A home for their 40th
Tom Titus
Visiting the spacious theater utilized since 1994 by the Huntington
Beach Playhouse at the city’s main library, someone from another
community theater group would be forgiven for turning a little green.
Locally, only the Laguna Playhouse -- long since graduated from a
community theater to a full equity operation -- surpasses Huntington
Beach’s performing facility in scope and amenities. But, while the
Library Theater certainly is impressive, it’s not quite home sweet home.
Last season, the playhouse was in danger of continuing its nomadic
history when library trustees proposed a whopping rent increase. After
lengthy negotiations with the city, the playhouse has been allowed to
continue renting the Library Theater -- albeit with an added escalating
municipal ticket surcharge over the next five years.
Playgoers accustomed to strolling across the hall after the opening
night performance to partake of champagne and munchies now must drive a
few blocks to the playhouse’s rehearsal hall on Gothard Street to toast
the latest production. And the theater was obliged to cut one weekend off
the run of each show, necessitating the addition of Saturday matinees and
Thursday evening performances.
Last fall, members of the playhouse took what may be a first step
toward locating a permanent home for their theater. They acquired 300
plush, folding seats donated by the Westminster Mall following the
closure of the shopping center’s movie theater complex. Now that they
have the seats, all they need is a theater.
As its president, Bette Muellenberg, points out, the Huntington Beach
Playhouse is an independent, nonprofit organization not affiliated with
the city of Huntington Beach, and board members recognize the need for
the theater to have its own venue.
That has been more easily said than done over the group’s first 39
years. Organized in 1963, the playhouse started out in the music room of
Huntington Beach High School and since performed at a series of different
venues, including the municipal courthouse (for the courtroom drama
“Night of January 16th”), downtown’s Memorial Hall, a storefront in the
Seacliff Village shopping center and, most recently, the Gisler School
auditorium.
Perhaps the playhouse’s most memorable location was “The Barn,” an
abandoned rural shed owned by the Huntington Beach Company inhabited by
owls and pigeons, which became a horseshoe-shaped stage from 1964 to
1976. This gave way to the bulldozers after a dozen years, and the
players moved across the street to the shopping center.
“In spite of the facility inconveniences, our audiences seemed to
enjoy the Seacliff location,” Muellenberg observed.
But progress once again pushed the actors out, first to a hotel and
restaurant in Long Beach for a brief stint, then to Gisler School, where
spiraling maintenance needs and vandalism presented a different set of
problems.
The thespians must have thought they’d died and gone to heaven in 1994
when then moved into their present location, the Library Theater.
There, they present eight shows a year, including a “Shakespeare in
the Park” attraction in the adjacent Central Park Amphitheater (this year
it’s “Henry IV, Part 1,” opening in early July). But, as they were to
learn, the promised land wasn’t abounding in milk and honey.
While marking time in the Library Theater, the playhouse board members
are attempting to establish a building and equipment fund, secure
corporate sponsors, identify and apply for grants and establish major
fund-raising programs.
“We recognize the need for our own venue,” Muellenberg states. “In the
near future we plan to purchase and renovate or build a new theater
facility as a permanent home. Acquiring the (movie theater) seats is just
the first step down that road.”
A new, permanent home. Wouldn’t that be a perfect 40th birthday
present?
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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