The Liberty Theatre, in North Bend, was designed by
Tourtellotte & Hummel, of Boise and Portland, and opened on Easter Sunday
1924. It cost $50,000, and was just one
of the fine concrete, fireproof, structures built in that city during North Bend boom of the early 1920s. The Liberty showed movies through
WWII but was closed when the newer, wide-screen, Port opened. It sat vacant for a time before its owners leased the building to Little Theater on the Bay (LTOB), a Coos
County-based community theater group. LIBERTY LTOB purchased
the building in the 1970s, paid off the mortgage in 1996 and even bought the
lot next door.
Coos County, so isolated for so many years before the
coastal bridges and highway was completed, developed a rather amazing tradition of high
quality local theater. In those early
years there just wasn’t much entertainment there and people, talented
people, learned to entertain themselves.
LTOB is now the second oldest continuously operated theater group in
Oregon, and has put on productions for more than six decades. Their alumni include people who went on to
Hollywood fame (Roy Scheider), people who perform at OSF, and yes, just as
likely the local teacher, the guy that works at the mill, or youngsters from
area schools. It’s community at its
best. The quality is rather astounding.
Focusing on theater, LTOB lucked out with the Liberty
Theatre but it was never exactly their primary focus. As long as the roof didn’t leak, the power
worked, and the acoustics were good (they are great) the theatre was just a
building. There has been an on-off interest
in new digs, maybe restoring the Liberty or maybe replacing it, but nothing much happened. Perhaps inspired by the work on the Egyptian Theatre,
just down the road in Coos Bay, the LTOB Board asked us to come out and take a look.
I had driven by the Liberty for years and never
really noticed it. The rather
monochromatic, (I called it Taupe-on-Taupe) faded, paint scheme didn’t exactly draw
the eye and, located at a curve on Sherman Street at the south part of downtown North Bend,
the natural inclination is to look away, toward the road. Certainly I'd not been inside and,
frankly, when the chance finally arrived this Spring, I didn’t expect to find much. I was wrong.
The interior has much of its original design…the lighting
and even the seats are all still there, probably not much different from what
they were in 1924. There has been some
change and loss (the painted murals are hidden) and there’s stage lighting and
sound from the conversion to live theater, but there's lots to work with.
The building is in good shape, mostly with deferred maintenance outdated systems, but nothing major. LTOB continues to put on plays and the magic on stage buys a lot of forgiveness for the limited services, lack of indoor ADA restrooms and small lobby and concession stand, but certainly the Liberty, a phenomenal Moorish design, could be so much more than it is. I couldn't see any reason not to rehab it and make it what it should be.
The building is in good shape, mostly with deferred maintenance outdated systems, but nothing major. LTOB continues to put on plays and the magic on stage buys a lot of forgiveness for the limited services, lack of indoor ADA restrooms and small lobby and concession stand, but certainly the Liberty, a phenomenal Moorish design, could be so much more than it is. I couldn't see any reason not to rehab it and make it what it should be.
LTOB decided to launch a fund-raising effort. The City of North Bend’s Urban Renewal Agency
very generously stepped up to the table with a major (like 6-figures major)
matching gift and over the next few years, in a series of phases, the Liberty
Theatre will get the attention that its needs.
We’ll bring the “show to the sidewalk,” and give LTOB the venue that their tradition of quality productions deserve.
Phase 1 was painting the exterior and having people notice the building and boy, do they ever! We did some testing to determine the color history of the exterior and came up with a historically-based design to support the Moorish style T&H chose in 1924. Next up, new restrooms and some lobby areas on the lot to the south, getting rid of the oh-so-lovely Sani-Can and then later a new marquee, some storage and rehearsal spaces, new systems, and more. Stay tuned!
Phase 1 was painting the exterior and having people notice the building and boy, do they ever! We did some testing to determine the color history of the exterior and came up with a historically-based design to support the Moorish style T&H chose in 1924. Next up, new restrooms and some lobby areas on the lot to the south, getting rid of the oh-so-lovely Sani-Can and then later a new marquee, some storage and rehearsal spaces, new systems, and more. Stay tuned!