Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Anaheim High’s historic Cook Auditorium stage filled again after 6 years of renovations

For the first time for any of these students, the historic Cook Auditorium lights shone as they performed center stage.

Thousands upon thousands of Anaheim Union High School District alumni have experienced performing for audiences in the theater, but for today’s students, it has been a work zone their entire high school career. Until now.

The school district completed a $7 million renovation to the 90-year-old performance center at Anaheim High just in time for the annual all-school choral showcase. So, on Friday night, hundreds of students took the stage as the top choir from each campus performed in the districtwide concert. For the finale, more than 700 students sang in unison — a “stress-test” of the new acoustics, said Brian Belski, the district’s director of arts education.

Belski said he is also looking forward to the first theatrical performance in the renovated Cook Auditorium, which is the “premier auditorium in the district.”

“We have not had theatrical performances in a building that is purposely designed for that,” he said of the years since the theater renovations started. “I look forward to students not having to compensate for the building.”

The Cook Auditorium was opened in 1935 — replacing the high school’s original Greek Revival–style auditorium that had been severely damaged in the 1933 Long Beach Earthquake — and closed in 2019 for renovations to address safety concerns with the now decades-old rigging system.

It reopened with technology that can be found on many a Broadway stage, including motorized stage rigging to replace the old manual system, 40 channels of digital LED lighting and 20,000 watts of audio power. Moveable acoustic drapes and sound-absorbing panels will let the theater be calibrated to the best sound for various styles of performances.

The district received a $2 million federal grant secured by Reo. Lou Correa, Anaheim High Class of 1976, with the remainder funded by Measure K, the $496 million school board measure voters approved in 2024, and other construction funds, Belski said.

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