Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar: The Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery, Ohio, March 4, 2025.

Copyright © 2025 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

I spent four days in Columbus, Ohio, last week. The trip was sandwiched in between load-in and tech week for the Gilbert & Sullivan Very Light Opera Co. production of Patience. The trip also fell between the opening and closing of my son’s first high school musical as a performer. Aaron was cast in the role of Nigel Bottom for Armstrong Highschool’s production of Something’s Rotten.

My journey to Ohio was for three specific projects:

1.) Documenting an 1883 historic scenery collection in Fort Recovery.

2.) Teaching a paint lab class at USITT (United States Institute of Theatre Technology) in Columbus.

3.) Photographing the birthplace of Joseph Sosman in Chillicothe.

It is hard to pinpoint the highlight of my trip, but documenting the Sosman & Landis scenery is certainly close to the top.

Two Sosman & Landis shutters delivered to the Morvilius Opera House in 1883, Fort Recovery, Ohio. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Lorri Kaup in front of the Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery, Ohio. The stage is located on the second floor of the building. The front windows are on the upstage wall. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett on March 4, 2025.
Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Morvilius Opera House before the wings and shutters were removed from the stage.
The ceiling of the Morvilius Opera House before the ceiling was repaired and repainted. Sadly, not all of the original ornamental painting was preserved or replicated.

Prior departing for Ohio, I recognized that my journey would be fueled by coffee and chaos. I took a very early flight to Columbus and immediately headed west to Fort Recovery. Morvilius Opera House steward, Lorri Kaup, picked me up from the airport and we began our two-hours drive.

Our drive passed though farmland, a picturesque rural route reminiscent of any midwestern drive. Fields are mostly dormant now, but dotted with both wildlife and live stock. We were extremely fortunate that the weather cooperated throughout most of our drive. However, a series of incoming storms on March 5 provided me with ample resources for future painting projects. Here are a few scenes from our trip back to Columbus.

Farmland near Fort Recovery, Ohio. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett on March 5, 2025.
Farmland near Fort Recovery, Ohio. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett on March 5, 2025.
Cemetery near Fort Recovery, Ohio. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett on March 5, 2025.

Cemetery near Fort Recovery, Ohio. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett on March 5, 2025.
Cemetery near Fort Recovery, Ohio. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett on March 5, 2025.

My Fort Recovery project was to document the scenery collection and stage of the Adams Opera House (now known as the Morvilius Opera House), as well as lecture about the cultural and historical significance of the venue. That evening, I was scheduled to give a presentation to members from the opera house board, placing the original scenery, stage machinery (grooves), and lighting system (gas) within the context of local, regional, and national histories.

1883 with upper grooves for wings and shutters. Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Flat sheaves on the shutters at the Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery, Ohio. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett, March 4, 2025.
Electric and gas footlights. Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein

Kaup and I had worked together for over a year. Last summer, she even attended my scenery preservation workshop at the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana in Mount Pleasant, Iowa – http://thetheatremuseum.com/.

Lorri Kaup and Grace Swank-Davis cleaning a historic drop at the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana in Mount Pleasant, Iowa. June 2024.
Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana in Mount Pleasant, Iowa. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett, June 2024.

In Iowa, I instructed students in the cleaning and minor repair of painted settings. Richard Finkelstein was also on site at the time, documenting my process and artifacts throughout the museum. He later created a virtual tour of the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana.

Richard Finkelstein and Jenny Knott joined me in Fort Recovery on March 4. We met at the opera house, then headed to document scenery in an off-site storage facility. Jenny was on her way to USITT where we were scheduled to teach the Paint Lab class “Foliage and Flowers: A Lesson in Color and Speed.”

Wendy Waszut-Barrett, Jenny Knott and Richard Finkelstein. March 4, 2025.

In Fort Recovery, Jenny and I photographed details and painting techniques, while Richard focused on the larger compositions (working his photographic “magic” once back home).

Wendy Waszut-Barrett and Jenny Knott documenting painting techniques in Fort Recovery, Ohio. March 4, 2025.

Much of the Morvilius scenery is currently stored at the Kaup’s warehouse where Lorri is not only cleaning the painted compositions, but also repairing some of the damaged fabric. Once the wings and shutters are cleaned and stabilized, I will be back to address paint preservation and other conservation tasks.

Here are a series of photographs from our site visit. Unless noted, all the images below were taken by Richard Finkelstein. Please credit his work if you use any of the images.

Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Proscenium arch detail, Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Painted detail from proscenium mural. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett, March 4, 2025.
House left side wall, Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio. These murals were done at a later date (and by a different artist), but intended to match the proscenium mural. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
SL wings. The Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Wendy Waszut-Barrett and Lorri Kaup moving a profile piece, in the SR wings. The Morviliius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Roller for a drop curtain on the stage of the Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio. Windows are all along the upstage wall, facing the street. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Sosman & Landis shutter painted for the Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio, c. 1883. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Sosman & Landis shutters painted for the Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio, c. 1883. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Sosman & Landis shutter painted for the Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio, c. 1883. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein
Two Sosman & Landis shutters painted for the Morvilius Opera House in Fort Recovery Ohio, c. 1883. Site Survey by Richard Finkelstein during the early days of its restoration. Site visit was on March 4, 2025. This photo is by Richard Finkelstein.
Scenery collection from the Morvilius Opera House, currently stored off site in Fort Recovery, Ohio. Photograph by Wendy Waszut-Barrett, March 4, 2025.

To be continued…

Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar: Scenic Artist Walter Hann.

Copyright © 2024 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

“Mr. W. Hann” was credited with the painting of stock scenery for the Adelina Patti Theatre at Craig Y Nos Castle, Wales, in 1891. This was Walter Hann, a well-known, well-respected, and extremely talented artist, having worked in the scene painting trade for thirty-five years.

A portion of the garden drop by Walter Hann that has not been overpainted.
Garden backdrop and three borders attributed by Walter Hann (c. 1891) at the Adelina Patti Theatre, Craig Y Nos Castle, Wales.
Painted detail on border curtain painted by Walter Hann for the Adelina Patti Theatre in 1891.

It was a familiar name to me; one that I have repeatedly encountered over the years, yet a career that I not really tracked down. Hann was an incredibly prolific artist, widely credited with many productions in both London and New York. Hann Some are listed in Robin Thurlow Lacy’s A Biographical Dictionary of Scenographers and Bobbi Owens’ The Broadway Design Roster. He is one of those 19th-century scenic artists who should have a database dedicated to his productions;  there are just SO many. 

Amazingly, an article about Walter Hann was published in Friends of West Norwood Cemetery  in Sept 1998. It even included a portrait of Hann; one that I have yet to locate online.

Walter Hann’s portrait, included in Friends of West Norwood Cemetery Newsletter (Sept 1998).

Walter Hann was born on Jan. 11, 1838, in London. The youngest child of Robert Hann (1782-1874) and Mary Ann Carey (b. 1795). Walter was one of many children fathered by Robert Hann, with some historians suggesting as many as nineteen. This gets a little confusing as Robert Hann was married twice, and both his wives were named Mary:  Mary Hillier (m. in Sparkford, Somerset, England from 1802-1812) and Mary Carey (m. at St. Martin in the Fields, Westminster, London, from 1818-1874). Incidentally, I tracked down only one child from his first marriage to Mary Hillier – Robert Hann, born in 1808.

By the time Walter was born, his parents (Robert Hann and Mary Ann Carey) had been wed for over twenty years, and there were at least two more born after him.

Here are the children from Robert Hann’s second marriage:

Jane (b. 1819-?), Richard (1821-22), William (1822-23), Ann (b. 1824-25), Louisa (1825-26), Eliza (b. 1827-28), William Henry (b. 1827-28), Henry (b. 1831-1920), William (1832-1920), Caroline (1834-1917), Ellen (1835-?), Walter (1838-1922), Emily (b. 1841-?), Robert Jr. (1847-?), In looking at the birth and death dates, the first child to not die withing the first year of life was Henry in 1831; I cannot imagine this type of consistent loss from 1819 to 1831.

Walter’s father was consistently employed as a baker throughout his life.

Hann is part of a scenic art legacy. He was apprenticed to William John Callcott (1823-1900) at the Surrey Theatre in 1853. 1851 Census listed William J. Callcott as an “artist in oil and water colour,” living with his much younger brother Albert Callcott, who also worked as scenic artist at the Surrey Theatre. The two continued to live (and work) together for the next decade, even after William married Elizabeth Irons in 1855.

Hann picked a truly good apprentice, as Callcott’s work continued to be heralded, even after his passing in 1900. Examples of Calcott’s work were still included in the 1905 exhibition at Grafton Galleries in 1905, organized by the newly-formed Scenic Artists’ Association. On April 13, 1905, The Times reported, “The Scenic Artists’ Association, which was founded last year, is holding at the Grafton Galleries a week’s exhibition of drawings, paintings, models of scenes and other things, most of them the work of the members, some of them sent by members and friends. Scattered among the works of the living artists – for no one who has visited the exhibition will hesitate to grant the living exhibitor’s right to the term – are a few well-known old masters, examples of David Cox, Sam Bough, the Leitches, Nasmyth, Clarkston Stanfield, and W. J. Callcott…”

Calcott was not only well-known for his scenic art, but also easel art; his large-scale marine scenes were especially popular.  

