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Keerthi Vedantam

Downtown Phoenix theater closes its curtains

October 04, 2017  /  Keerthi Vedantam

PHOENIX––A local downtown theater named Space 55 is taking its final bow after 10 years.

"We give a place for local artists, local performers," said Dennis Frederick, director of 'Ear', an original Space 55 production. "We give them a home."

It's a home they will have to leave. The small, self-made theater was transformed from a bail bonds building and a coffee shop.

"Oh yeah, there's all kinds of weird history here." Ashley Naftule, an actor and writer, said about the space. He joined the theater eight years ago. It was his home, and its inhabitants were his family.

Today, the small storefronts that combine to make Space 55 are home to quirky original plays and underground theater classics. 

"It's a very, very different building, and it has changed over the years," said Naftule.

But no one knows what will become of the ever-transforming space when the theater troupe clears out. 10 years and nearly 30 plays later, Space 55 is closing its location here. It grew with the rest of downtown Phoenix as a witness to its transformation.

But the surrounding high rises came with high costs, forcing actors to get creative with props and costumes.

"We put a lot of pride in doing do-it-yourself efforts," Naftule said.

Space 55 is facing what many have faced before it; High costs prevent these downtown art icons from staying where they began.

Artistic director Duane Daniels says he's working hard to not uproot the family home.

"We wouldn't feel comfortable in Scottsdale," he said. "We're sort of a downtown sensibility."

Despite the financial troubles, Space 55 hadn't crumbled in more than a decade.

"What Starbucks does up the street, somehow we're doing that here," Daniels said. "They're paying market value rent on their building and I'm paying market value rent on my building..."

"...I think that's a pretty amazing accomplishment."

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