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The Heart & Rhythm of
Santa Barbara for 150 Years.

1873

The Opera House

Originally founded as Jose Lobero’s Opera House in 1873, the Lobero is the oldest continuously operating theater in California, and the fourth oldest performing arts theater in the country. Whether hosting events of great societal importance, launching the careers of Hollywood legends, serving as an influential jazz venue, or providing a stage for some of the world’s finest performers, the Lobero inspires diverse audiences of all ages.

The Lobero
is a place
where we
capture
dreams
together.

Spirit of Fiesta 2022
Tara Mata Photo By Fritz Olenberger

Providing
a stage
for some
of the
world’s
finest
performers.

Lindsey Buckingham 4-15-22
Photo By David Bazemore

The Lobero also provides a platform for local artists and regional organizations, such as Opera Santa Barbara, CAMA, Flamenco Arts Festival, State Street Ballet, AHA! and many more. With the next 150 years on the horizon, now is the time to commit to setting the stage for posterity – ensuring that this theater will be physically and financially ready for whatever the future holds, while providing support and partnership for its family of arts institutions that make the Lobero the cultural jewel of Santa Barbara.

An Ovation Celebration

To commemorate this occasion, the theater will mount a public celebration and awareness campaign to pay tribute to this remarkable landmark, and position the Lobero Theatre to be a prominent, integral, and essential stage for the performing arts in Santa Barbara well into the future.

As part of that acknowledgment, The Lobero Theatre Foundation’s Board is launching a $6 million endowment and capital campaign.

Endowment – Community
Access Fund (CAF) - $2.5 M

For 150 years, the Lobero Theatre has enjoyed a symbiotic relationship with the wonderful arts organizations that perform on its stage. The Community Access Fund (CAF) supports a vibrant arts scene and fosters a new generation of artists and audiences that will significantly impact the future of the industry. The CAF will allow the theater to meaningfully subsidize the community’s use of the Lobero, reducing their expenses and allowing them to focus their limited resources on production and audience development – thereby strengthening the health and growth of each organization.

Building Maintenance
Endowment - $2.5 M

The Lobero’s remarkable sesquicentennial represents a key milestone in the city’s cultural timeline. The building itself is the Lobero Theatre Foundation’s greatest asset and the main focus of its stewardship. The Building Maintenance Endowment ensures that a significant annual investment is made toward the building’s technical systems and historic aesthetics. Every effort will be made to prioritize maintaining state-of-the-art technology, while honoring the unique architectural design created by George Washington Smith and Lutah Maria Riggs. This vital fund will systematically reduce the need for a major capital campaign.

Capital Items - $1 M

Several major capital needs have developed since the last capital campaign in 2013, including a new LED lighting system and the addition of solar panels. Once the Building Maintenance Endowment is fully funded, it will be possible to address system upgrades on an annual basis. Immediate capital priorities include facility security measures, courtyard enhancement, exterior painting of the theater, stage floor replacement, PA (Public Address) system improvements, and green room refurbishment. These goals strengthen the Lobero Theatre’s capacity to serve its mission, while adding stability to its annual financial position.

Lobero Timeline

2018
Neil Young
Neil Young

Neil Young & Promise of the Real rock the Lobero for three nights.

2011
Jeff Bridges
Jeff Bridges

Jeff Bridges joins T-Bone Burnett for an evening of country and American roots music.

2007
Carol Burnett
Carol Burnett

The comedic genius teams up with fellow Santa Barbara resident John Cleese in the tender, tragi-comedy Love Letters.

1998
Mikhail Baryshnikov
Mikhail Baryshnikov

The dance legend performs for 5 consecutive solo shows at the Lobero – the smallest, most intimate stage he has appeared on in 20 years.

1989
Dizzy Gillespie
Dizzy Gillespie

The jazz trumpet virtuoso performs as part of the illustrious “Jazz at the Lobero” series.

Marcel Marceau
Marcel Marceau

The French mime artist and “master of silence” delights a Lobero audience with his brilliant pantomime.

1981
Charles Lloyd
Charles Lloyd

The composer and saxophone great graces the Lobero for the first time with his innovative and transcendent jazz.

1977
Tom Waits
Tom Waits

The gravelly voiced singer/songwriter performs two evening shows billed as “A Very Special Turkey for Thanksgiving.”

1971
Richard Pryor
Richard Pryor

The well-known comedian brings his raw, unfiltered act to the Lobero and the sold-out, tightly-packed audience roars with laughter – sometimes nervously.

1953
Dave Brubeck
Dave Brubeck

The legendary American jazz pianist and composer performs at the Lobero and, in the following decades, the theater helps popularize a new style of jazz known as “west coast” or “cool jazz.”

1952
José Greco
José Greco

This is the year America falls in love with classical flamenco dance, when the José Greco Company brings their riveting showmanship to the Lobero for 4 performances.

1947
Lucille Ball
Lucille Ball

On New Year’s Eve, the comic whirlwind takes to the Lobero stage in the ambitious comedy-fantasy, Dream Girl.

1945
Orson Welles
Orson Welles

The 30-year-old director of Citizen Kane previews his speech on fascism, entitled “The Nature of the Enemy,” at the Lobero before traveling to deliver it in New York.

1943
Yehudi Menuhin
Yehudi Menuhin

The 27-year-old violin prodigy steps onto the stage with his 1733 “Prince Khevenhuller” Stradivarius and mesmerizes the audience with his flamboyant virtuosity.

