Playhouse leaders pan idea of shorter lease
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The spotlight is on the Huntington Beach Playhouse
now that a preliminary lease agreement has been drawn up between the
theater group and the Central Library.
The playhouse, which has offered theatrical performances to the public
for 37 years, is hoping to convince city leaders that another five-year
lease is better than a proposed three-year lease.Since 1995, the private
nonprofit playhouse has used the library’s theater to put on a variety of
productions, including “Harvey,” “Evita” and “The Last Night of
Ballyhoo.” The lease on the 319-seat theater, which included renewal
options, ran out in December, and the playhouse has been operating on a
month-to-month basis since.
However, at last week’s library board of trustees meeting, members
proposed a three-year lease for $28,000 a year -- which is what the
playhouse has paid since it moved to the library -- but the lease would
come with new conditions.
“We are truly the city’s oldest cultural arts center in the city,”
said Bettie Muellenberg, playhouse director. “And we want to continue
offering that culture to the city.”
The City Council, which will have the final say over the lease
agreement, discussed the lease renewal at its Sept. 18 meeting, but
deferred the decision to the library board.
“We’re a working board,” said Don Stanton, playhouse treasurer, adding
that the theater group’s organizers also construct sets, serve as ushers
and direct the productions. “The five-year lease would be preferable
because it allows us to concentrate more on the theater than preparing
for lease negotiations every two years. But I think negotiations are
going well.”
Initially, the library board proposed a lease that raised the
playhouse’s annual rent to $121,000, the rental fee that is normally
charged to groups wanting to use the facility. But that $93,000 increase
would be financially impossible for the playhouse and force its closure,
theater officials said.
The playhouse produces seven shows a year at the Library Theater,
using about 70% of the available weekends, said Ron Hayden, the city’s
director of library services, adding that the Central Library is paying
off a $5-million bond that funded an expansion project to build the
theater. The loss in revenue from the playhouse’s rent has affected those
payments Hayden said.
The proposed three-year lease has three requirements.
The first requires an audited financial statement each year, followed
by a yearly business plan detailing the expected revenue through ticket
sales, fund-raising and other financial sources, as well as any special
projects. Those include creating a playhouse foundation, such as the one
at the Art Center.
The final condition is the shortened lease, coupled with a joint
annual review of the playhouse’s financial plan to determine other
possible funding sources, library officials said. The stipulations would
hold the playhouse more accountable to the library because it uses the
theater, they said.
The library’s proposed lease is scheduled to appear before the City
Council at its Oct 16 meeting. Playhouse officials said they will wait
and see what the City Council decides to do before continuing
negotiations.
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