For 28
years, Lansing’s Peppermint Creek Theatre Company has lived a vagabond
existence.
They have
moved from one theater to the next always looking for the best place to produce
their shows. They have moved from art galleries to floral conservatories to
churches to community rooms.
But despite
the challenge of adjusting to a new venue so often, founder and artistic
director Chad Swan-Badgero always managed to produce challenging plays of impressive
quality. Using amateur actors, they produced superb performances of dramas such
as “God of Carnage”, “Other Desert Cities”, “Venus in Fur”, “Indecent” and
musicals such as “Assassins,”, “Next to Normal”, “In the Heights” and “Parade”.
In the summer
of 2022 something magical happened. Tom Arthur, Pastor of Sycamore Creek Church,
with facilities in south Lansing and Potterville and ardent theater lover,
approached Swan-Badgero after a production he attended about an unusual idea.
He had recently
acquired a spacious church building on Lake Lansing Road with lovely grounds,
space galore and a central location.
Arthur looked at the facility and wondered how the space could serve the
community in addition to being a place of worship.
Upon further reflection, he felt that the arts could be the centerpiece of his vision of bringing in a diverse group of people to the church. To that end he approached Swan-Badgero to see if Peppermint Creek would like to share the sanctuary with the church for their productions.
After all,
the 150-seat sanctuary is only used on Sunday mornings and sits there empty the
other six days of the week. Swan-Badgero
said “sure” to Arthur, never thinking that it would actually come to pass.
Arthur also approached
Jeff Coff and his Ixion Ensemble Theater and Anna Maria Pasley-Horn, director
of Hope Central Urban Arts to join the them who will also be sharing the space.
The church
is located at 2200 Lake Lansing Rd., across from Eastwood Town Center.
In the year
that followed Arthur’s momentous conversation with Swan-Badgero, the 1968-era
church was transformed. Big airy windows
were added to the cafe area, bright colors cover most of the walls, the HVAC
was modernized, a new sound system was installed, and the sanctuary was totally
changed to include new lighting, chairs, a backstage stairwell for actors to access
their dressing rooms and more. The
Peppermint Creek people will add stage lighting and just raised money to
install new risers.
And suddenly
we were all gathered on September 28 at the newly refurbished facility for a grand
ribbon cutting ceremony. Lansing mayor Andy
Schor was there, The Lansing Regional Chamber of Commerce sent representatives,
as well as community and arts leaders all celebrated the newly named Stage One.
Performing arts
centers are expensive and difficult projects to bring to reality. Just ask the
City of Lansing, which has been working on a new performing arts center for
over ten years. They finally broke ground
on a trimmed down facility, but so far the construction work has not yet begun.
But in this
case, a dynamic and positive pastor together with successful theater companies
displayed how a community can come together to create a new and attractive art
center quickly and inexpensively.
Tom Arthur, Chad Swan-Badgero, Jeff Croff, Anna Maria Pasley-Horn
There were
space needs for small arts organizations and forward-thinking people to make it
happen, creating a new arts, community and worship center in one facility.
A big bravo
for Pastor Tom Arthur and his team for showing us all what a community can do
to make Lansing a better place to live.
Stage One
Performing Arts Center is a shining light to guide us to appreciate how cooperation
and collaboration can produce astounding results.
5 comments:
Wonderful news!
Thank you for this column. We totally agree with everything you said!
Rose and Jim Zackd
This is terrific to hear about!
Thanks, Ken, for such a positive article. We look forward to seeing what new surprises await us in Stage One!
Many thanks for this good news.
Post a Comment