Over the years, Hann also studied with William Roxby Beverly, Charles Marshall, and John Coleman. In turn, Hann’s own assistants included Joseph Harker, Bruce Smith (noted as his only apprentice), and his own son Ernest Hann (1879-1966). Ernest would follow in his father’s footsteps and continuously work as a scenic artist throughout the duration of his career.

This scenic art lineage, identifies Walter Hann as a key link in the development of English scenic art. He is especially significant when examining the throughline from one generation of English artists to the next.  Skills he learned at the paint benches of Callcott, Beverly, Marshall and Coleman were passed along to Harker, Smith, and his own son Ernest Hann. From there, you can continue to trace the scenic art legacy in theatre at home and abroad.

Scenic art remnants of Hann’s contribution to the Adelina Patti Theatre in 1891 are of both historical and cultural importance. Furthermore, the Victoria & Albert Museum holds dozens of Hann designs, dating from 1868-1904. Here is an example of Hann’s design work in the V&A Museum digital database:

Walter Hann’s scenic design for a production of Junius by Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1885). Victoria and Albert Museum Department of Prints and Drawings and Department of Paintings Accessions 1966 London: HMSO, 1967.

Here is the link for the 1885 design for Junius:https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O695380/print-hann\

Hann’s career follows a series of twists and turns that links him to dozens of theaters throughout the UK. By 1856, Hann was engaged at Her Majesty’s Royal Italian Opera, and then the Adelphi Theatre in Sheffield. It was at the Adelphi that Hann was credited with the design and painting for Ambition in 1857. By now, Hann’s career was beginning to take shape.

The 1861 Census listed 23-yrs.-old Hann working as a scenic artist and living with his parents. The Hann household at that time included Robert Hann (79, retired baker), Mary A. Hann (65), Caroline Hann (27), Walter (23, scenic artist) and two boarders.

At the age of 25 yrs. old, Walter Hann married his first wife, Harriet Frances Dawes, The couple was wed on 9 March 1863 at St. Mary’s Lambeth, Surrey, England. That same year, Hann began painting with F. Lloyds at the St. James Theatre.

From 1865-1868 Hann worked at the Princess’s Theatre. This was at the same time, his family began to rapidly expand, celebrating the birth of their first three children: Harriet (b. 1864, St. Pancras) Walter Jr. (b. 1867, St. Pancras), Arthur (b. 1868).

Hann was making a name for himself, securing business form repeat customers. In 1868 and 1870, Hann delivered two act drops to the old Lyceum Theatre, painting at the venue throughout the early 1870s. From 1871-1874, Hann’s work was featured at the Princess Theatre (Manchester), The Prince of Wales Theatre (Birmingham), the Court Theatre, and Covent Garden.

By 1874, the Hann family lived at 51, Arthur Rd. Brixton. It was at this time that Hann’s professional and personal life began to thrive. Walter and Harriet Hann celebrated the birth of two more children in the 1870s: Constance (b. 1876, B. Brixton) and Ernest (b. 1879). He continued to work at the Lyceum, as well as Her Majesty’s in London.

As his family continued to expand, Hann also began painting scenery for William S. Gilbert’s plays. His contributions are detailed in Backdrop to a Legend: The Scenic Design of the D’Oyly Carte Opera Company (Raymond Walker and David Skelly, 2018. By the end of the 1870s, Hann was also working for Henry Irving on his productions at the Lyceum Theatre. Hann was painting alongside Hawes Craven, T.W. Hall, J.S. Hall, and W. Cuthbert.

The increased demand for Hann’s scenic art, prompted him to move his family from Brixton to Lambeth. The 1881 Census listed the Hann family’s address as 24 Guildford Rd, Lambeth, London. The household now included Walter (43), Harriet (41), Harriet (19), Walter Jr. (14), Arthur (12), Constance (4), Ernest (2) and a servant. During thr early 1880s, Hann began to paint on several productions for Wilson Barrett, including Romeo and Juliet (1881, Court Theatre) and Hamlet (1884, Princess’s Theatre).

Walter Hann’s scenic design for a production of Hamlet, showing an interior of the Palace (1884). Victoria & Albert Museum Department of Prints and Drawings and Department of Paintings Accessions 1966 London: HMSO 1967

Here is the link for the 1884 design for Hamlet: https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O695386/theatre-design-hann/

In 1880 Hann established his own studio on Murphy Street where he would enjoy great success painting for well-known theatrical personalities that included Wilson Barrett, Henry Irving, Dion Boucicault, Herbert Beerbohm Tree, Bancroft, H. A. Jones, and many others. Hann was entering the peak of his career by the late 1880s. It is in the midst of success, that tragedy often strikes. In 1887, his wife passed away, followed by his son Arthur the next year.

In 1890, Hann was primarily painting on productions for John Lancaster at the Shaftesbury Theatre and Wilson Barrett at the New Olympic Theatre. The year that Hann painted scenery for Adelina Patti, he was doing extremely well, with his name constantly making news. It is not surprising that Patti hired him to paint stock scenery for her theatre.  

In 1891, Hann frequently made news, credited with an abundance of scenery. That year, he was associated with the following Shaftesbury Theatre productions: The Middleman  (painted with J. A. O’Rorke), Handfast  (painted with Mr. H. Potts), and Judah. Hann’s work for Wilson Barrett at the Olympis Theatre included Ben-My-Chree and The Acrobat (painted with Stafford Hall). Hann also worked with T. F. Dunn and Joseph Harker on scenery for The Idler, performed at Theatre Royal, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne that September, The following month, Hann was credited with scenery for The Crusader, Henry Arthur Jones’ new play of Modern London Life.

The year after Hann delivered Adelina Patti’s stock scenery he married. On July 6, 1892, Emily “Totty” Mary Matthews (1857-1944) became his wife.  The two celebrated the birth of only one child, in 1896 – Maurice Hann.  

In addition to his scenic art, Hann’s easel art was also well-received and quite popular He exhibited at numerous galleries throughout his career, including the Suffolk Street Gallery, Royal Hiberian Gallery, and the Royal Academy. I am going to stop here, as this gives a pretty good snapshot of why Patti selected Hann to paint her stock scenery collection. In 1891, his scenic art skill and theatrical connections were paramount.

There is a wonderful article about Hann published in The Era on May 25, 1912 (Thank you for sharing, Mike Hume!). An interview with Hann was included in a section entitled, “Scenery, Scenic Art, and Its Artists.” Here is the full transcription, with portrait of Hann:

Interview with Walter Hann.

A Londoner by birth, born as far back as 1838, son of Robert Hann. He has two daughters, three sons, and one son working with him in his business, and, generally speaking, he has been constantly at work now for 56 years. “That’s what I call a pretty long time, Mr. Hann. I suppose you have painted every subject in the world, every country in the world, and every style of architecture in the world in your vast experiences?”

Mr. Hann acknowledged that it fell to the lot of a scenic artist to be very versatile and be able to grasp any subject at a very short notice, and nothing escaped him. More so than the academician, I suggested. Mr. Hann said that he had exhibited himself in the Royal Academy some half a dozen times, and one of the pictures painted in distemper on brown paper was sold to Mr. George R. Sims, who, I believe, would not part with it, “He has asked me for a companion, but I regret to say I have neglected to do so.” Then the late Wilson Barrett was made a present of another picture, which was recorded in “The Era.” But here are a few celebrated people he has worked for: John Colman, Frederick Lloyd, George Vining, Marie Litton, Sir Henry Irving, the Bancrofts, Wilson Barrett, Hare, and Kendal, Sir George Alexander, Forbes-Robertson, Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, Augustin Daly, George Edwards, Frank Curzon, Charles Calvert, Dion Boucicault, Tom B. Davis, Charles Frohman, Frederick Harrison, Cyril Maude, Arthur Chudleigh, Weedon Grossmith, William Grœt, Charles Hawtey, Henry Arthur Jones, Otto Stuart, and practically every important manager in the country.

And here are a few productions that he has either done entirely or been connected with: – Royal Italian Opera, the original; “Arrah-na-Pogue,” “Streets of London,” “Dark Days,” “The Huguenots,” “Babil and Bijou”, “Rienzi,” “Romeo and Juliet,” “Still Waters Run Deep,” “Mice and Men,” “Othello,” “The Light That Failed,” “Twin Sister,” “Letty,” “Claudian,” “Junius,” “Hamlet,” “Lights of London,” “Romany Rye,” and the following now running: – “Mind the Paint Girl,” “Looking for Trouble,” “At the Barn,” and others.

He started as a scenic artist at the old Her Majesty’s Theatre, and has been scenic artist at the old Adelphi in Sheffield, St. Jame’s, Olympic, Princess’s, Court Theatre, Covent Garden, and nearly every noted theatre in London. It was at Sheffield that he was responsible for the production of “Ambition,” it being his first complete production.

“I suppose you have had a great number of apprentices in your time, Mr. Hann?”

