Former CA Theatre Director Sues Board, Citing Wrongful Termination and Retaliation
by Chris Peterson
The Alcazar Theatre in Carpinteria, CA has become the center of controversy after its former executive director filed a lawsuit against the organization, alleging wrongful termination and discrimination.
According to media coverage, the director claims she was dismissed in July after raising concerns about workplace conditions — including issues of compensation, reporting structure, and governance — and that she was then excluded from further decision-making. The board, for its part, has issued only a brief statement acknowledging the separation, and now the matter has entered the legal arena, leaving the supporters of this community institution in limbo.
The lawsuit’s specific claims matter: She alleges that the board shut her out of core meetings, that decisions were made without her input after she voiced concerns, and that eventually she was told her contract would not be renewed — with no meaningful process or explanation. According to coverage, she is seeking back pay, severance, and compensation for alleged emotional distress. The board withheld comment beyond confirming only that the relationship ended, and the theatre continues to operate while the legal process plays out.
I have spent years watching how boards and creative leaders interact: the ideal is a partnership. One side brings discipline, the other brings artistry. But too often the institutional side forgets the human element, and the artistic side underestimates the structural demands.
In this case, a director believed she had a stake in shaping the theatre’s direction — then felt marginalized. The board believed it had to act in what it saw as the institution’s best interest — and perhaps felt constrained by donors, finances, and oversight. Neither is wrong in isolation, but the collision is painful.
What troubles me is how quickly empathy vanishes when conflict enters a cultural organization. Instead of sitting down and naming the difficulties — budget shortfalls, competing priorities, personality clashes — we retreat into press releases and legal filings. The theatre world is built on stories of transformation and collaboration, but when leadership becomes another stakeholder in a lawsuit, that magic gets dimmed.
For the community that loves the Alcazar Theatre — its patrons, volunteers, artists, children in classes, neighbors who walk past the marquee — this isn’t just an internal board dispute. It is a break in the narrative. The institution that promised safety, inspiration, and continuity now shows cracks. Even if the lights remain on, the change in tone is felt.
So what happens next? The legal process may result in a settlement or a judgment. The theatre may appoint a new executive director. The board may revise its governance practices.
Yet what I hope for even more is that the one thing no lawsuit can force is rediscovered: trust. That the people who serve the institution remember that a theatre is more than a venue for shows; it is home for voices, and hope for patrons. That the leaders remember that the job is not only to secure seats but to protect spirit. And that the community remembers that their voice matters not just when they enter the auditorium, but when the board meets and the director leads.