

Less than a dozen people were at the recent performance I attended, but the atmosphere and performance were still magical, perhaps even haunting. Like Becket, Vazquez performs every role herself, sometimes simultaneously, with a hat or false mustache denoting a change of character. The talented and energetic Vazquez now performs shows at the opera house of Becket’s dances as well as her own newly created interpretations. Young dancer Hilda Vazquez, who came to Death Valley Junction two years ago specifically to meet Becket, received the older dancer’s permission to continue the performances. But the show always went on, until her retirement in 2012.īecket also painted murals in the quaint hotel, which still offers rooms to travelers visiting the opera house or passing through on the way to Death Valley National Park.īecket died last year, but I couldn’t help but feel her presence all around.Īnd, delightfully, the show goes on once again. Occasionally the Amargosa audience totaled zero, the only spectators the characters in her murals. The Spanish Colonial-style building, including the hotel and what was a social hall for a borax mining company, was salvaged from ruin in 1968 by Marta Becket, a ballet dancer who was driving through, saw the place and became transfixed.īecket devoted the rest of her life to what she dubbed the Amargosa Opera House, leasing the old, decrepit venue, pouring in love and money (much more of the former than the latter), and covering the walls herself with colorful murals depicting an audience of 16th century Spanish royal courtiers.īecket used the space for her own interpretive dance pieces, which she performed most weekends for more than 40 years. But there’s definitely an otherworldly, mesmerizing feeling connected to the eerily quiet, windswept crossroads called Death Valley Junction. I don’t believe in ghosts, and as far as I know, the opera house and attached Amargosa Hotel don’t purport to be haunted.

A hundred miles of lonely desert lies between the glitz and glamour of Las Vegas and the Amargosa Opera House.