No, I haven’t. I only had one who became a scene painter, and that was Bruce Smith, who is one of the most genial men in the profession. He was painting with me three years, and he has been doing it ever since, and I rejoice in his success.”

“Can you give me a list of some of your principal assistants, who have worked with you?”

“Well, Jos. Harker, worked with me for some time, also Tom Hall, H. P. Hall, Theodore Parry, and a whole host of assistants who have not yet come to the front, but show great promise.”

“What is your favorite amusement?”

“Painting, and if I have any spare time I seek nature.”

“Have you done any important work, Mr. Hann, beside theatrical work and pictures?”

“Yes,” he replied, “a few things, the most important being for the Brussels Exhibition in 1910. I painted some tableaux illustrating the woolen industry for the Chamber of Commerce, firstly, a series of tableaux showing the process through which the wool has to go before being ready for use. They were in the following order: The sheep grazing on the hillside, wool sorting, combing, spinning, dyeing, and weaving, with lifesized wax figures of the mill hands busy at the machines. All the machinery was correct in very detail, being painted under the supervision of two of the engineers sent specially from Bradford for the purpose, culminating a fell-sized tableaux of the interior of the lobby of the House of Commons, with twenty-five lifesized wax figures of prominent M. P.’s of the day, all their clothing being made of woolen materials from the Bradford mills. Other tableaux, showing completed materials in the form of clothing.

“Some of these tableaux were destroyed in that terrible fire at the Brussels Exhibition, so I repainted them for the exhibition at Turin the following year.”

“And what is that, Mr. Hann?” said I, pointing to a certificate hanging on the wall.

“Oh, that,” he replied, “is a gold medal diploma awarded to me for the work I was just speaking of which I did for the Brussels Exhibition.”

“That is an honour, Mr. Hann.”

“Yes, he replied, “and one I greatly appreciate; but I must own, I don’t live for the honour; I love for my work.”

“Well, I see you are busy, painting a gymnasium and a lovely woodland for the Duke of York’s, so I think I will leave you to do some more of your work of love, and get on with mine. Good wishes, good luck, and best of health ofr years to come.

T. B. S.

From The Era 25 May 1912.

As with many great scenic artists, little of their scenic work remains. That is what makes the scenic remnants at the Adelina Patti theatre so remarkable. Despite changes in ownership and building renovations, they have somehow managed to survive.

Painted detail on border curtain painted by Walter Hann for the Adelina Patti Theatre in 1891.
Painted detail on border curtain painted by Walter Hann for the Adelina Patti Theatre in 1891.

To be continued…

Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar: Ruby Theatre. Chelan, Washington, April 22 – 29, 2024

Copyright © 2024 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

Many of my projects take years to plan and implement.  Such was the case with the main drape and valance at the Ruby Theatre in Chelan, Washington.

The drapes were intended to accentuate a newly acquired photo-player. The old ones having fallen into an irreparable state of disrepair.

Proving to be a bit of a diva during installation, theatre owner Larry Hibbard, appropriately named his photo-player Valentina. Photo-players accompanied silent movies with both music and sound effects. By the way, Valentina rises from the original orchestra pit, now hidden below the thrust. Hibbard explained that Valentina demanded this grand entrance after learning about the history of photo players from her big-city cousins .

“Valentina” – the photo-player – on stage at the Ruby Theatre in front of the new draperies.

Here is a link to an interview with Hibbard about his photo-player, named Valentina, for Wenatchee World (January 2021)- “Bringing Back a Piece of History to Chelan’s Ruby Theatre.” https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=416089849649129

Exterior of the Ruby Theatre in Chelan, Washington.

I was first contacted by Hibbard in November 2021. He was interested in replicating the main drape, complete with hand-painted border.

In January 2022, Hibbard shipped half of the main drape to my studio so I could examine the fabric and stencil. The arrival of the curtain at my studio coincided with another Washington State theater event that made national news. On Jan. 27, 2022, CNN reported, “A couple renovating a 115-year-old building discovered two 60-foot-long hidden murals.” The next day I received an email with a link to the article from my Canadian colleague John Madill. Madill was the first of many colleagues to share the online article; all urging me to contact the couple. I was hesistant as my schedule was already booked for the year.

The next day, on Jan. 29, 2022, I received the following FB message:

“Hi, Wendy! My husband and I recently uncovered a 60ft mural from 1915 and are hoping to conserve it. I was wondering if you could offer any advice or expertise as it looks like a theatre backdrop. There are videos and pictures on our Facebook group (mural restoration at the historic Timm building). Thanks so much.”

Great. I decided to see exactly where Okanogan was located.  Amazingly, it was less than an hour north of the Ruby Theatre in Chelan, Washington. That was my sign to plan a quick trip.

Here is a map of the area – west of Spokane, Washington.

The Okanogan Murals were located in a building once known as the Hub Theatre.

A small section of the mural, delivered to the Hub Theatre by the J. M. Deeds Scenic Studio of Spokane, Washington.

They were only seen by the public for three years before being encapsulated behind a wall of plaster. In 1918, the building was again renovated, becoming the Paramount Theatre.

The renovated Hub Theatre when it became the Paramount.

I did a little research, and soon discovered that J. M. Deeds Scenic Studio decorated BOTH Okanogan’s Hub Theatre and Chelan’s Ruby Theatre.  On Dec. 7, 1915, the Okanogan Independent announced, “Improvements at Hub’s.”  The article reported, “Hub Carlton has contracted with J. M. Deeds of Wenatchee for interior decorations, new screen and new curtain for the Hub Theatre that will greatly improve the inside appearance of this popular playhouse. Mr. Deeds came up from Wenatchee last week and is now supervising the work, which is being done by W. J. McConnon, and experienced decorator who has been in Mr. Deeds employ for some time. Mr. Deeds has just completed decorations for the Wenatchee theater, which is said to be one of the finest in this part of the state, and also is the man who did the decorating for the Ruby Theatre of Chelan, known far and near as one of the most attractive playhouses in the country. The new improvements at the Hub include 120 feet of panoramic landscape scenery in light tans. The picture screen will be 11×13 feet in size and have frame effects of moulding. There will also be a pretty drop advertising curtain with an overhead roll, noiseless I operation and will be controlled from the operator’s booth. Mr. Carlton is sparing no means to improve his place of business and is making additions to his equipment as rapidly as business will warrant.”

Here is a link to my previous post about James Marion Deeds: https://drypigment.net/2022/03/07/travels-of-a-scenic-artist-and-scholar-j-m-deeds/

After a quick visit to meet with both theater owners in Okanogan and Chelan, I was soon back in Okanogan to supervise the removal of both murals from a water-drenched building. As they were created with distemper paint (pigment paste and diluted hide glue), time was of the essence.

Removing the murals at the Old Hub Theatre in Okanogan, Washington. March 2022.

That fall, I again led a crew to clean and stabilize the murals before again placing them back into storage.

The murals hanging in an Okanogan Fairground building after Phase 1: cleaning and stabilization. October 2022.

All the while, I remained in contact with Hibbard about the Ruby Theatre project. It took us quite some time to locate a similar fabric. Creating a custom-dye job was not financially feasible, as the project was too small.

In the end we hired Liba Fabrics to manufacture the draperies with a lovely rose-colored fabric that shifted color under light.

They were shipped to the Ruby Theatre during the spring of 2023.

The plain curtains, valance, and side curtains, installed at the Ruby Theatre in 2023.

My trip to paint the draperies was scheduled for spring 2024.  Prior to my April departure, I replicated the stencil and completed several samples to look at on site before commencing the project with local assistants. As light altered the fabric to an alarming degree (that was the magic), we wanted to make sure that everything would work with the space.

Here is one of the three-color stencils…

The base color for the stencil.

Detail of the base color. I came up with a technique that made it look like velvet appliqués.

Two types of gold were applied for detail; warm and cool to help it take dimension from a distance.

Two types of gold paint were used for the second stencil.

Although photographs make it difficult to see the gold, it reflects light beautifully – especially in low-light conditions.

Completed stencil.

As anticipated, the “R” stencil would prove to be problematic. Enter, Patrece Canoy-Barrett. She re-stitched the top and flipped a pleat.

On site assistant, Patrece Canoy-Barrett, who re-stitched the pleats to make the “R” hang flat.

Addition highlight to “R” so it would “pop.” The seam disappears from a distance.

Completed stencil with Valentina, after painting the proscenium arch . Thrust lights are only used when Valentina emerges from the pit.

During my time on site, we also moved a drop curtain from the local museum back to the Ruby Theatre. I really wanted Hibbard to see how a painted element shifted the space. It was so successful that an event was planned to feature Valentina and the historic ad drop. The drop has since been returned to the Museum where it will be on display.

Moving the drop from the Museum to the Ruby Theatre.

Ad drop painted by J. C. Carpenter in 1932 for the Ruby Theatre.

To be continued…

Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar. The Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, Jan. 7-15, 2024.

Copyright © 2024 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

The Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana when we left work on January 13, 2024.

On January 7, 2024, I drove from Minneapolis, Minnesota, to Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. My project was to catalogue a portion of the vast scenery collection at the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana. Located in southeastern Iowa, this unique museum is “dedicated to the preservation of memorabilia and artifacts of early repertoire theatre.”

