Los Angeles Times

A new home for puppet troupe

L.A.’s historic Bob Baker Marionette Theater is moving to Highland Park.

- By Deborah Netburn

The black cat with the rhinestone collar. The hand walking clown. The petunia that dances and sings.

These beloved characters and 2,000 other puppets handcrafte­d by marionette mastermind Bob Baker are about to get a new home.

After more than 55 years in a small cinder block building on the edge of downtown L.A., the historic Bob Baker Marionette Theater will move to a former movie theater turned Korean church on the corner of York Boulevard and North Avenue 50 in Highland Park.

The theater’s company of red-clad puppeteers hopes to start staging its playful and eccentric brand of marionette shows in its new space in early summer. The official grand opening is set for Nov. 29 — almost a year to the day after the troupe performed its last public show in its original home.

“Boy, are we rushing to figure everything out, but opening day will happen as soon as is humanly possible,” said Alex Evans, the theater’s executive director and head puppeteer, in the same cheerful and English-accented voice he’s used to introduce nearly every performanc­e over the last 10 years. “I want to play with puppets again.”

A few days after signing a 10-year lease, Evans and Winona Bechtle, the theater’s director of developmen­t, were seated at a card table in a cold, messy office on the second floor of their new headquarte­rs.

They were already hard at work writing text for the website, putting together a press release about the move and preparing to meet with the architectu­ral firm Escher Gune-Wardena, which will help transform the building’s cavernous auditorium into the cozy space draped in tinsel and red velvet that Bob Baker audiences know and love.

They were tired but excited. For months, the theater’s future had been in limbo as they sought a suitable place to continue Baker’s unique legacy. They looked at more than 30 locations before settling on the York Boulevard building. It does not have parking, but it is across the street from a playground with a rattlesnak­e slide and a coffee shop with excellent lattes.

“This was the space where you could pretty much walk in and see it right away,” Evans said. “We don’t have to change much to make it feel Bob Baker.”

The structure started out as the York Theater, hosting movies and vaudeville per----

formances in the 1920s. It most recently housed the Pyong Kang First Congregati­onal Church. It has also been a barbershop and an organ sales and repair store.

“It’s very L.A., all the transition­s it’s been through,” Bechtle said.

Inside, the building still looks like it belongs to the church, with large banners written in Korean hanging on the walls, red poinsettia­s lined up in front of an ornate wooden pulpit and a drum set and keyboard unmoved since the congregati­on’s last service in early January. The room felt large and tall — a jarring contrast to the gilded intimacy of the old Bob Baker Theater.

But Bechtle and Evans pointed to the building’s art deco touches, such as the lettering on the exit and bathroom signs and what was once an old ticket booth.

“We’ve done [performanc­es] in a box for 55 years,” Evans said. “There’s moldings on the doorways here. That’s more than we had in the other theater.”

The move didn’t entirely come by choice. Baker sold the original building to a developer shortly before his death in 2014. Now, the current owner is moving forward with plans to turn it into an apartment complex.

The Bob Baker Marionette Theater was designated a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 2009, and soon after the sale of the building, there was talk of keeping the institutio­n on the premises. However, recent renderings of the project suggested that was not likely to happen.

“We thought it was the plan until we saw the plans,” Bechtle said.

But the push to move to the new space — which is 10,000 square feet, while the old building was 7,000 square feet — may be a blessing for the company. It has experience­d a renaissanc­e and unpreceden­ted growth over the last few years, with gross revenues increasing to $604,312 in 2018 from $247,687 in 2014.

“Our revenue is up 60% this year over last year, and that allowed us to consider that the best option for Bob Baker wasn’t necessaril­y staying in that building,” Bechtle said.

For more than 50 years, audiences were treated to a singular experience at Bob Baker’s Marionette Theater. People sat in the round, with (mostly) kids sitting crisscross applesauce on the floor. Puppeteers brought the handcrafte­d marionette­s right into the center of a carpeted area, where they blinked and winked and danced to campy soundtrack­s Baker spliced together.

If you were lucky, a puppet might sit on your lap, knock off your hat or wave a scarf in your face.

“Who knows what they’ll do?” Evans said before the start of the show in recent years. “They’re puppets.”

To keep that experience intact, the theater company is working with architects Frank Escher and Ravi GuneWarden­a, who specialize in historic preservati­on projects.

The current open auditorium will become shorter and narrower once they create a backstage area, puppet storage and a workshop. A carpet stage will be created, and so will a sense of closeness to the performers.

“It really is about the audience — the kids on the carpet and their parents and older kids around them, surroundin­g the puppets and performers,” GuneWarden­a said. “It is very much interactiv­e, and it will continue to be interactiv­e.”

To guide them, the architects are turning to dozens of drawings that Baker made for the original theater.

“Bob Baker had these amazing, beautiful renderings of his vision for altering the old space, so we’ve been collective­ly mining those images,” GuneWarden­a said.

The annual Christmas show, a nontraditi­onal and completely surreal “Nutcracker” that opens with a shadow puppet orchestra and includes a Clara and her little brother Frank (who each sound like they are 45), was staged at the Pasadena Playhouse at the end of 2018.

Those shows “helped us see how the Bob Baker vibe works in a space that is not our original home,” said Bechtle. “It was a nice exercise in what makes the theater the theater — the tinsel, the coloring, the carpet. Transposin­g it there was like, ‘We can do it.’ ”

Bechtle and Evans said another priority is to create a place that will allow the marionette theater to more easily collaborat­e with other artists and organizati­ons. In the last few years, the theater began hosting movie screenings, punk shows and other events that were not solely marionette-based.

In the new location, they hope to do even more of that.

“We have a library of 6,000 LPs, so music is part of what we do; Bob worked on ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind’ and ‘Escape From Witch Mountain,’ so screenings are an obvious way to illuminate our programmin­g,” Bechtle said.

The build-out will take place in two phases. The first is getting the theater ready to receive audiences. This should wrap up by the start of summer, Evans said.

The second is developing the rest of the theater — carving out room for workshops and smaller performanc­es, a library and a Bob Baker museum. A lot will depend on how much money the troupe can raise over the next few years.

“The goal is to get them into the building and doing shows as quickly as possible,” said Michael Ferguson of the theater design company Theater DNA, who is also working on the project.

Bechtle said she is relieved to finally be able to reveal where Bob Baker will be for the foreseeabl­e future.

“For the longest time, we’ve been answering the phones saying, ‘Call back next month. Call back next week,’ ” she said. “I can’t wait to tell everyone.”

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? BOB BAKER shows off some of his puppets in 2012. His Marionette Theater, an L.A. institutio­n, has found a new home in Highland Park.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times BOB BAKER shows off some of his puppets in 2012. His Marionette Theater, an L.A. institutio­n, has found a new home in Highland Park.

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