May be curtains at HBP
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The Huntington Beach Playhouse is having a hard time paying its rent
and is considering leaving town, company members said.
The group’s 2002 gloom and doom predictions about the theater’s
lease are materializing, Playhouse board member Harold Gooder said.
For 11 years, the Playhouse has held its performances at the
Huntington Beach Central Library Theater, hosting shows like “Bye,
Bye Birdie” and “Plaza Suite.” It’s current run, “Hello Dolly,” goes
through mid-August. Now Playhouse officials said they’ll likely leave
when the lease expires at the end of the 2006 season.
At issue is a surcharge the city placed on ticket sales;
theater-goers are asked to pay two dollars more this year and will be
asked to cough up three more by 2006. With ticket prices that run $21
for night performances and $9 to $17 for matinees, the surcharges
make for a significant increase that some say is driving away
customers.
“The city surcharge is eating us alive,” Huntington Beach
Playhouse President Catherine Stip said. “It’s not likely that we’re
going to extend our lease when it expires.”
The Huntington Beach Playhouse was founded in 1963 and held its
first play at a now demolished barn near City Hall, before moving to
a small venue in Seacliff Village and later Gisler Elementary School.
In 1993 the Playhouse moved into the library theater, operating on a
five-year, $24,000 annual lease. The agreement included a clause
giving the Playhouse two additional five-year renewal options, but
city officials said the library never submitted the proper paper work
to extend its contract.
From December 1998 to September 2001, the Playhouse operated on a
month-to-month lease under the same terms until adopting its most
recent agreement.
“They were operating under a preferential rate, essentially
special fees in recognition of them being a worthwhile community
organization that should get preferential rates,” library director
Ron Hayden said.
Over the objections of many Playhouse board members, Hayden said,
the council added the sliding surcharges in hopes of eventually
collecting about $110,000 a year for the use of the theater. The
council also tacked on an annual rent increase and shortened
performance calendar to allow the library to rent the theater out to
private groups at a higher rate.
“We wanted the Playhouse to bring payments in line with what other
nonprofits pay to use the theater,” Hayden said.
Money generated from the lease would help pay off several city
loans financing improvements at the Central Library.
“The problem when they raised the rent was that many of our
patrons are senior citizens on a limited income,” Gooder said. At the
time the contract was written and signed, many Playhouse members
loudly protested, instead advocating for only the shortened
performance calendar.
“Every year since we’ve signed that new contract, we’ve lost
money,” Stip said. “We can’t increase our own prices because of the
city surcharge.”
Tax returns for the Huntington Beach Playhouse available on
Guidestar.org show the group had an 8% drop in ticket sales for 2003,
although it did show the theater squeaking out a $7,000 surplus.
According to the tax return, the theater has about $188,000 in
assets.
The drop can be attributed to a number of issues beyond the
surcharge, Gooder said. Theater attendance overall seems to be down,
while the price of putting on musicals is going up. The licensing
rights alone cost about $15,000, Gooder said, while the normal
expenses associated with running a play could cost an extra $30,000
to $40,000.
At least 13 other theaters in Orange County receive some kind of
subsidized rent, a city theater comparison shows, and groups like the
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse and the Newport Theater Arts Center are
charged only $1 a year to rent their respective theaters.
Hayden said the library has successfully rented the facility to
outside groups during off weekends and would expand that practice if
the Playhouse decides to leave.
“If they can’t make a go of it, the city will have to decide if
they want to continue the preferential lease,” he said.
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