Here is a link to their website http://thetheatremuseum.com/

The Theatre Museum resulted from a memorabilia exhibit displayed at the Midwest Old Threshers Reunion and Iowa Wesleyan College in 1970. Local enthusiasm fueled discussions to build a Theatre Museum on Old Thresher Reunion show grounds. On September 1, 1973, the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana was dedicated, and is currently situated at the north end of the show grounds. I. must mention that most of the credit for this entire endeavor goes to the promotional efforts of Caroline Schaffner (Neil & Caroline Schaffner Players), Jimmy Davis (6-yrs. member and 35-yrs. owner of the Schaffner Players), Helen Virden, and Joe Mauck.

The exterior of the Theatre Musuem is intended to simulate a nineteenth-century opera house.

My photograph of the Theatre Museum Building, March 2017.

Over the years, a variety of theatre artifacts were donated to the museum, necessitating two major renovations. In 2000, the Caroline Schaffner Research Library was added to the building. This archival space is packed full of rare scripts, correspondence, tour schedules, production photos, and a large collection of videotaped interviews with performers describing their touring experiences.

There is much, much more to discuss about the Theatre Museum’s origin, but I am going to pause here.

Displays at the Theatre Museum include a variety of scenery, costumes, machinery, touring trunks, play bills, show cards, advertising sheets, playbills, musical instruments, and more. Here are a few photographs of museum displays from my most recent visit.

Display cases in front of two 1875 shutters painted by Harry Dressel for Steyer’s Opera House in Decorah, Iowa.

Interior book flat delivered by Iowa scenic artist Jesse Cox in front of an Ad Drop painted by Iowa scenic artist Hugh Lanning (for the Blakesburg Opera House) in 1905.

There are many aspects that make this museum that make it internationally significant. However, it is their association with the Midwest Old Threshers Reunion (Old Threshers) that I find the most remarkable.

To clarify this relationship: Old Threshers owns the museum, but it is run by a museum board.

(Click here for more information about the upcoming Reunion)

Now you may wonder, “What is an old threshers reunion?”  Let’s start with a thresher. A thresher, or threshing machine, beats the kernels from grain heads. This is a necessary step in the process of preparing grain for market. In the Midwest, many farmers gathered their resources to hire a threshing machine at harvest time. Threshing was an annual, or bi-annual, affair (depending on region) that gathered communities together for a common purpose. The result of their labors made it possible to ship large amounts of grain to flour mills and other processing plants across the country. For those who want to know about the evolution of the thresher, here is a link: https://www.farmcollector.com/steam-traction/evolution-of-the-thresher/

A Minneapolis Threshing Machine in front of chaff (the covering and other debris separated from the kernal when threshing grain).

Harnessing a steam engine’s power.

Although this is a far cry from current agricultural practices, it marked a culturally significant events for farmers. Threshing reunions celebrate agricultural technology from the nineteenth-century through mid-twentieth century. In addition to tractors and farming equipment these shows feature other aspects of farm life, including innovative technology and cultural artifacts from metropolitan areas too.

Also referred to a “steam shows,” the main feature are rows of tractors, with the earliest examples powered by steam. There is nothing quite like watching a massive steam tractor slowly puff across a field or power a threshing machine. It is a multi-sensory experience that instantaneously transports you back to another time and place. It provides contexts for all those American History classes that examined rural communities. If the show grounds include a steam engine that puffs along on a few miles of track, old-time music, vintage-clothing style show, it is magical.

I have been a member of the Western Minnesota Steam Threshers Reunion (WMSTR) since 1972. Here is their link and a few pictures from 2023: https://rollag.com/

My son and mother playing music in the WMSTR mercantile building, 2023.

My dad and husband working as conductors on the 353.

My dad has been the WMSTR Hobo for three decades.

Sadly, both WMSTR and the Midwest Old Threshers hold their reunions at the same time – on Labor Day Weekend.

Threshing shows are extremely affordable, with a four-day pass costing approximately $30.00. Both volunteers and visitors often camp on, or near, the show grounds for the entire event. This creates a tight-knit community over the years, fostering many life-long friendships.

Threshing shows offer something for everyone in the family, but the inclusion of a theatre museum makes the Midwest Old Threshers Reunion unique.  As in days past, the museum offers respite to those weary from spending the day outside. In fact, it is a natural pairing that many fail to realize; the bringing of theatrical entertainment to rural activities.

As America’s network of transportation expanded throughout the second half of the nineteenth century, performance venues rapidly appeared throughout the Midwestern States and Western Territories. Scenery was delivered to stages in buildings titled Opera House, Opera Hall, Academy of Music, Museum, and Atheneum. Town halls, city halls, lodge rooms, saloons, and academic institutions. These spaces included stages, often with complete sets of scenery. The construction of a stage, regardless of the building’s name, signaled the success of a rural community. It signified that there was a social space to not only host a variety of community events, but also serve the needs of touring entertainments. For farming families, it was an opportunity to connect with their neighbors and in-town residents. Overall, it fostered the sense of community and provided a network of support for many individuals otherwise isolated on distant homesteads.

The Theatre Museum’s scenery collection includes scenery dating as early as 1875.  Painted compositions for the stage feature the works of many well-known studios, including Sosman & Landis, Kansas City Scenic Co., Twin City Scenic Company, Joy & Cannon Scenic Company, and Universal Scenic Company. Some pieces are even signed and dated, signifying the only surviving scenic artworks by well-known scenic artist’s Arthur R. Hurtt and Harry Dressel. There is also an extensive collection of the Diamond Dye scenery painted Jesse Cox, founder of Cox Scenic Studios in Estherville, Iowa. The Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana houses the greatest variety of late-nineteenth century and early-twentieth century scenery on display in North America.

Studio label on back of a drop recently documented at the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana.

Jesse Cox’s paint table on display in front of a dye drop.

During my stay, I documented far more than 50 drops, and there are dozens of wings and interior flats to go, with some dating as early as 1875. Despite, two blizzards and sub-zero temperatures, the trip was extremely successful.  Keep in mind, that I was born and raised in Minnesota. I am very familiar with driving in near white-out conditions and have snow tires on my car. However, I am always hesitant to put myself in harm’s way on a winter road.

On Sunday, January 7, 2024, I drove from Minneapolis, MN, to the home of my host in Washington, Iowa, where I stayed at the home of Theatre Museum president, Monie Hayes.

He was my timeline for the week:

Day 1: On Monday, January 8, we both drove the 40-min. trip to Mt. pleasant, Iowa. That day we were able to unroll and document ten drops. Our primary focus was unlabeled scenery stored in the basement, above the stage and on the walls. The basement of the museum is another display area with small stage.

Day 2: On Tuesday, January 9, the first blizzard hit, dumping about 15” of snow where I was staying. It was an intense storm system that paused and spiraled around Washington. We called work off for that day, so I started compiling my report. Sadly, this delay meant extending my stay.

Screen shot of my weather app radar on Jan. 9, 2024.

Day 3: On Wednesday, January 10, I drove down the Mt. Pleasant, where we repeated the process, slowly unrolling, or unfolding, one scene at a time.

Day 4: On Thursday, January 11, I relocated to the home of another board members, Leigh Bradley, in Mt. Pleasant. I needed to be in town and not commute 40 minutes to an from the job site. My decision was based on the forecast of another blizzard. This storm was now combined with sub-zero temperatures. Iowa had again issued a no-tow order, meaning that travel was at your own risk; tow trucks would not be sent out to rescue stranded cars. As I was now staying only a few miles away from the Museum, we continued cataloguing scenery.  The second storm was scheduled to start at 9PM that evening. After work, we all headed out to dinner at a local restaurant. These are the moments that make everything worthwhile; getting to know the people who are passionate about preserving there scenery collection.

Part of the week-long team included Richard Finkelstein. He had driven 14 hours to join me on site and photograph this remarkable collection.  As always, I am amazed with Richard’s talent, knowledge, and generosity.  It was such a delight to work with him again. Our last project was at the Scottish Rite in Richmond, Virginia when I packed up and moved that Masonic scenery collection to Tucson, Arizona, in January 2021.

Richard Finkelstein working at the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana.

Wendy Waszut-Barrett and Richard Finklestein at the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana.

Our workspace in the basement. Platforms and chairs were moved in the auditorium to lay out the backdrops.

Signature on corner of a Front Curtain (shown above), painted at the Twin City Scenic Co. in 1915.

Days 5 and 6: The back-to-back winter storm and second blizzard warnings for January 12 and 13 meant that there were only two volunteers who could show up. In many ways, these were my two favorite days on site.

Day 7: By Sunday morning, I recognized that I was going to be stranded in Mt. Pleasant another day. Again, there was a no-tow order, and I was unwilling to chance the 5-hrs. drive north; some roads were still impassible due to snow and ice.

Day 8: In the end, I left early Monday morning, and made it home by late afternoon. The anticipated 5-hrs. drive lasted much longer due to poor road conditions and slow speeds.

Iowa roads after the storms on January 15, 2024.

Here are a few images from my adventure.

1875 Shutter painted by Chicago scenic artist, Harry Dressel, for Steyer’s Opera House in Decorah, Iowa.

Detail from a drawing on the backside of Dressel’s shutter.

