Table Of Content
- Monster of the Month w/ Colin Dickey: The "Mutes"
- Latest Entertainment & Arts
- Did you enjoy reading this dispatch? Consider supporting us with your tax-deductible donation.
- Amenities of Amargosa Opera House & Hotel
- ALL THINGS DEATH VALLEY JUNCTION
- Spotlight: Death Valley National Park
- Picture of Marta's Seat.
Please inform Amargosa Opera House & Hotel of your expected arrival time in advance. You can use the Special Requests box when booking, or contact the property directly using the contact details in your confirmation. I admit that I was not paying much attention as I was walking all over trying to get good shots in the short time we were in there.

Monster of the Month w/ Colin Dickey: The "Mutes"
Of course, a filling station enabled them to tend to the damaged tire. Becket's choice to depict a 16th century Spanish court complete with king and queen plus a host of colorful patrons was inspired by the period Spanish Colonial style of the building. Jewel-like colors portray an array of distinctively stylized nobility, bullfighters, Catholic clergy, peasantry, gypsies and ladies of the night said to be modeled after some of the area's local brothel hostesses. A vignette suggests the flirtation of a young suitor caught in the act of dropping down a secret proposition tied to a string oven braided flowers to a would-be lover. In another, two rather exoticized native peoples of the New World wrestle for the make-believe audience perhaps as a side entertainment between an imaginary operatic performance. The entire trompe l'oeil covering three walls took Becket fours years to complete.
Latest Entertainment & Arts
When our 15 minutes were up, we walked out, and the magical opera house was locked behind us. Sign up for our newsletter to get unique arts & culture stories and videos from across Southern California in your inbox. The building was modern for its day and included central cooling and heating and skylights in all the bathrooms and throughout the building. "It’s one of the park’s most photographed viewpoints and a busy spot at sunset."
Did you enjoy reading this dispatch? Consider supporting us with your tax-deductible donation.
Take that with a grain of salt, but all of you ghost hunters out there should check it out and report back in the comments. The first thing I did was head into the hotel, which is a historic building in California. Death Valley National Park has a ton of amazing natural wonders in its vast expanse; however, for man made attractions, it is hard to beat the crazy, fun Amargosa Opera House. Located on the eastern outskirts of the park, this hotel and fully functional opera house are a must-stop on any visit to the park from the east side.
CTG Artistic Director Snehal Desai and Managing Director Meghan Pressman lay out a tentative road map for recovery, including the reopening of one of the city’s most important stages. Opotowsky was remembered for his dry wit that at times leaned acerbic. He had a soft spot for practical jokes and an even softer spot for his grandchildren and great-grandchildren, his son said. He loved horseback riding, fox hunting and trying different restaurants, he said. Please note that all special requests cannot be guaranteed and are subject to availability upon check-in. As far as haunted goes, the women who took us on the tour said that she has heard and seen ghosts on two separate occasions.
Amenities of Amargosa Opera House & Hotel
By midsummer, a destructive flash flood had swept through the compound leaving it deluged by a foot of mud. Yes, thanks to the vision of New York dancer Marta Beckett who fell in love with the 1920s colonnaded adobe building when her car broke down nearby in 1967. For decades she entertained the curious with dance, music and mime shows. Marta sadly passed away on January 30, 2017 but visiting performers continue to keep her legacy alive. Each part of the mural has a story to tell – from the Native American performers in the bottom alcoves, to the 16 ladies on the ceiling playing antique musical instruments, to the gypsies and artists making merry while ignoring the performance on the stage. Marta’s vision was to create a world of the past, in keeping with her repertoire of classical dance and pantomime, which originated in the courts of the de Medicis and King Louis XIV.
ALL THINGS DEATH VALLEY JUNCTION
One or both of the rulings have been cited as precedents in a slew of high-profile proceedings, including those related to the Oklahoma City bombing, 9/11, the Boston Marathon bombing, the Aurora, Colo., theater shooting and Martha Stewart’s perjury case, Bernstein said. Opotowsky was a top editor at the Riverside Press-Enterprise when the paper brought two cases before the U.S. Supreme Court that resulted in landmark rulings advancing the public’s right to view certain legal proceedings. He was later a founding board member of the First Amendment Coalition, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting the free press and preserving access to government records and meetings. Opotowsky died April 18 at Claremont Manor retirement community, where he lived with his wife, Bonnie Opotowsky, according to their son, Didier Opotowsky. He said his father’s cause of death is not certain, and that he had Parkinson’s.
Attached at the northeast end of the colonnaded, U-shaped structure stood Corkill Hall, a quaint recreational center with a built-in stage where dances, weddings, movies, church services and other community events had taken place years ago. While her husband was tending to the flat at the service station, Becket found herself drawn to the building that had been constructed the same year she was born. Her legendary story is not only the subject of the Emmy-winning documentary "Amargosa" (2000), but one that fans from across the globe have sought out here in the desert for years now. Perhaps as recently as 300 years ago, molten lava came in contact with groundwater, steam pressure built up underground and the earth exploded in a massive volcanic belch.
