Curtain to rise on Balboa Theater construction
- Share via
Mathis Winkler
BALBOA PENINSULA -- It all began at the corner of L Street and East
Balboa Boulevard, at 5:30 a.m. on a day in March 1995.
“Dayna, we have to save the [Balboa] theater,” architect Ron Baers
said to community activist Dayna Pettit.
“Ron, I don’t have time,” came her answer, but Baers didn’t let her
off the hook.
“This won’t take any time,” he told her.
Six years and $2.5 million later, sitting in the Balboa Performing
Arts Theater Foundation’s modest office Thursday, Pettit, the
organization’s president, said the countless hours she and others have
spent on the project were finally about to pay off.
On May 22, a groundbreaking ceremony will kick off about 10 months of
construction to transform the 1927 building into a performing arts center
capable of seating 350 patrons. If all goes well, the theater could open
by fall 2002.
Pettit and Michele Roberge, the foundation’s executive director, said
they’ll turn the event into the most unusual groundbreaking anyone has
ever seen.
“We’re going to have a bulldozer ballet,” Pettit said.
“It’s to give people an idea of what we’re all about,” Roberge added.
Raising money -- the foundation still needs $4 million for
construction and to secure the theater’s first-year budget -- and
building activities will keep the group busy in coming months.
But while the foundation already offers a “Reading Shakespeare”
seminar that’s held at a private home, Roberge said she hopes to put
together a sampler season of performances for the fall.
“These won’t be high-ticket, fund-raising things,” she said, adding
that there will be plenty of those as well. “We want to give people a
glimpse of what’s going to happen.”
Because Newport Beach lacks venues for the performing arts -- the
city-owned, 90-seat Newport Theater Arts Center on Cliff Drive rarely
accommodates outside groups and a proposed arts and education center on
open space behind the Central Library has faced vocal opposition from
environmentalists and residents alike -- Roberge has begun to look at
unconventional spaces to put on shows.
She’s in talks with a car dealership. The American Legion Post 291
hall and the Balboa Pavilion are also under discussion, Roberge said,
adding that she’s hoping to stage about five performances.
Recent controversy over the use of the Cliff Drive center, as well as
the arts and education center, suggest the city’s residents are no longer
satisfied with trips to the Orange County Performing Arts Center in Costa
Mesa.
“We’ve gotten spoiled,” Roberge said. “We want to have that in our
neighborhood too. It really points at a dire need of space for the arts.”
Pettit added that the theater could also attract people living beyond
Newport Beach’s borders.
“This is not a local project,” she said. “We can really serve Orange
County.”
FYI
For information or to make a donation, call (949) 673-0895.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.