Detail of Grand Drapery Border paint by Sosman & Landis Scenic Studio, delivered to Mineral Point, Wisconsin.

Painted detail from dye drop painted by Jesse Cox of Estherville, Iowa.

Painted detail from dye drop painted by Jesse Cox of Estherville, Iowa.

Painted detail delivered the the Quoque Community Hall in Long Island, New York.

Painted detail by Sosman & Lanids studio artists for the ZCBJ Lodge Hall Front Curtain in Oxford Junction, Iowa.

Painted detail from a “Yankee Doodle” scene used by the Jack & Maude Brooks Stock Co.

Painted detail from a 1918 Ad Drop.

Stage screw and stage jack on display the the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana.

Border lights from the Blakesburg Opera House on display at the Theatre Museum.

The next few posts will explore some of the more significant scenery in the collection, starting with Arthur R. Hurtt’s street scene. I am posting some of my research while I complete condition reports, replacement appraisals, and a Collections Care Management document for the Theatre Museum of Repertoire Americana. In an effort to generate support for the Theatre Museum, I will share some of the most significant artifacts in the scenery collection.

Please consider becoming a member of the Theatre Museum. The annual fee is only $20 ($15 for students). Your support sends a message to the Midwest Old Thresher’s Reunion and the Mt. Pleasant Community that the Theatre Museum is important and should remain open. Here is the link to contribute: http://thetheatremuseum.com/membership

To be continued…

Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar: The St. Louis Scottish Rite, March 19, 2023

Copyright © 2023 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

On November 30, 2022, I received a FB message from Robert Van Dillen, a St. Louis-based scenic artist. He asked if I would consider being guest speaker for an upcoming scenic art event in St. Louis, tentatively scheduled for the beginning of 2023. Van Dillen explained that there was a group of local scenic artists who wanted to see the St. Louis Scottish Rite scenery collection before the building was sold. Unfortunately, the tentative date coincided with my trip to the Galveston Scottish Rite. We looked at a couple of possibilities, and then scheduled the event to coincide with my March trip to USITT.

My last visit to the St. Louis Scottish Rite theatre also coincided with USITT in 2017. This is a remarkable scenery collection delivered by Toomey & Volland, of St. Louis. I spent much of the conference documenting the scenery, stage machinery, and building.

Tomoey & Volland Studio stencil on the back of a Scottish Rite backdrop.

Just prior to the conference, I documented the gridiron with Rick Boychuk and Richard Nix.

High above the St. Louis Scottish Rite stage with Rick Boychuk and Richard Nix in 2017.

For the remainder of my stay in 2017, I painstakingly photographed one drop after another, trying to capture as many painted details as possible. I am afraid that I spent very little time at the conference that year. In hindsight, however, it was a good thing, as I may never have the time again. Here is one of the posts about my 2017 visit to the St. Louis Scottish Rite: https://drypigment.net/2017/05/17/tales-from-a-scenic-artist-and-scholar-acquiring-the-fort-scott-scenery-for-the-minnesota-masonic-heritage-center-part-88/

One of many photos from my trip to the St. Louis Scottish Rite Theatre in 2017.

On this trip, I arrived at the St. Louis Scottish Rite by 9AM on Sunday morning, March 19, 2023. I was accompanied by my close friend and colleague, Jenny Knott. Alessia Carpoca, Mike Monsos, and Martha (University of Montana – Missoula) soon joined us, as they had an early flight to catch; one that prevented them from staying for the entire presentation. From 9-10:30 a.m., we shifted furniture, set up the power point, and double checked the lines. I wanted to make sure that everything was in working order for my presentation. This also provided Mike, Alessia, and Martha, with the opportunity to see some of the drops before their early departure. I am very grateful to Mike for handling the operating lines during this time!

At 10:30 a.m., I gave a quick power-point presentation to provide some context, placing what we were going to see within the context of American scenic art and theatre history. By “quick” I mean thirty minutes! Then we brought in one scene after another for the next three hours. By 2 p.m. I called it quits, due my impending flight and grumbling stomach.  We grabbed a quick bit to eat and then I was on my way to the airport.

The St. Louis Scottish Rite Theatre is a sight to behold. It is a three-thousand-seat auditorium that boasts a 90’-0” wide proscenium opening.

The St. Louis Scottish Rite auditorium.
Looking up into the flies at the St. Louis Scottish Rite. Scenery by Toomey & Volland Studios, c. 1923.

The size and scope of this Masonic scenery collection is almost unparalleled, with the McAlester Scottish Rite from 1929 being a major contender. There are 147 line sets, with stage machinery and scenery produced by the Toomey & Volland studio in 1923. There are a few drops that pre-date the building, a couple more that were delivered in later years.

The Scenic Studio where the St. Louis Scottish Rite scenery was painted in 1923.

Sadly, this may be the last time I get to visit and examine this remarkable scenery collection. Like many massive Masonic buildings, it is up for sale. Rumors of a sale had already begun in 2017. This is not surprising, considering a series of obstacles faced by many fraternal organizations; challenges that range from declining membership and insufficient funds to high utility bills and a long-term practice of deferred maintenance. My only hope is that when the building is sold, the scenery is somehow preserved for future generations. This collection really needs to be professionally documented, complete with lights and props, before it disappears.

Many thanks to Rob for organizing this event. I also want to thank his wonderful colleagues who so warmly welcomed me to St. Louis. I am grateful that we were able to share this experience together.

Here are a few pictures from our day at the St. Louis Scottish Rite.

A painted scene at the St. Louis Scottish Rite. Scene by Toomey & Volland Studios, c. 1923.
Metallic strips that make the foliage sparkle under stage light.
My host, Rob Van Dillen behind a section of theatrical gauze.
Scenic artists at the St. Louis Scottish Rite. March 19, 2023. Scene by Toomey & Volland Studios, c. 1923.
Changing scenes at the St. Louis Scottish Rite. March 19, 2023.
A few of the scenic artists who gathered at the Scottish Rite on March 19, 2023.
Scenic Artists at the St. Louis Scottish Rite on March 19, 2023.
Painted detail from the carpenter shop scene at the St. Louis Scottish Rite.
Landscape backdrop at the St. Louis Scottish Rite. March 19, 2023.
Painted detail from a landscape drop at the St. Louis Scottish Rite. March 19, 2023.
Painted detail from a landscape drop at the St. Louis Scottish Rite. March 19, 2023.
Painted detail from a drop at the St. Louis Scottish Rite. March 19, 2023.
The Camp Scene at the St. Louis Scottish Rite. March 19, 2023. Scene by Toomey & Volland Studios, c. 1923.

Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar: Louisville, Kentucky, Nov. 8-12, 2022

Copyright © 2022 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

My recent scenery restoration project at the Louisville Scottish Rite Theater began three years ago in 2019. These projects are often years in the making, and it really takes the right person to set the ball in motion.  I have watched scenery collections crumble from both indecision and poor stewardship. Time is often of the essence when historic scenes start to fail.  Scenery that survived decades against an upstage wall can rapidly deteriorate over the course of a few years if the conditions are right.

My initial visit to the Louisville Scottish Rite was a side trip while attending USITT (United States Institute of Theatre Technology). Whenever I attend the annual conference, I try and schedule a visit to a nearby Scottish Rite theatre or historic opera house. These side trips provide me with an opportunity to learn and document “just one more” scenery collection.

Visiting the Louisville Scottish Rite during the USITT conference in 2019.
The Louisville Scottish Rite Auditorium.
The Louisville Scottish Rite.

The only day that I could photograph Masonic scenery while attending USITT in 2019 was on Wednesday, March 20. Preparations for the Scottish Rite reunion were scheduled to start the next day. I had from 9AM to 3PM to document as much as possible and make my way back to the convention center for a meeting.

I must have made an impression, as the Louisville Scottish Rite hired me that fall to assess the collection. I was contracted to compile condition reports, historic analyses, and replacement appraisals for each drop in the collection. My documents that December were so well-received that I was asked to visit Louisville and present my findings at a special event.

The Egyptian Setting for the 31st degree was one of six settings featured during my presentation on March 7, 2020.

On March 7, 2020, I was the guest speaker for Family night at the Louisville Scottish Rite.  I gave a presentation about their historic scenery collection, tracing the history of Masonic scenery in the United States and placing the Louisville Scottish Rite scenery collection withing the context of American theater. At the time I was also asked to work as an historical consultant for upcoming interior renovations throughout the building. After speaking at the Scottish Rite in Louisville in March 2020, the pandemic put everything on hold.

March 2020 – May 2022

Eventually, I lost touch with the Louisville Scottish Rite and moved onto other projects, yet the Louisville Scottish Rite scenery collection continued to lurk in the back of my mind. Surprisingly, Randolph Starks, Secretary of the Louisville Scottish Rite, reached out again last spring.  On May 2, 2022, I received the following text: “Hi Wendy. It has been a very long time since we spoke, but I have enjoyed seeing your Facebook posts, the reports of your travels, and the images of your beautiful artwork. I would like to renew our conversation about you providing advice and guidance on some renovation and painting of our Scottish Rite temple. Let me know when you would be available to schedule a phone call to discuss this.”  I received this on the same day that my mother went into the ER, so our conversation was again placed on hold for a few more months.

