On Saturday, October 17, 1896, the Lobero Opera House’s 1300 seats were filled - and hundreds were turned away at the door - when women’s rights activist Susan B. Anthony...
Read More
Jazz pianist McCoy Tyner and the Lobero Theatre had a relationship that spanned 34 years and helped establish the Lobero as one of the premier live jazz venues in the...
Read More
By Lobero Theatre Director of Development, Brandon Mowery Over the past few COVID influenced months, the Lobero has worked hard to keep the theater relevant, and one avenue we’ve managed...
Read More
On the evening of October 4, 1977, a petite woman with a Swiss-German accent held a standing-room-only Lobero audience spellbound as she spoke about what she called the greatest mystery...
Read More
On September 15, 1988, Burl Ives, a 79-year-old, white-bearded icon of music and film took to the Lobero stage in a one-man show about another American legend, poet, and essayist...
Read More
On Saturday evening, September 8, 1962, jazz singer Sarah Vaughan stepped onto the Lobero stage. Almost exactly 20 years earlier, her career had begun on a dare when she had...
Read More
On the night of September 7, 1903, the Lobero Opera House curtain rose and a Santa Barbara audience was introduced to Zamloch the Great, immodestly promoted as “The Wonder Worker...
Read More
On this day in 1943, 27-year-old violin prodigy Yehudi Menuhin stepped onto the Lobero stage with his 1733 “Prince Khevenhüller” Stradivarius and mesmerized the audience with his flamboyant virtuosity. His Lobero...
Read More
On August 21, 1941, a young Irish actress named Geraldine Fitzgerald took to the Lobero stage to star in the world premiere of an English murder mystery called Lottie Dundass....
Read More
On August 13, 1926, Will Morrissey’s Music Hall Revue came to town for the Lobero Theatre’s first (and likely only) “midnight matinee.” The Revue was an enormous production involving a...
Read More