1941
Ingrid Bergman
Ingrid Bergman

Opening night of Eugene O’Neill’s play Anna Christie, starring Ingrid Bergman, with Hollywood luminaries such as Alfred Hitchcock, Charlie Chaplin, Lana Turner, Olivia de Havilland, and more in the audience.

1938
Marian Anderson
Marian Anderson

The American singer, known for her warm and modest personality, enthralls the audience with her extraordinary contralto voice.

1936
Martha Graham
Martha Graham

Graham – considered by many to be the 20th century’s most important dancer and the mother of modern dance – first performs at the Lobero, which she soon considers her second home.

1932
Humphrey Bogart
Humphrey Bogart

The play The Mad Hopes, a comedy starring Billie Burke and featuring a young Bogart, previews at the Lobero.

1931
Paul Robeson
Paul Robeson

A standing-room-only audience fills the Lobero to hear the singer unleash his rich timbered, bass-baritone voice in a program that ranges from classical arias to southern spirituals.

1929
Bela Lugosi as Dracula
Bela Lugosi as Dracula

Two years before he stars in the world-famous horror film, Bela Lugosi takes the stage as the blood-sucking vampire, Dracula.

Sergei Rachmaninoff
Sergei Rachmaninoff

The Russian composer, conductor and virtuoso pianist performs at the Lobero as part of the Community Arts Music Association’s (CAMA) 10th season.

1926
Bing Crosby
Bing Crosby

Will Morrissey’s Music Hall Revue comes to town – with pianist Al Rinker and the talented 23-year-old jazz crooner, Crosby – who specialize in interesting jazz rhythms and tricky harmonies.

Clark Gable
Clark Gable

25-year-old Clark Gable appears at the Lobero, alongside veteran headliner Pauline Frederick, in the drama Lucky Sam Carver.

1924
New Lobero Theatre
New Lobero Theatre

After the lights are turned off at the Lobero Opera House, the new Lobero Theatre, designed by George Washington Smith and Lutah Maria Riggs, premieres with the social satire Beggar on Horseback.

1902
W.C. Fields
W.C. Fields

A young W.C. Fields was considered the comedy juggler of his generation and visits the Lobero as part of the Great Orpheum Road Show – billed as the “eccentric tramp juggler.”

1896
Susan B. Anthony
Susan B. Anthony

From the 1890’s – 1910’s, the Lobero Opera House is an important venue for the women’s suffrage movement and all seats are filled when this famous women’s rights activist comes to speak.

1894
Blind Tom
Blind Tom

Thomas Wiggins, born a slave on a Georgia plantation, is a piano touring sensation, playing both classical works and popular songs on stages worldwide.

1891
John. L. Sullivan
John. L. Sullivan

The world’s first sports superstar boxer tries his hand at acting, appearing in the melodrama Honest Hearts and Willing Hands to a standingroom-only Lobero crowd.

1883
Roller Skating
Roller Skating

Roller skating is all the rage, and the Lobero removes theater chairs to provide a large rink for skaters to move in accompaniment to the sounds of a brass band.

1876
Tennessee Jubilee Singers
Tennessee Jubilee Singers

After the Civil War, jubilee minstrel troupes made up of ex-slaves are popular performers at opera houses across America.

Prof. S.S. Baldwin and Clara Baldwin
Prof. S.S. Baldwin and Clara Baldwin

In the late 1800’s, interest in Spiritualism is all the rage in America and the opera house is the ideal venue for performances catering both to believers as well as skeptics.

1873
Grand Italian Operatic Concert
Grand Italian Operatic Concert

Giuseppe (Jose) Lobero’s Theatre has its official opening. Lobero’s Theatre is only the second opera house in California, and for more than a decade is the envy of Los Angeles.

Brett Hodges

Ovation Chair

Web developer and philanthropist Brett Hodges is a fifth generation Californian, who has lived in Santa Barbara since 1980. After growing up in West Los Angeles, he then attended college in England, where he received a degree in religious studies. Upon graduating, Brett wrote and produced educational and documentary films for schools and PBS, then went on to develop several websites. His RemedyFind site was one of the most active health communities on the web, and was sold in 2006 to Steve Case’s Revolution.com.

After enjoying countless diverse performances at the Lobero over the years, Brett eventually became a Lobero “superfan.” Having been introduced to the Lobero’s Board through his childhood friend, Board President Steve Hayes, Brett now serves as Ovation Chair and Chair of the Development Committee. He has also taken on the prodigious task of being the Lobero Theatre’s Historian, working on the theater’s archives and creating the Intermission Series blog posts. Brett has served on the board of his daughter’s school (Laguna Blanca School), and is currently a Santa Barbara Historical Museum board member. He is also involved with the local equine community and riding trails network. Through the WWW Foundation, Brett and his wife Natalie support a variety of educational and animal-focused charities. Their daughter, Lillie, who graduated from Middlebury College in 2016, is also honored to now be able to participate in the family foundation’s philanthropic ventures.

We Welcome Your
Ovation Celebration
Collaboration!

To learn more about how to get involved, please
contact our Ovation Team:

Jim Dougherty

Ovation Coordinator and
Heritage Director
jdougherty@lobero.org
805.679.6005

Brett Hodges

Ovation Chair
brettedwardhodges@gmail.com
805.682.6706

Brandon Mowery

Director of Development
bmowery@lobero.org
805.679.6009

Sylvie Monsivais

Assistant Director of Development
smonsivais@lobero.org
805.679.6007