Stark contacted me again on June 29, 2022, but for another reason.

I received a series of pictures of the Egyptian cut drop, with the text message, “Hi Wendy. We just discovered this damage to this scenery drop today. I don’t know how it happened. I would like to know if it would be possible to repair and restore it.”

Damage to the Egyptian Cut Drop at the Louisville Scottish Rite.
Damage to the Egyptian Cut Drop at the Louisville Scottish Rite.

My response was, “Yes. You will need to take the drop down, or damage will continue- I am mid-project, but can chat tomorrow afternoon.” Realistically, I was in no position to take on another project and knew that I would have to mostly advise from afar. Starks gathered a team to lower the drop, and I then directed its preparation for short-term storage, until I could travel to Louisville that fall. We tentatively scheduled my visit for November. I would not only repair the scene, but also advise on some upcoming interior renovations. I was also scheduled to again speak about the history of the Louisville Scottish Rite scenery (another Masonic event on Nov. 10, 2022).

Repairing the Egyptian Cut Drop

Unfortunately, there were a series of obstacles to overcome before rolling and storing the cut drop to await my future repairs. The first obstacle was removing wood from the backside, as several “stiffeners” were glued to the cut edge.  Many cut drop openings without netting for support curl over time. As a preventative measure, some scenic studios attached wood stiffeners upon installation.  These stiffeners were frequently thin strips of pine that were secured to the drop with a strip of glued muslin.  Removing an original stiffener is often simple, as the fabric and wood easily peel off of the fabric.

Over the decades, Masonic stage crews tried to replicate this technique. Unfortunately, instead of using thin strips of light-weight pine, they improvised, using a variety of hard woods and solvent-based or inappropriate adhesives.  Over the years I have encountered oak strips attached with contact cement (Wichita, KS), lathe attached with wood glue (Fort Scott, KS), yard sticks attached with plaster of paris (Fargo, ND), just to name a few. 

Patch on a cut drop at the Scottish Rite Theatre in Fargo, North Dakota.

In Louisville, however, an enterprising Mason opted for a black substance that looks like coal-tar pitch; this was a new one to me.

Photograph sent to me by Jordan Morgan, showing stiffeners attached with a black adhesive.
Wood attached to the backside of many cut drops at the Louisville Scottish Rite.

In addition to the stiffeners, ¼”-thick black flexible foam was secured to all of the cut edges with spray adhesive. Sadly, I have encountered this before too, at the Scottish Rite in Cheyenne, Wyoming. Although it works in the short term, it wreaks havoc when repairs need to occur. In Louisville, a solvent-based spray adhesive was used, partially melting the foam and permanently affixing it to the backside of the drop.  

Removing the flexible foam from the Egyptian cut drop.

And there was one more thing…

The original netting in the cut opening was replaced with plastic netting that was hot glued on.   

Plastic netting attached with hot melt glued, placed over original cotton netting.

Although I feel like a broken record, constantly repeating myself, here goes…NEVER use hot melt glue on historic stage scenery. Hot melt glue has no place in historic preservation, as it severely damages fragile fabric, embedding itself in the fabric’s fibers. Often the hot melt glue is even visible from the front, marring a once beautifully painted composition. Attaching anything to historic scenery with hot-melt glue makes the repair irreversible and flammable. It is especially unfortunate if the new netting is plastic or poorly positioned in the cut opening. Both were the cases with the Egyptian cut drop at the Louisville Scottish Rite. When conducting the initial examination of the scenery, I recognized that the plastic netting would have to remain, as there was so much hot melt glue applied to the fabric that it is now permanently affixed to the cut drop.

The stiffeners, foam, and plastic netting prohibited any expedient storage of the scene last summer until my fall arrival. Fortunately, one diligent Masonic volunteer, Jordan Morgan, spent over thirty-hours removing both foam and wood. Despite his diligence, some areas were left for me to deal with once on site. As I expected, removing the foam and stiffeners could not occur without damage to the painting and fabric.  Some of the foam remains firmly adhered to the cut drop.

Egyptian cut drop with flexible foam around cut openings.
Removing the flexible foam.

My trip to repair the scenery was slotted for November. During my stay, I would not only fix the damage to the cut drop, but again speak as a guest lecturer and continued to function as a historical consultant for a few anticipated interior renovations.

On the afternoon of Nov 8, 2022, my plane touched down and I was off to the races. This was well after casting my vote at 7AM; it was election day, and I was thankful that the Minnesota polls open so early. After renting a car, checking into my hotel, changing into work clothes, and driving to the Scottish Rite, I began the slow process of setting up the workspace. Once everything was set, I carefully unrolled the damaged cut drop and assessed the damage, simultaneously planning my attack. Despite the dozens of pictures that were sent, nothing replaces examining the damage in person.  I went to bed that night, weighing the pros and cons of various approaches to the damage.

The Egyptian cut drop on the stage at the Louisville Scottish Rite.
Beginning the repair

Arriving at the Scottish Rite the next morning, I met my onsite assistant, Jordan, and we began the painstaking process of cleaning both the cut drop. This is necessary before any fabric repair.

Cleaning the backside of the fabric prior to repair.

I focused on the biggest damage, before tackling the dozens of small punctures. By midmorning, I realized that the project would go far beyond patching visible damage. I had to do some preventative care – placing vertical reinforcement strips on every seam and weak area. The culprit of the anticipated damage? Flame retardant.

Split seams caused from repeated applications of flame retardant over the decades.

A repeated application of flame retardant often causes the greatest damage to historic scenery; it is like giving the drop cancer.  Applying different flame retardants over the decades creates a toxic environment for the fabric and the very fibers begin to break down. Therefore, I need to help support the fabric so that the weight of the fabric will not cause stress that results in tears.

Now, I was dealing with a few different problems. The central portion of the drop is much older than the top and the bottom; the oldest portion dating from the previous building, c. 1910. Toomey & Volland Scenic Studio records indicate that scenery was delivered to the Louisville Scottish Rite in 1910.  

Original fabric (below) and fabric extensions (above) added in the 1920s.

Original fabric (below) and fabric extensions (above) added in the 1920s.

These drops were later refurbished, enlarged, and installed in the current building during 1923.  Over the years, there have been several alterations made to the collection. Initially, the top sandwich batten was removed and replaced with jute webbing and ties lines.  This likely occurred when the 1910 scenery was refurbished and moved into the new building. The first-generation bottom sandwich battens were replaced with pipe pockets at this time too.

Flexible black foam attached to the cut edge with spray adhesive.

However, over time, as the pipe pockets failed, ripping off, second-generation pipe pockets were added, the latest being thick, clear plastic that was glued to the back.

Plastic pipe pocket glued to the back of a Louisville Scottish Rite backdrop.

Additional scenery was purchased from Volland Studios between 1951 and 1952, then again in 1968.

Additional repairs, fabric reinforcements and attempts to consolidate loose pigment occurred continuously over the decades. For example, olive green edging (similar to a coarse bias tape) was sewn onto the offstage edges. This was an early attempt to prevent tearing from contact. Although this has prevented some damage and deterioration, the actual sewing greatly damaged the painted surface and has weakened the fabric over time. Other drops have large pieces of mesh glued to the entire back, possibly an attempt to prevent rips. However, the added weight is now jeopardizing the top of each scene.

Mesh glued to some of the backdrops at the Louisville Scottish Rite.

Over the course of three days we cleaned, patched, and reinforced the fabric of the Egyptian cut drop. Paint touch-up of visible patches will occur on my return. I only transport my distemper palette by ground, and therefore will drive on my next trip.

On the morning of Nov. 12 (my fourth day), I supervised the hanging of the repaired cut drop. Everything looked perfect!

Front view – the repaired cut drop.
The repaired cut drop, as viewed from behind.
Details of repaired damage.
Egyptian Cut Drop. Repair work Completed from Nov. 8-12, 2022.

I then assessed the remainder of the collection and began planning for the complete preservation of the entire collection.

Painted detail from another Louisville Scottish Rite scene.

By the afternoon I was on my way home, only 96 hours after my arrival. It was an action-packed trip that I have yet to recover from.

In regard to the history of the Louisville Scottish Rite scenery, my research indicated that Kentucky may have been the earliest state in the Southern Jurisdiction to use stage scenery for their degree work. Here is an excerpt from the document that I submitted in 2019 as it helps frame the significance of the scenery collection and my restoration project.

The History of Degree Productions at the Louisville Scottish Rite.

Scottish Rite Valley’s bordering the geographical demarcation between the Northern and Southern Jurisdiction were experimenting with stages in Masonic Halls and common lodge room long before the first “official” Scottish Rite theater was constructed in the Southern Jurisdiction, c. 1890s. The earliest Scottish Rite stages frequently referenced in the Southern Jurisdiction are Little Rock, Arkansas and Oakland, California in 1896. Theatrical staging of degree work in Louisville, Kentucky, may have predated these two Valleys, signifying the inclusion of the earliest Masonic stage settings in the Southern Jurisdiction.

