Auburn Public Theater came to life as the unlikely result of a feng shui
consultation done by Sheila Murphy for Carey Eidel, my husband, and me,
then owners of Daddabbos Pizza downtown Auburn. One day, Sheila came in
for lunch, sat down in a booth and noticed the building across the
street had two signs in the window, one announcing the building was for
sale and the other announcing the retail space in the building was for
rent. Later that evening, she called and gave me a few quick fixes for
Daddabbos Pizza � hang a few plants, put small white lights around the
inside of the large window in the front of the restaurant, group the old
photos of family members together and cluster them over the tables next
to the wall. And, finally, she suggested that I see if it would be
possible to do something a little more lively in the window across the
street she explained that half of Daddabbos customers had been sitting
down and staring out the window directly at the For Sale and For Lease
signs every day and, quite frankly, if only on a subconscious level,
that was probably more than a little depressing.
I quickly made the easy fixes. I bought plants and strings of small
white lights and worked with Carey to reorganize the many photos and
posters hanging all over the restaurant. Now, for the window across the
street, that was a little more complicated. Who owned the building?
Would he or she be amendable to making changes for the sake of helping
to improve the vibe at Daddabbos Pizza? Should I really lend this
suggestion time and energy or should I just let it slide? I decided to
let it slide. Then one day, a great idea came to me. How about hanging a
poster of Einstein sticking his tongue out in the window of the vacant
building across the street from the pizza shop? It would only cost about
$20, it wouldnt interfere with the current signage in the window and it
would make everyone who walked by it, drove by it or sat across from it
smile. Perfect. Then another idea came along � how about hanging a dark
red, heavy, velvet theater curtain in that window? That would be more
expensive but it would also be more interesting; it would help to create
a little mystery. As I continued to drive, a third idea quickly came
dont hang a theater curtain in the window; build a theater in the
building across the street. I immediately knew this was the one true
thing, the perfect fix on all levels and that I needed to act on this
idea as soon as I possibly could; I also knew how much time, effort and
money would be needed to execute such an idea so, at first, I tried as
hard as I could to ignore the idea altogether. In fact, I immediately
told the idea to go away and leave me alone forever.
Back in LA, where Carey and I met years ago, we always talked of a
shared dream to own a theater building where we could program plays,
musical performances, comedians, family productions and acting classes.
With our first spare million dollars, we fantasized, we would buy a
little building on Theater Row in Hollywood and see to making our dream
come true. But when we made the decision to leave LA in 2001 and move to
Auburn, we also made the decision to leave that dream behind, too. Until
that fateful feng shui consultation at Daddabbos Pizza, our dream of
having a theater space of our own was all but dead and buried.
So, after trying my hardest to ignore the idea of building a theater in
the old Grants building Downtown Auburn (the idea came to me daily,
hourly even), I finally decided to share it with Carey. Upon hearing the
first version of the plan, he promptly fell sound asleep. In all
fairness, it was pretty late at night. Several days later, Brain
Anderson, our neighbor, was outside raking leaves. For some strange
reason, I started telling Brian about my idea to build a theater
downtown Auburn. Like me, Brian grew up in Auburn and fondly remembered
downtown in its hey-dey. He was curious to know more. And so he gave me
the greatest gift one human being can give another human being he
listened. And then the dream hooked him, too.
Brian and I promptly started out on a path to meet and speak with anyone
and everyone who could help us turn our daydream into a reality. Soon
after our first few meetings, we asked Janie MicGlire, a friend and
neighbor, to get involved. And soon after that, we asked another friend,
Tiffany Brasell, to join our fledgling group. And something magical
happened after we found our fourth member. Everything just wen OK. The
four of us met on a weekly basis for nearly a year, named ourselves
Auburn Public Theater, produced two plays (one at Cayuga Community
College and one at Westminster Church), formed a not-for-profit entity
(with the help of CPA Brenda Kayn), designed a logo (with the help of
Terry Cuddy), had stationary printed and tried on several occasions to
sign a lease for the space in the former Grant�s building across the
street from Daddabbos Pizza. But, for various reasons, it kept not
working out. We looked at vacant buildings all over Auburn. Several had
real potential. But our hearts were downtown. That, we decided, was
where Auburn Public Theater needed to be built. So we waited. And,
finally, the planets lined up. In October, 2005, Carey and I were able
to purchase the building at 108 Genesee Street and lease 10,000 square
feet to Auburn Public Theater.
On December 7th, 2005, Auburn Public Theater opened its doors to the
public for an Open House. Over five hundred people came and took a tour
and, since then, over twenty thousand patrons have come through the
doors of APT. It is our wish, the wish of all of us involved with Auburn
Public Theater, that 50 or 100 years from now, programming will be going
strong, the number of people through the doors will be in the millions,
Downtown Auburn will be the thriving city center it once was and has
always deserved to be and those people running the place will have as
much fun working together as all of us have had dreaming it into
existence.