Amargosa Opera House - Atlas Obscura
Amargosa Opera House.
Posted: Sat, 13 Feb 2010 08:00:00 GMT [source]
Born on August 9, 1924, in New York City’s Greenwich Village, creatively precocious Martha Becket began studying ballet at age fourteen—considered a late start in the professional dance world—through encouragement and support from her somewhat overbearing mother. Naturally talented, she began dancing professionally during her early twenties with the corps de ballet at Radio City Music Hall and later on Broadway in three popular musicals including Showboat. Well before the dance lessons of her teenage years, the young Martha (she later changed her name to “Marta”) was instructed in a variety of other classic visual and performing arts including painting, drawing and piano. Her life infused with art, dance and music have continued for nearly ninety years now. Her ballet and pantomime bring Old World culture to a place where one would least expect it -- providing a conduit and glimpse into a live entertainment tradition that is largely forgotten. The entire appeal is strangely beautiful, somewhat odd but in the most surprisingly wonderful way.
After traveling to and from Las Vegas, the very next day they met with the town manager and secured the lease of the theatre for $45 a month plus repairs. The two straightened out their affairs back east over the next few months, returning to Death Valley Junction on Marta’s forty-third birthday, August 9, 1967. They promptly began the renovation of the Amargosa Opera House—rechristened in honor of the original settlement whose name translates as “bitter” in Spanish for the area’s surrounding alkali springs. During one tour, the couple decided to camp between shows for a week at the Furnace Creek Campground in Death Valley National Monument. The year was 1967, and the interest for performance programs of her ilk was dwindling due to the profound upheaval in 1960s popular culture. Colleges, universities and community halls where she performed regularly over the previous years were now more interested in booking burgeoning rock ’n’ roll acts, spoken word and other hip happenings of the time.
Legal proceedings ensued, eventually forcing the "gun-toting" manager (who on one occasion brandished his firearm at a concerned, highly respected area resident dropping in to check on Becket's welfare) to cease all activities and vacate the property for good. Born on August 9, 1924 in New York City's Greenwich Village, creatively precocious Martha Beckett began studying ballet at age considered a late start in the professional dance world -- through encouragement and support from her somewhat overbearing mother. Her life infused with art, dance and music has continued for nearly 90 years now. Although Marta largely stopped performing by 2012, at the age of eighty-eight, she has appeared live on stage a few times since.
By early February she was teaching local children ballet and also performing for the tiny community. By midsummer a destructive flash flood had swept through the compound leaving it deluged by a foot of mud. "A fortuitous flat tire" came after a fortune teller's prophecy that suggested the letter A loomed large on Marta Becket's personal horizon. Once in a lifetime experience awaits you in a tiny town known as Death Valley Junction, for this is the home of the Amargosa Opera House and Hotel. For more than 40 years, Marta Becket has lived and shared her art and dreams with those fortunate enough to find this wonderful and magical place. Located a few miles west of the California-Nevada border, near Death Valley National Park, no journey to this part of the world would be complete without a visit to this unique and inspiring destination.
The creek is home to the Salt Creek pupfish, a 2-inch/-long fish that lives nowhere else. As its watery home changed from freshwater to salt water, the pupfish evolved to survive in its new environment. The fish’s evolutionary change would be roughly the same as if humans decided to drink petrol instead of water. Not only that, but the pupfish has the ability to survive in water from near-freezing temperatures to almost 42°C.
While Marta was sweeping the muck out of the opera house, she conceived of her plan to paint a Renaissance courtly audience on its walls—even if a live audience was not present, a fantasy assemblage could be forever regarding her as she performed. Shortly thereafter, the couple acquired scaffolding from Las Vegas and she began to paint the opera house’s interior by the end of 1968. Her legendary story is not only the subject of the Emmy-winning documentary Amargosa (2000) but one that has captured the imagination of fans from across the globe. While Becket was sweeping the muck out of the opera house, she conceived of her plan to paint a Renaissance courtly audience on its walls -- even if a live audience was not present, a fantasy assemblage could be forever regarding her as she performed. Shortly thereafter the couple acquired scaffolding from Las Vegas and she began to paint the opera house's interior by the end of 1968.
No trip to Death Valley would be complete without a visit to Badwater, the lowest point in the North America, which tips the altimeters at 282 feet below sea level. Its vast expanse of salt flats and salty puddles were a terrible disappointment to thirsty emigrants who crossed this desert in the 1800s in search of a better life. The salty puddles—which can become large ponds following a big storm, are all that remain of a lake that was more than 600 feet deep hundreds of thousands of years ago.
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