Q&A; -- A spotlight on the Balboa Theater
- Share via
After seven long years and $2.5 million, community activist Dayna
Pettit is finally going to see construction start Tuesday on the Balboa
Theater. Pettit, president of the Balboa Performing Arts Theater
Foundation, is looking forward to watching the “bulldozer ballet” that
will help transform the 1927 building into a performing arts center
capable of seating 350 people.
It has been a labor of love for Pettit, a community activist who
helped to form the Balboa Merchants and Owners Assn. She sat down with
Features Editor Jennifer K Mahal to talk about the theater, its progress
and why the project has been worth so much of her time.
What made you commit so much time and so many resources to the
Balboa Theater?
I’ve lived in this community for 26 years, and I’ve always believed
that you need to give back to your community, especially when you live in
a paradise like we do. And I’ve watched the demise of our little town of
Balboa for some time with the advent of the shopping centers. All little
towns went through this. We used to have kind of a bustling little town
with a big department store -- Donaldson’s department store and hardware
store -- and things have changed, and you have shopping centers and
people start going there because they can get several things done at one
time and parking and all of those things.
I came downtown 10 years ago and started an association to see if we
couldn’t, maybe, start turning our little town around and get some of the
people who work down here involved. We started out, we really were on a
pretty good momentum, and then the City Council decided they were going
to do another major study of the downtown, probably the fourth or fifth .
. . and it just stopped everything that we were doing for a couple of
years while they were going to get this major redevelopment going. Well,
that didn’t go anywhere.
So we just kept plodding along, and seven years ago my neighbor came
to me early one morning and said “Dayna, we just have to save this
theater. It’s for sale. If the theater goes, it’s just going to be
another t-shirt shop and that’s just going to completely destroy the
downtown area.”
So, I said, “Ron, I don’t have any time.” And he said, “Oh, you’ve
just got to do this. It isn’t going to take any time.” Seven years ago,
March.
So, we made an offer to purchase the theater and that didn’t work out.
But it did put John Wortmann, who bought it, in touch. He called me and
we got acquainted and he said that he would be willing to rent it to us.
So we worked on a lease for six, eight months. Then he decided to sell it
to us, so we entered into escrow with him for a year, and during that
period of time, we lobbied the city heavily to see if we couldn’t get
them involved because it’s their downtown area as well. So we got the
city to purchase the building in 1998 and from that point we just kept
going forward. It’s just picked up all kinds of momentum.
My initial goal is to try to turn this little town around and I felt
that by doing it with the theater, you’re introducing a really fine
flavor into an area that attracts all kinds of wonderful people who love
theater. Rich and poor alike, it doesn’t matter.
Are you worried at all about the parking and the traffic?
No. No, I’m not. Traffic and parking, there’s always been parking and
traffic problems in this area. That’s just the nature of the beast. We’re
in a little small area here between Beach and Bay and we have a large
parking lot on the ocean front that is going to be enhanced and restriped
to accommodate some more parking. When people come down to the theater,
there are 350 seats, you’re not going to have 350 cars coming down. And
people can park in the ocean front lot and walk to the downtown.
What do you think the Balboa Theater will offer this community?
It will bring a richness that is needed in Newport Beach. We don’t
have a lot of art facilities. The Performing Arts Center is wonderful,
but it isn’t right here within our own city. And they have the little
theater on the hill that’s just under a hundred people. So, we felt that
we could compliment these other things that are available, add something
to Newport Beach that would give everyone a flavor of what we are.
We’re going to be not only cinema, but also live theater and other
things.
What would you like to see performed on the stage?
I’m an opera fan, so I’d love to see an opera. It couldn’t be “Aida,”
that’s for sure. Maybe an operetta or a musical. A smaller version of
“West Side Story.” I’d love to see “Riverdance” there. We’re going to try
and get them sometime.
Why not Elton John when we open, ‘cause that would be a great big
splash. Sarah Brightman, I think she’s wonderful. Gosh, I mean there’s
just so many wonderful things that I would like to see if we can get
them. That’s the question.
What’s your favorite memory of the Balboa Theater before it closed?
I’ve seen “Gone with the Wind.” I’ve seen a lot of other classics with
Humphrey Bogart. Evelyn Hart and I went to “The Rocky Horror Picture
Show” after the chief of police said it was going to be outlawed in town
if they didn’t clean up the act. So we thought, let’s go see it was. It
was just a stitch, we both thought it was hysterical and what was the big
to-do about it.
We hope to bring that back for a performance one night. Wouldn’t it be
fun if we could get Susan Sarandon, who really, initially filmed it. But,
yes, we thought we would do that one night. We would have “The Rocky
Horror Picture Show” for those people who were great followers of that
cult. It was a fun thing to do.
BIO
Name: Dayna Pettit
Age: 62
Family: Married 27 years to Bob. Has two dogs, Foxy and Pookie.
Community involvement: A local activist, Pettit helped start the
Balboa Merchants and Owners Assn. She is president of the
Balboa Performing Arts Theater Foundation.
Miscellaneous: Pettit likes working without gloves in her garden,
where she grows roses and impatiens.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.