Fairyland’s Storybook Puppet Theater, which opened in 1956, is the oldest continuously operating puppet theater in the United States. The theater presents three performances a day, year round, from a repertoire of more than 150 puppet shows. Most of the shows are based on classic fairytales and folk tales from around the world, including
The Three Little Pigs, Pinocchio, and
The Pied Piper. All of the puppets – including
bunraku, shadow puppets,
hand puppets,
rod puppets, and
marionettes – are constructed at the theater by the puppet director and apprentices. The theater structure was designed by the park’s original architect, William Russell Everitt, with the assistance of members of the San Francisco Bay Area Puppeteers Guild. It accommodated hand and rod puppets. For the theater’s 50th anniversary, in 2006, the building was redesigned with a storage area, workshop, and higher ceiling for dramatic effects. Many accomplished puppeteers have worked at Fairyland’s puppet theater, including Tony Urbano, Luman Coad, The Oznowiczes’ son, Frank, performed at the theater when he was a teenager; he later shortened his name to
Frank Oz and went on to perform with
The Muppets and to direct many Hollywood films. Muppet performer
Alice Dinnean also got her start at Fairyland's puppet theater. Lewis Mahlmann, who served as the puppet theater’s director from 1967 to 2005, authored four books about puppetry, and twice served as president of the Puppeteers of America. The current theater director is
Randal J. Metz, who apprenticed with Mahlmann while he was still in grade school. Metz shared the director’s job with Mahlmann beginning in 1991, and became sole director upon Mahlmann’s retirement in 2005. ==The park today==