Two weeks ago, a pair of interior designers got an unusual request: Would they be interested in creating a backstage lounge for country-music superstars Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood?
Target Center was looking for a way to make the singing spouses feel at home during their long-running gig — 11 shows in 10 days, with back-to-back shows on some nights.
"They [Target Center] wanted something homey and comfortable," said Jacquelyn Carter of Renewing Spaces, Minneapolis. "They liked our stuff and called us out of the blue."
Carter and her business partner, Stacy Sternberg, have designed and staged a lot of interiors, but they'd never before been called upon to create essentially a pop-up den for a performer who was passing through town. "This is a first," Carter said.
The time frame was short; the project would have to be completed in just a couple of days, before Nov. 6, the date of the duo's first concert. But the designers were game.
"The whole idea of it was fun," Carter said. "And who doesn't love Garth Brooks?"
Unlike many big-name performers with exhaustive backstage requirements, Brooks and Yearwood hadn't asked for anything special, according to Katrina Jaeger, marketing manager for Target Center. "This was done by Target Center for them," she said. "This is a really big deal for our venue. We wanted to create something unique and special."
The space — two rooms that can be opened into one — started out bare bones: concrete walls, black curtains and black and gray carpet tiles. During basketball games it's used as a changing area for Crunch, the Timberwolves' mascot. Although it has been dressed up for other events, Jaeger said, it's never before gotten a complete designer makeover.