The Wilkes-Barre Times of Pennsylvania, the Arizona Daily Star of Tucson, and the Akron Beacon Journal of Ohio all published the following article in 1895:

“BIG SCOTTISH RITE DEDICATION. Louisville, Ky., Oct. 15 – The Scottish Rite Cathedral of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite for the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States, at Sixth and Walnut street was dedicated today. This dedication surpassed anything ever seen in Masonic ceremonies in this city. It was open to the public, and conducted with all the pomp, which the occasion calls for. The remainder of the inaugural week will be given in reunion, during which all degrees will be conferred. The new cathedral in point of general magnificence is surpassed by only two in the United States, those being cathedrals of the Grand Consistories of Illinois, at Chicago, and of Ohio, at Cincinnati.” Both Chicago and Cincinnati boasted theatrical stages with elaborate scenery collections, but they were in the Northern Jurisdiction.

The article also notes, “All degrees will be conferred,” which translates to “all degree will be dramatically presented” aligning with the staged degree productions in the Chicago and Cincinnati Scottish Rite theaters at the time.

The Grand Consistory, Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, was organized in Louisville, August 21, 1852, with meetings being held on the Southwest corner of Fourth and Jefferson Streets. By August 1876, the Louisville Scottish Rite occupied the Courier-Journal Building, located on Jefferson Street, between Third and Fourth Street. In 1894, the Louisville Scottish Rite Bodies purchased the St. Paul’s Episcopal Church at Sixth and Walnut Streets. The church has been partially destroyed by fire when they acquired the building, and approximately $41,000 was spent on remodeling the facility. By 1895, it was dedicated as a Scottish Rite Cathedral. This predates what Little Rock and Oakland would do in 1896; remodel an existing space to include a Scottish Rite theatre to fully confer, or stage, the degree work. This Louisville Scottish Rite building was used until 1923, when their new home was constructed at Brook and Gray streets.

In 1910, Toomey & Volland business records note that they delivered a scenery collection to the Louisville Scottish Rite. This scenery would have replaced the original scenery installed in the renovated Episcopal Church space. Churches were perfect buildings to retrofit with theatrical stages for degree productions.

There is not yet a definitive indicator of the scenic artist or studio that first delivered the original scenery in 1895. However, it was not Toomey & Volland, as the firm was not established until 1901.  Toomey and Volland delivered scenery to the Louisville Scottish Rite Cathedral in 1910, with many of their backdrops being refurbished and transported to the new building during 1923. This was a common practice throughout both the Northern and Southern Jurisdiction at the time.  The Guthrie, Oklahoma, Scottish Rite even reused and transported their 1910 scenery collection to the new building during this same time.

The first Scottish Rite Cathedral in Louisville was a remodeled building. St. Paul’s Episcopal Church at Sixth and Walnut Streets was renovated for Scottish Rite purposes in 1895. From this moment forward, the Masonic membership in Louisville continued to grow at a rapid rate, as was common with many other Valleys that began producing degree work for the stage. By 1919, Louisville’s Scottish Rite candidate class size numbered 200, and the overall membership began exceeding the building’s capacity.

During the 67th annual spring reunion in 1919, the president of the “Victory Class “of Scottish Rite candidates introduced a resolution. Dr. T. H. Tuley urged, “the Grand Consistory immediately to make plans for the erection of a [new] Scottish Rite Cathedral in Louisville which will prove a credit to the Rite and to the city.”  The Courier-Journal reported, “the reading of the resolution was greeted with applause, and from the manner in which the proposition was received it seems possible some steps in this direction will be taken” (26 April 1919, page 4).

Previously, the Courier-Journal reported, “Largest Class in History of Consistory Attending Scottish Rite Meeting. 200 At First Dinner” (23 April 1919, page 9). The session opened at 10AM on April 22, with conferring the Lodge of Perfection degrees (4-14). The article noted, “For several months the Scottish Rite has been practically overwhelmed with applications for membership, every Masonic lodge in the State reporting unusually large numbers of initiates.

            The result has been that for the first time in many years it has been necessary to hold two spring Scottish Rite classes, the first one having completed work only about ten days ago.” Capt. John H. Cowles, sovereign grand inspector general of the Supreme Council of the Rite, was interviewed by the Courier-Times. The newspaper reported, “He says unusually large classes are being accepted into the rite in all consistories of the southern jurisdiction. He was highly pleased with the showing made by the Louisville lodge, especially in view of the fact that he received his degrees here and is a native of Kentucky, having lived for many years in Louisville.” In 1919, the Louisville Scottish Rite premiered a four-page publication for attendees titled “The Reunion News.” It was published every day during the Scottish Rite reunion. Interestingly, the Scottish Rite once met in the same building as the local newspaper, the Courier-Journal.

Scottish Rite membership was explosive during the 1920s, and the influential power of the Freemasons was substantial.  This is a moment in time when the Rite, especially the Louisville Scottish Rite, was very vocal about their activities and positions on both political and social issues. From the late-nineteenth century to early twentieth century, it was not unusual to find detailed information pertaining to daily activities at Scottish Rite reunions, a list of members, the history of the organization and their stance on public and political topics. For example, the views of the Rite regarding public education were published in the local newspapers for all to read. When a potential candidate thought about joining a particular Scottish Rite, there was no question in his mind about what the organization stood for and could determine in advance if it was a good fit. This may be why the Scottish Rite continued to gain ground and dominate the fraternal landscape of America during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.

In regard to the construction of their new home, on May 11, 1923, the Courier-Journal published, “Scottish Rite Masons will begin a three-day campaign May 23, to raise the $300,000 necessary to complete their building fund for the proposed $750,000 cathedral at the southwest corner of Fourth and Breckinridge Streets. Ground for this structure will be broken in September, it was said. The cathedral will have four stories and basement, with an auditorium seating 1,350 persons. Solicitation will be from the 2,286 members in the State of which 1,200 are in Louisville, The campaign will be in charge if Benjamin S. Washer, Richard Priest Dietzman, Edward F. Metzner, Harvey White and Dr. E. L. Henderson” (page 18).

On June 27, 1923, the old Scottish Rite was sold, becoming the new R. E. Jones Temple, Methodist Episcopal Church. On September 9, 1923, the Courier-Journal announced, “The contract for the construction at Fourth and Breckinridge Streets will be awarded shortly after bids are opened about October 15” (page 34). The building was sold to the Methodist Episcopal Church, becoming the R. E. Jones Temple. Rev. Dr. Robert Elijah Jones (1872-1960), namesake for the new church, was also a 33rd degree Scottish Rite Mason. Within a year, however, tragedy struck the old Scottish Rite building. On May 27, 1924, the Courier-Journal reported “Five Firemen and a negro preacher were overcome by smoke last night when flames of undetermined origin ignited debris in the basement of the R. E. Jones Temple, formerly the Scottish Rite Cathedral at Sixth and Walnut Streets” (page 5).

There is one thing to consider about the original Scottish Rite stage and scenery when the Louisville Scottish Rite Cathedral changed ownership. When the building became the R. E. Jones Temple, it is highly unlikely that any fraternal artifacts or decorations were left behind. This means that the old scenery, stage machinery and other stage equipment was either returned to scenic studio (for credit on the purchase of a new collection), it was enlarged for their new stage, or it was sold to another Scottish Rite. To all indications, there remains a significant amount of scenery used by the Louisville Scottish Rite that predates the current building, c. 1910. 

In 1910, the Louisville Scottish Rite purchased scenery from Toomey & Volland.  Interestingly, Toomey and Volland advertisements from 1912 do not list Louisville alongside fifteen other Scottish Rite Cathedral installations by that time, suggesting that they may have only been adding to a previous purchase. Toomey & Volland could have simply expanded an earlier collection, possibly the one delivered in 1895. There is a distinct possibility that scenery was delivered by the precursor to Toomey & Volland – the scenic studio of Noxon & Toomey. 

Thomas C. Noxon was a Freemason, and extremely active in the Shrine.  Also, in 1895, Noxon & Toomey delivered stock scenery to Louisville’s Amphitheatre Auditorium. This may have been the crucial connection, a preliminary link with Louisville Masons and the scenic studio of Toomey & Volland. It would not be surprising to learn that Noxon visited the Scottish Rite while installing scenery for another theatrical venue; a common practice among scenic studio owners at the time.

It remains uncertain as to whether the major Scottish Rite scenery supplier to the Southern Jurisdiction at the time, E. A. Armstrong Manufacturing Co., delivered any scenery to the Louisville Scottish Rite Cathedral.  Scottish Rite minutes may point to a specific vendor. If the theater work was contracted to E. A. Armstrong, Sosman & Landis were the preferred subcontractors in the mid-1890s, the scenic studio who manufactured and installed the scenery for this fraternal supplier. However, the Louisville Scottish Rite is not listed in a 1902 E. A. Armstrong advertisement that notes all the Consistories they had equipped since 1897. Keep in mind that was after the potential 1895 date of delivery. If it was manufactured at the Sosman & Landis studio, David A. Strong would have been the Masonic designer and primary scenic artist for the earliest Louisville collection due to his early Masonic affiliation. Strong was instrumental in producing much of Chicago’s Scottish Rite scenery for stages starting in 1873; this was the other Masonic theater that Louisville was compared with in 1895.

