Making Detroi t Sin g - cONt \ MAX FISHER AND OTHER JEWISH BENEFACTORS EXPLAIN THEIR COMMITMENT TO THE ARTS AND DETROIT. ' 74 '7 V hen Max Fisher, the dean of Detroit's Jewish philanthropists, first came to the city in 1930, he used to attend Detroit Symphony Orchestra Pops concerts for 25 cents a ticket. But times have changed since then. The top price for tickets to premier DSO concerts has risen over the $100 mark, and construction and mainte- nance costs have taken a comparable leap. This month, the DSO unveils the Max M. Fisher Music Center, a new $60-million performing arts complex on Woodward Avenue in Detroit. "The Max," as it's known to promot- ers and music-lovers alike, was made possible by a $10-million contribution from its 95-year-old benefactor — the largest personal gift ever to the DSO — as well as by generous donations by others. Many of those underwriting the Max are Jewish. And many are Detroit natives, with roots in the same neigh- borhood just north of downtown that stands to profit the most from the Max and other components of the Orchestra Place project. Renaissance Men DIANA LIEBERMAN Staff Writer "I always felt, as chairman of Detroit Renaissance (the nonprofit organiza- tion founded in 1970 by business leaders to facilitate the physical and economic growth of Detroit and Southeast Michigan), that the Woodward corridor was the future of the city, and it's finally developing into that," Fisher said in a recent interview with the Jewish News at his Franklin home. Cultural life is vital to the renais- sance of the city, he said. "There's a decrease in population in Detroit, but when people come to Detroit to go visit, one of the first questions they ask is, 'What are your cultural activities? What about your art museums, what about your sym- phonies?' 'And those are very important things in the life of the city," he said. "Look, a great city has good institu- tions, whether it's a museum or a sym- phony," Fisher said. "When you think about it, even Toledo, Cleveland, Columbus ... they all have it. We just fell behind. But now we're catching up." Fisher was amused by recent reports that he has no time for music and art. "I read in the New York Times that I don't like art," he said. "Where in the hell did they get this? I wouldn't be making a major investment if I didn't like it. In talking about his contributions, Fisher said he wasn't the first to work to keep the DSO in Detroit. Beginning in 1970, a group of com- munity members and musicians, working as the Save Orchestra Hall committee, successfully banded together to reclaim the acoustically superb orchestral venue. "It was going to be torn down," Fisher said. "The fact that they stuck to it and brought it to this stage is a real tribute to the city and its citizens, the people who were involved." Fisher's words were echoed by those of his son-in-law Peter Cummings of Bloomfield Hills. "I love music and I love the city," said Cummings, DSO board chair- man and the driving force behind the creation of the Max. "Orchestral music is my favorite type, but I like practically all types — I just went to the Bruce Springsteen concert." ' Cummings, of Bloomfield Hills, said he wanted it made clear that, if it weren't for activists such as DSO bas- " soonist Paul Ganson, impresario Dr. Zalman "Tiny" Konikow and vision- ary investor Sam Frankel, the acousti- cally perfect hall that is the kernel of the Max would no longer exist. "Everything we're doing now is _being built on the foundation of the Save Orchestra Hall movement," Cummings said. Saving A Treasure Sam Frankel is not one to mince words. Ford Auditorium, the hall on Jefferson at the foot of Woodward Avenue where the DSO performed 1955-1989, was "not made for classi- cal music," said the Bloomfield Hills developer. "It was meant for drum majors." On the other hand, Orchestra Hall, built in 1919, has acoustics that rival those at New York City's peerless Carnegie Hall, musicians agree. But by the late 1960s, the hall was deserted, with a leaky roof, shattered stairways and practically no seats. When Ganson began rallying support to renovate the building, it already had an appointment with the wrecking ball. Frankel, who grew up in Detroit, said he used to hear the symphony play at Orchestra Hall as a child, and took violin lessons at a music conser- vatory down Woodward Avenue. "When the opportunity arises to save something, you take it," he said. "I couldn't believe it when I saw it — the hall was dark and vandalized. I just thought we should have a cultural center, and here was the start." Frankel followed his instincts and led the group that bought out Orchestra Hall's mortgage. He contin- ues to make his presence known as a donor to the Max. Dr. Konikow, a pediatric dentist by profession and former president of the 0 A 10/3 2003 67