Peek inside this south Minneapolis warehouse and papier-mâché faces stare back.
Puppets tall and small, eyes open and closed. Moths, sloths and, in the left corner, a moose, its antlers so big they nearly brush the ceiling.
Sandy Spieler can look at any face and tell you the person who designed it, the hands that helped make it, the parade or play that featured it.
Then, she might perform the poem that inspired it.
"Let's see if I can remember," said Spieler, and without pausing began to recite Meridel Le Sueur's "Let the Bird of Earth Fly."
"I send my voice of sorrow, calling, calling. My bowl is full of grief and the wind is up. 'Thanks,' the people are crying. Behold and listen ..."
In the Heart of the Beast Puppet and Mask Theatre's warehouse space on Lake Street is a maze of materials that fueled decades of May Day parades and festivals, as well as performances in and around the Avalon Theater.
Last month, the nonprofit that Spieler helped lead for more than four decades said it would sell the theater at 1500 E. Lake St. — its home since 1988 — and vacate the storage space it rents nearby.