There are two other possibilities in regard to regional artists who may have created the original 1895 scenery collection Louisville Scottish Rite Cathedral –scenic artists E. T. Harvey or Henry C. Tryon.

Harvey was the scenic artist who designed, painted, and installed Scottish Rite scenery collections for Cincinnati in 1886 and Cleveland in 1901. In 1886, Harvey delivered eighteen sets of scenery to the Cleveland Scottish Rite Cathedral’s stage.  Keep in mind that Louisville’s 1895 Scottish Rite Cathedral was compared with the Cincinnati Scottish Rite Cathedral in the newspaper article; “The new cathedral in point of general magnificence is surpassed by only two in the United States, those being cathedrals of the Grand Consistories of Illinois, at Chicago, and of Ohio, at Cincinnati.”

Tryon was the scenic artist credited with scenery and stage machinery at the Indianapolis Scottish Rite a few years earlier in 1883. Both Harvey and Tryon were close friends with Thomas G. Moses, who was in charge of the design, painting, construction, and installation of all Scottish Rite scenery at Sosman & Landis (Chicago) after 1904.”

There is so much more that I could write about this project and the collection as a whole, but I need to pause here. For more posts about this collection, keyword search “Louisville Scottish Rite.”

To be continued…

Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar: The Tabor Opera House Makes News Again!

Here is a lovely article written by Carolyn Paletta for the Vail Daily newspaper:

https://www.vaildaily.com/entertainment/hundreds-of-19th-century-painted-scenery-sets-discovered-in-leadvilles-tabor-opera-house/

It is another fantastic article about the Tabor Opera House scenery and the venue’s sole full-time employee, Tammy Taber! Tammy’s institutional memory of the building is astounding, as she began working under the leadership of Evelyn Furman. To me, she is not only the heart and soul of the building, but also a dear friend.

Tammy Taber looking at the scenery. Photograph by Carolyn Paletta for the Vail Daily.

Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar: Making News in Leadville, Colorado.

Copyright © 2021 by Wendy Waszut-Barrett

It has been a while since my last post.

I took a pause after spraining both wrists on May 1, 2021. It has been a long recovery, and if I could just sit still, they would probably heal faster. I wish that there was a wonderful tale to tell, but I simply tripped and fell in my driveway.  Yes, I was going too fast and was preoccupied at the time. No, the injury has not slowed me down. However, the accident greatly limited my ability use the track pad on my laptop or move the mouse for my computer. Typing was also challenge.

Fortunately, this injury occurred after submitting my 1300-page report to the Tabor Opera House Preservation Foundation, detailing the historic scenery and stage machinery at the venue. In the end, I divided the scenic artifacts into fourteen distinct theater collections, compiling conditions reports, replacement appraisals and an historical analysis of each piece. Some of the collections were founded on scenic artists, some on stage hardware, and others on textile manufacturers.  This document far surpassed my doctoral dissertation, which says a lot. There were too many moving parts, too many pieces to juggle, cross-reference and illustrate. And yet, I continued to write my daily blog about the life and times of scenic artist and studio owner, Thomas G. Moses (1856-1934), entitled “Tales of a Scenic Artists and Scholar.”

In hindsight, my sprained wrists gave me permission to take a break from my blog and solely focus on a few major projects and my family.  After all, since the fall of 2016, I had dutifully posted daily about historic scenic art, theatres, and theatre technicians. Then work started pouring in this spring as COVID-19 restrictions were lifted; everyone resumed projects that were placed on hold in 2020. Feast or famine.

As several of my projects received a green light, I began traveling again. In July, I headed to Colorado with one of my historic rigging advisors, Michael Powers. Our Colorado stops included Trinidad, Leadville, and Aspen.

The Leadville stop was to meet New York Times reporter Elisabeth Vincentelli, and photographer Benjamin Rasmussen.  At the time, I couldn’t explain why I was staying in Leadville.  While on site, however, I took the opportunity to further examine the historic wings and shutters still trapped above the attic loft.

Happily, the New York Times article was published yesterday! Here is Vincentelli’s article about this amazing venue and historic scenery collection:https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/11/arts/music/opera-sets-leadville.html?referringSource=articleShare&fbclid=IwAR3AZ3hM6B2k35j3G2gGZDFwhplGGhmS_TU_M6ZbkW9CBKF_NEuRnwEoFvc

Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar: The Wheeler Opera House in Aspen, Colorado.

Copyright © 2021 by Wendy Rae Waszut-Barrett

I spent yesterday afternoon in Aspen, Colorado, at the Wheeler Opera House. This was a trip instigated by Ziska Childs; a project that took advantage my visit to the Tabor Opera House in Leadville this month. I was fortunate to share my on-site discoveries with Jenny Knott, Michael Powers, and Tammy Taber. After an in-depth examination of the Wheeler drop curtain, we suspended it from a downstage line and admired the scenic art from the house.  Shortly after the unveiling, my preliminary findings were presented to the Board of Directors. I am currently in the process of developing an historical analysis, condition report and replacement appraisal for the piece.

The current drop curtain for the Wheeler Opera House was delivered by Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc. in 1983. It is the same subject matter as the drop curtain first delivered to the Wheeler Opera House when it opened in 1889. The original drop curtain for the Wheeler Opera House was painted by Henry E. Burcky, a scenic artist for the Tabor Opera House in Leadville and Tabor Grand Opera House in Denver. Prior to relocating west, Burcky was also a scenic artist at Hooley’s Theatre in Chicago and also painted for the Cincinnati Opera Festival in 1881. I have written about him quite a bit in the past. On March 26, 1889, the Aspen Times interviewed Manager Weill of the Wheeler Opera House who described the new drop curtain as “a representation of the Brooklyn Bridge painted by Burke [of the Chicago Opera House] from sketches obtained in this city and is one of the best pieces of work of the kind I have ever seen.”

That same year that Burcky worked for the Wheeler Opera House, he also painted a drop curtain for DeRemer’s Opera House in Pueblo, Colorado.

Burcky first came onto my radar while researching a set of painted cut wings at Tabor Opera House in Leadville, Colorado, c. 1890. From 1884-1890 Burcky painted scenes for Tabor’s opera houses in both Leadville and Denver. During this time, Burcky and master mechanic J. C. Alexander renovated numerous Colorado stages for the Silver Circuit, their projects included those in Aspen, Leadville, and Pueblo. 

The extant drop curtain at the Wheeler Opera House by Tiffin Studios is either a painted replica of the original drop curtain, or one inspired by Burcky’s work.  I am currently on a quest to track down the history for this particular piece.

Painted detail. Drop curtain Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, Colorado. c. 1983
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc.
Drop curtain Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, Colorado. c. 1983
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc.
Painted detail. Drop curtain Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, Colorado. c. 1983
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc.
Painted detail. Drop curtain Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, Colorado. c. 1983
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc.
Painted detail. Drop curtain Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, Colorado. c. 1983
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc.
Painted detail. Drop curtain Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, Colorado. c. 1983
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc.
Painted detail. Drop curtain Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, Colorado. c. 1983
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc.
Painted detail. Drop curtain Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, Colorado. c. 1983
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc.
Painted detail. Drop curtain Wheeler Opera House, Aspen, Colorado. c. 1983
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Inc.

To be continued…

Travels of a Scenic Artist and Scholar: Above the Attic at the Tabor Opera House

Copyright © 2021 by Wendy Rae Waszut-Barrett, PhD

There is still an astounding amount of historic scenery tucked away at the Tabor Opera House in Leadville, Colorado. When the building was renovated in 1902, the stage was enlarged, and all of the original wings and shutters (c. 1879-1900) were placed above the auditorium. This space is now considered the 3 ½ floor, seventy-steps above street level. Last September, I led a crew of volunteers to remove the scenery from the attic space to the stage floor. Here is a link to a previous post: https://drypigment.net2020/09/23/travels-of-a-scenic-artist-and-scholar-day-2-at-the-tabor-opera-house-september-22-2020/

The 3 ½ floor, now referred to as the attic, once consisted of several hotel rooms. Over the decades, the walls dividing each room were removed and the enlarged space became home to abandoned artifacts. Stage artifacts included wings, shutters, and painted profiles.  

I returned to the attic yesterday, fully prepared with my N95 mask and work gloves.  My focus was on the scenery above the rafters. There are several shutters and wings trapped in a web of ceiling joists and electrical wires. I needed to ascertain what was left to plan their removal and cataloguing.

Here are a few pictures of what I discovered yesterday; the many hidden treasures, with much concealed under a layer of soot.

Scenery still stored above the attic at the Tabor Opera House. Leadville, Colorado.
Scenery still stored above the attic at the Tabor Opera House. Leadville, Colorado.
Scenery still stored above the attic at the Tabor Opera House. Leadville, Colorado.
Scenery still stored above the attic at the Tabor Opera House. Leadville, Colorado.
Scenery still stored above the attic at the Tabor Opera House. Leadville, Colorado.
Scenery still stored above the attic at the Tabor Opera House. Leadville, Colorado.
Scenery still stored above the attic at the Tabor Opera House. Leadville, Colorado.

To be continued…