In 2002 an epiphany of sorts hit Colleen Donley like a truck. Literally.
She had just had gotten a diagnosis of cancer and been told she had one year to live. Donley was so absorbed with the news, she stepped off the curb and was run down and dragged 10 feet.
As Donley recovered from the accident and underwent chemotherapy, her twin brother, Chris Frost, began looking for a dream that might keep her alive longer -- an eccentric house to refurbish, maybe.
He stumbled upon a large building on the highway in Staples, Minn., the former Batcher's clothing store. Frost climbed over piled junk to get to the second floor. When he flipped on the lights, he couldn't believe what he was seeing: a massive opera hall that had gone virtually untouched for more than 60 years.
The walls, though water-stained, were painted in elaborate scrolls. Original hand-painted backdrops hung above a large stage. There were dramatic balconies and chandeliers and art posters from the building's heyday, when it showed famous plays and hosted musicians who had come by train to Staples, then considered "the travelers' rest."
Together, Donley and Frost began cleaning up the hall in June 2003, even scrubbing the frescoes on the balcony with a toothbrush. They put in new windows and a new roof, and began rehabbing some of the bedrooms down a long hall where the train conductors slept during their breaks. They succeeded in getting the building on the National Register of Historic Places.
Donley and Frost sold antiques on the first floor of the building to help pay the rent, but before long they started booking shows in this small town of about 3,000. One of the first was comedian Louie Anderson, who had stopped in to look at antiques. They took him upstairs and he was so awed by the place he said, "I want to do a show here."
For some events, they had as many as 300 people lined up, said Donley. "It was really magical."