The Little Theatre is a nonprofit organization devoted to staging plays for children. The theater has a very small full-time professional administrative staff. Through a special arrangement with the actors' union, actors and directors rehearse without pay and are paid only for actual performances. The Little Theatre had tentatively planned to put on six different productions with a total of 108 performances. For example, one of the productions was Peter Rabbit, which had a six-week run with three performances on each weekend. The costs from the current year's planning budget appear below. The Little Theatre Costs from the Planning Budget For the Year Ended December 31 Budgeted number of productions Budgeted number of performances Actors and directors wages Stagehands wages Ticket booth personnel and ushers wages Scenery, costumes, and props Theater hall rent Printed programs Publicity Administrative expenses Total 108 $216,000 32,400 16,200 108,000 54,000 27000 12,000 43,200 $508,800 Some of the costs vary with the number of productions, some with the number of performances, and some are fixed and depend on neither the number of productions nor the number of performances. The costs of scenery, costumes, props, and publicity vary with the number of productions. It doesn't make any difference how many times Peter Rabbit is performed, the cost of the scenery is the same. Likewise, the cost of publicizing a play with posters and radio commercials is the same whether there are 10. 20, or 30 performances of the play. On the other hand, the wages of the actors, directors, stagehands, ticket booth personnel, and ushers vary with the number of performances. The greater the number of performances, the higher the wage costs will be. Similarly, the costs of renting the hall and printing the programs will vary with the number of performances. Administrative expenses are more difficult to analyze, but the best estimate is that approximately 75% of the budgeted costs are fixed 15% depend on the number of productions staged, and the remaining 10% depend on the number of performances. After the beginning of the year, the board of directors of the theater authorized expanding the theater's program to seven productions and a total of 168 performances. Not surprisingly, actual costs were considerably higher than the costs from the planning budget. (Grants from donors and ticket sales were also correspondingly higher, but are not shown here.) Data Page448 concerning the actual costs appear below: For the Year Ended Decenber 31 341800 9700 Actors and directors wages Stagehands wge Ticket booth personnel and ushers wages 25900 Scenery, costumes, and pesps Theater hall e Printed progra Publicity Required: 1 Use Eahih 9- as your guide, peepare a flesible budgct perormonce neport fioe the year tha both spending varances and activity variances 2 If yoe were on the hoand of directoes off the theater, woel you he pleased with how well conts we coetrolled daring the year? wr controlled during the year? hy, or why not The cost formalas peoidees o the avrage os per peodetion and average cost per performance. How accurate do you think these figures would be for pedicting the cost of a now production or of an additional porformance of a particular