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Woodstock 50 festival has to find a new venue

With less than 70 days to go, there's a new roadblock for the Woodstock 50 festival.
Credit: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
Comedy writer Alan Zweibel, from left, HeadCount executive director Andy Bernstein, Hip hop recording artist Common, left, Woodstock co-producer and co-founder, Michael Lang and musician John Fogerty participate in the Woodstock 50 lineup announcement at Electric Lady Studios on Tuesday, March 19, 2019, in New York. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — The fate of the Woodstock 50 festival was cast further into doubt Monday afternoon when Watkins Glen International announced it's not hosting the anniversary event.

Watkins Glen issued a two-sentence statement saying it had terminated the site license for the upstate New York festival "pursuant to provisions of the contract."

A principal organizer of the festival says he and others are in discussions with another venue to host the event.

Gregory Peck said organizers "look forward to sharing the new location when tickets go on sale in the coming weeks."

The festival scheduled Aug. 16-18 has faced a series of setbacks. Financial backer Amplifi Live announced April 29 it was canceling the festival and took back about $18 million, the remains of the $49 million it had put in. Production company Superfly soon dropped out after tangling with organizers over how many people the Watkins Glen auto racing site could accommodate.

Woodstock co-founder and 50th anniversary festival organizer Michael Lang filed a lawsuit against the investor and insisted the show was still on. A judge ruled May 16 that Amplifi, an arm of Japan-based marketing firm Dentsu, couldn't singlehandedly call off the show but also doesn't have to put the $18 million back into it while the dispute headed to arbitration.

Legal skirmishes have continued, but Woodstock 50 has so far lost bids to regain the $18 million. The organizers have said investment bank Oppenheimer & Co. signed on as a financial adviser to pull money together.

Meanwhile, the lawsuit shed light on how much work lay ahead. Major improvements, including roads and a temporary water system, needed to be made to the racetrack site, according to court documents and testimony. And the total number of attendees — and, therefore, ticket sales — had been called into question, with organizers envisioning 150,000, but Superfly saying 65,000 was the "safe and appropriate capacity," according to the documents.

The tentative lineup includes Jay-Z, Santana, Miley Cyrus, John Fogerty, Dead & Company and Imagine Dragons.

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