There are bridge nuts, people who 'collect' bridges.
It got worse and worse because of Wal-Mart and Kmart and things like that. People would drive out of town for something a nickel less than we could sell it for.
We are storytellers. That's what theater is. My job is to visually personify that, and to show or hide who they are by how they look.
I've been here for 20 years, and this is the most significant thing I've seen.
This is not home for the dogs. She saw that and wanted to help.
They're like a box of puppies. It's more like the square root of two. They fight like dogs, but will always be each others' best friend.
It's got lovely arts and crafts details in it. It just needed someone to take care of it.
It's close to $400,000 to save the bridges.
I know it's mostly them, but I help them. They raise the bar for themselves.
In 1954, cars were bigger and repairing these little bridges was a nuisance. The big bridge came down in 1954. That would have been the seventh bridge,