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    Greater LA

    Bob Baker Marionette Theater: new home, new ambitions

    Los Angeles’ oldest children’s theater recently moved from downtown to Highland Park. Now the marionette troupe wants to create a puppeteer academy, host workshops for kids, host film shoots and screenings, and work with musicians and comedians.

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    Person smiling broadly wearing glasses and plaid shirt against ivy-covered wall background.By Steve Chiotakis • Nov 27, 2019 • 1 min read

    Los Angeles’ oldest children’s theater recently moved from downtown to Highland Park, and its 2,000 puppets came along too.

    “It's like a Disney cartoon come to life. It feels like anything's possible here. You could dream of something, and it could happen in front of your eyes,” says Alex Evans of the new 10,000 square foot space. Evans is Executive Director and Head Puppeteer of the Bob Baker Marionette Theater.

    One of the puppets at Bob Baker Marionette Theater.

    Evans took over from Baker after he passed away in 2014.

    Evans’ decade with the theater has been somewhat shaky. He wasn’t sure if the new opening day -- Nov. 29 -- would ever come. “We used to think every Christmas was going to be our last Christmas,” Evans says.

    Before Baker’s death, his theater was experiencing financial tumult for years. Developers eventually bought the original space.

    In searching for a new home, the marionette troupe looked at more than 50 buildings in downtown, Boyle Heights, Echo Park, Burbank, Pasadena, and other neighborhoods.

    They chose the Highland Park location, a former silent theater-turned-Korean church.

    What drove that decision? Evans says, “There's just character here, just stuff you respond to. In every corner, there are layers of history.”

    This history includes a baptism pit beneath the stage and an organ pit beneath that.

    The theater will look to make more history going forward. Bob Baker Marionette Theater has a new 10-year lease at this space and a new nonprofit status.

    Now the marionette troupe has lofty ambitions. They want to create a puppeteer academy, host workshops for kids, produce Baker’s unfinished shows, host film shoots and screenings, and work with musicians and comedians.

    The theater recently collaborated with the label Burger Records, whose artists covered classic Bob Baker songs. Earlier this year, the theater held an EP release party with rapper Lil Nas X, and made a puppet in his likeness.

    However, the theater’s core purpose will always be to serve kids.

    • Person smiling broadly wearing glasses and plaid shirt against ivy-covered wall background.

      Steve Chiotakis

      Afternoon News Anchor

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      Angel Carreras

      2022 KCRW Radio Race winner

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      Christian Bordal

      Managing Producer, Greater LA

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      Jenna Kagel

      Radio producer

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      Caleigh Wells

      Former KCRW climate reporter

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