Ballet beginning
- Share via
Mathis Winkler
BALBOA PENINSULA -- The dancers may have climbed Bobcat bulldozers to
music from Mozart’s Requiem, but mourning was the last thing hundreds of
residents, city leaders and arts supporters had in mind when they
gathered for the Balboa Theater groundbreaking ceremony Tuesday.
“This is the start of the rejuvenation of the entire village,” said
Councilman Tod Ridgeway, who represents Balboa Peninsula.
He added that the theater’s rebirth will go hand in hand with a
$7.5-million beautification project of Balboa’s downtown, which is set to
kick off in October.
“This whole building holds so much promise,” said City Manager Homer
Bludau. “It was once a focal point and we know it can be that again.”
Theater supporters said Tuesday’s ceremony marked “the beginning of
the end” of a seven-year-long struggle to bring the former movie theater
back to life as a center for the performing arts.
“Today seems like a very surreal moment,” said Dayna Pettit, the
president of the Balboa Performing Arts Theater Foundation. “The theater
is going to be so many things to so many people. It’s a wonderful legacy
that we’re leaving to the city of Newport Beach.”
After watching the “Bulldozer Ballet” -- the theater’s first
commissioned piece performed by dancers from Mandala DanceWorks --
Michele Roberge, the foundation’s executive director, told the audience
this was just a sneak preview of what was to come.
“As they say on Broadway, ‘You ain’t seen nothing yet,”’ she said to
cheers from her listeners. “For the last 7 1/2 decades, this theater has
done one thing. It’s provided us with a place to tell stories.”
She added that theater officials would work hard to revive the mission
by putting on performances ranging from drama to dance to children’s
concerts.
“It’s a building for us, but also for our children and grandchildren
and many generations to come,” she said.
But before the theater can open its doors to patrons, supporters still
need to raise $4 million to cover the costs of renovation and secure an
operating budget for the first season.
With construction finally set to begin, raising the dollars might
prove an easier task.
Foundation members “have had so many fund-raising efforts and no
product to show for it other than the collection of funds,” Ridgeway
said. “They needed to show construction in order to get the money.”
Taking a break from their starring roles as bulldozer drivers, Trevor
Kean and Dieter Kulbe said they’d enjoyed branching out into the
performing arts.
“Other than having ballet girls” on the machines, their twist and
turns with the bulldozers hadn’t required any special skills, Kean said.
But Kulbe added that he’d only consider changing careers “if the pay’s
real good.”
Standing on East Balboa Boulevard, which had been closed off to
traffic, longtime Balboa resident Ralph Bernard said he couldn’t wait to
see the theater brought back to life.
“It gives us back a speck of class,” he said. “We’re going to get some
culture now. We need it.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.