Ron Delsener Presents

Showings

Mary D. Fisher Theatre Fri, Jun 13 7:00 PM
Mary D. Fisher Theatre Sat, Jun 14 7:00 PM
Mary D. Fisher Theatre Sun, Jun 15 4:00 PM
Alice Gill-Sheldon Theatre Mon, Jun 16 6:30 PM
Mary D. Fisher Theatre Tue, Jun 17 4:00 PM
Mary D. Fisher Theatre Wed, Jun 18 4:00 PM
Mary D. Fisher Theatre Thu, Jun 19 4:00 PM
Film Info
Event Type:Music Documentary Feature
Release Year:2023
Run Time:99 minutes
Production Country:United States
Original Language:English
Trailer:https://youtu.be/cEH0-CBQVdw?si=TjfttJxR57DTY1Qa
Cast/Crew Info
Director:Jake Sumner

Description

“Ron Delsener Presents” features an all-star cast of the who’s who in the music industry, including Bruce Springsteen, Cher, Billy Joel, Paul Simon, Patti Smith, Roger Waters, Jimmy Buffet, Jon Bon Jovi, Steven Van Zandt, Bette Midler and more.


“Ron Delsener Presents” is equal parts all-access pass to New York's greatest gigs featuring some of the iconic artists who performed in them; and a portrait of the singular figure who brought these shows together — rock concert promoter and impresario Ron Delsener.


In a career spanning sixty years, concert promoter and impresario Ron Delsener was the name behind virtually every major contemporary music concert in New York City for generations. From promoting The Beatles at Forest Hills Tennis Stadium, to bringing David Bowie to Carnegie Hall and Patti Smith to the Palladium, to somehow convincing Simon and Garfunkel to bury the hatchet and play the biggest concert of all time in Central Park, Ron Delsener was behind it all.


Through a portrait of a mercurial and relentless showman, “Ron Delsener Presents” takes us behind-the-curtain through the last half century of the live music business, chronicling the tactics that drove live performance from disorganized, low-fi nightclubs to international tours, arenas, stadiums, and, eventually, into a global empire. A transformation that Delsener is in many ways responsible for. Working in a business he helped to create Ron Delsener now in the later stages of his life, still has his hand in the game. Sure, he could stop — he maybe even should but Ron doesn’t know how.