EASTON -- The Avalon Theatre and Ellen
Vatne General have been synonymous with the arts
in Easton since 1994.
At its annual Winners Circle Reception last Wednesday,
the Talbot County Arts Council honored General for
what she and the Avalon have accomplished.
“For exceptionally distinguished service since
1994 as executive director of the Avalon Foundation
and the leader behind the tremendous artistic and economic
success of the Historic Avalon Theatre,” read
the Special Outstanding Achievement Award that Andy
Anderson, immediate past president of the Arts Council,
presented to General on Nov. 14. “She has built
the Avalon into the hub around which the cultural life
of Talbot County revolves.”
A decade and a half ago, the possibility of a performing
arts venue in Easton seemed like an idea ahead of its
time. While the building was transformed from an empty,
derelict shell into a magnificent showplace, no one
could seem to make it succeed once the doors were reopened.
General was a newcomer to Easton at that time, with
a background in education. “I saw the inside
of the theatre and just fell in love with it,” she
said.
On Jan. 1, 1994 she became Executive Director of the
nonprofit Avalon Foundation, and set about running
the Avalon Theatre.
“While we wanted to present the theatre as a
great place to see live entertainment, we knew that
it could not just be one thing, meaning just a place
to present theatre or concerts,” said General. “It
had to be a multi-purpose venue to bring people downtown.
I wanted it to be something that the whole community
was involved in.”
The Avalon's programs, according to the Arts Council
award, “include a wonderful mix of nationally-known,
regional and local artists.” As a result, the
Avalon Theatre is rightly thought of as a performing
arts center. But there is more to it than that.
“Under [General's] leadership,” the citation
reads, “the Avalon has emphasized community education
and enrichment, and she has generously made its facilities
available for many important civic events. She has
also been the inspiration or a driving force behind
a host of arts-related programs of major community
benefit including the Passport to the Arts quarterly
community arts calendar, the summer outdoor concert
series, and the First Friday Gallery Walk.”
The Avalon Foundation has expanded in campus-like fashion
to help create the Easton Resource Center, home to
more than 120 community groups that use its meeting
rooms 300 days a year. The Theatre houses MCTV, the
local television station, which has been broadcasting
town and county council meetings for several years.
While those operations became part of her everyday
routine and took up much of her time as operations
inside expanded, General was not done. She spread the
foundation's wings further to offer more in the way
of community events outside the art deco landmark on
East Dover Street. The free outdoor Summer Concert
Series has become an event that brings thousands of
residents downtown. The Easton Farmer's Market, complete
with live music, is in part a function of the Avalon
Foundation through its partnership with Easton Main
Street. Ditto the First Friday Gallery Walks, the Plein
Air Arts Festival and Competition, the 4th of July
Carnival and Fireworks Celebration, the Children's
Halloween Parade, the Downtown Easter Egg Hunt and
the upcoming holiday events support downtown businesses
while making Christmastime a festive time in Easton.
After the Avalon was renovated in the late 1980s, several
attempts were made to operate it as a quasi-governmental
agency, run by volunteer boards that reported to the
Easton Town Council. Yet it has only been since General
brought her perseverance, determination, unyielding
spirit and occasional quirkiness to bear that the Avalon
has become the multipurpose facility and organization
for which people wished.
General is quick to share the credit for the Avalon's
success.
“The magic of the Avalon is about the people
of this community coming out and celebrating and supporting
this beautiful theatre,” she says. “I am
very honored by the Talbot County Arts Council recognition,
and I will continue to work towards keeping the Avalon
as a place where residents gather to celebrate as a
community together. We have a beautiful community that
has not only come out to support what we do inside
the theatre but has enabled us to carry the magic outside
of the theatre walls.”
Fittingly, the Arts Council's Special Outstanding Achievement
Award concluded with two of General's favorite words:
magic and energy.
“Her boundless vision and energy, supported by
a superb board of directors and a dedicated staff,
have resulted in an organization whose operating budget
now approaches $1 million,” it read, “and
which provides the yearly opportunity for tens of thousands
of residents and guests to 'experience the magic' brought
to them by the Avalon Foundation.”
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