Author: Phillip Chavira

  • Meet Our Emerging Artists: Victoria (Vee) Camacho Deleon Guerrero

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Victoria (Vee) Camacho Deleon Guerrero

    This is part of a series about our 2016 Emerging Artists. They will perform selections from three powerful plays by Black women, August 5-7, for Intiman Theatre’s Emerging Artist Showcase. Join us for this free show! LEARN MORE.

    Victoria ( Vee) Camacho Deleon Guerrero | Stage Manager

    Q: How did you first get involved with theatre?
    A: The first time I got involved with theatre was when I was about six or seven and I ran up on stage to bow with my dad who had produced an adaptation of Grease at our high school!

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: Theatre has the ability to capture today’s essence onstage. Whether you are doing Chekov, Ibsen, Wilson, Parks, or Craig-Galvan, Theatre can bring universal or specific realities to life. We create a world that the audience can love or hate, but more importantly we can create a world that the audience can reflect on.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: Now that we’re nearly halfway in, the artist! I’ve never met so many beautiful and creative souls that are so open, compassionate, and willing to throw themselves into our art. I’m excited so see how our final piece comes together and I am more than excited to share what we’ve created with all of you!

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: Our conversations about race and equity. We were challenged to think, to feel, and to see. Never have I been more ready to be unsafe.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: My parents. Amidst this crazy world we call life, my parents have only shown me what hard work and love really is. They have supported me and each other in all our endeavors. They have pushed me to succeed, to be the best that I can be, and to reach for the stars (Even if it means being thousands of miles away from home).

    Victoria (Vee) Deleon Guerrero, is an aspiring professional stage manager pursuing her undergraduate degree in the Theatre and the Interdisciplinary Liberal Studies at Seattle University. As a rising senior, she also works as an actor, scenic painter, and student carpenter for various shows at her SU. Most recently, she has portrayed the role of Inez Smith in Our Lady of 121st Street, stage managed 365 Days/ 365 Plays, and assistant stage-managed Love’s Labor’s Won. She has worked as a scenic painter for Women of Troy and built set pieces for Picnic, 365 Days/ 365 Plays, and Female Transport. After earning her undergraduate degree she intends to either stay in Seattle and work on professional shows or return to Saipan and expand the theatre programs in her community. She is grateful for all the support from her family, friends, and professors who have believed, encouraged, and pushed her to follow her dreams and is grateful for the opportunity to be a part of this program.

    Join us for our Emerging Artist Showcase August 5-7 at Seattle Repertory Theatre. We will feature selections from three plays: The Owl Answers and A Movie Star Has To Star In Black And White by Adrienne Kennedy and Black Super Hero Magic Mama by Inda Craig-Galván. The show is free and open to the public. RSVP HERE.

     

  • Meet Our Emerging Artists: Alexandra Kronz

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Alexandra Kronz

    This is part of a series about our 2016 Emerging Artists. They will perform selections from three powerful plays by Black women, August 5-7, for Intiman Theatre’s Emerging Artist Showcase. Join us for this free show! LEARN MORE.

    Alexandra Kronz | Actor

    Q: When did you know you wanted to dedicate your career to the arts?
    A: I have been involved with performing arts since childhood, and was set on having a career in the arts from a very young age, but in my mid teens I had a bad injury that ended my competitive dance career and I convinced myself not to pursue anything artistic professionally.  I graduated college with a Bachelor of Science, planning to apply to grad school for cognitive neuroscience…and then started teaching full time at a dance studio and taking visual art commissions.  I realized that I can’t keep myself away from the arts if I try, and I’m just not the type to half-ass anything so how could I talk myself out of pursuing it professionally?  15-year-old me is happy with this decision, and honestly so is 19-year-old me, even if she wouldn’t have said so at the time.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A:  I am fundamentally interested in humans, how we relate to each other, how we think, how we feel, and how we treat each other.  And how we might be able to do all of those things with more kindness.  This might be a cliched answer to the question, but I think sometimes cliches exist because they do represent some truth a lot of people agree on (saying that is also cliched-see what I did there). I think theater gives artists and audiences an opportunity to explore different facets of human experience and emotion.  Fiction is a safer place than your everyday life to explore risk, to try to unpack dark and twisted things, to call out prejudice and discrimination and humanize – not pity or martyr – the recipients of this hatred, to try to understand people who (you think) are very different from yourself.  I think that space of exploration, sometimes uncomfortable questioning and open discussion is invaluable to a society, and I certainly find it critical to somewhat-satisfy my continued curiosity about people – they’re just so strange and endlessly interesting!

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: The mission of Intiman itself is very much in alignment with my beliefs and values.  I am so so thrilled to not only be working with and making connections through a theater company that actively gives a platform to relevant, diverse theater and theater artists, but also to get to work with the other artists in my cohort.  This group is extraordinarily gifted, but there are a lot of gifted artists – my cohort was also selected on the basis of their values and goals as artists…and damn good people as well!  This program is a fantastic introduction to Seattle theater – it’s also just plain good for my heart.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: The intensive first week of the program was a phenomenal experience.  Not only did we bond and develop an incredibly deep level of emotional intimacy with each other shockingly quickly, we also got to perform for each other and create art together multiple times during the first week. Watching our Friday performances of our first week projects, I was floored by the talent level of this group, and knew I was incredibly lucky to be counted as one of them.  Honestly…I’m feeling myself a little, if I look to either side, see people that good, and know I was selected along with them. I won’t deny that bit of ego.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: The humans who I personally know.  I could probably list some artists but thinking honestly about this question and what it means to me today, it’s the people in my life who I’m scared of, who I’m drawn to, whose talents inspire me to work harder, whose behaviors baffle me, who I love.

    More: Alexandra Kronz is a dancer, singer, actor and visual artist/illustrator, and could not be more thrilled at the opportunity to deepen her connection to Seattle theater through IEAP.  She is a graduate of of the University of Washington, where she worked on many Undergraduate and School of Drama shows while earning a B.S. in Psychology and B.A. in Linguistics.  She also recently received classical training in visual art through the Studio Arts Intensive Program at Gage Academy of Art.  Seattle credits include; portrait oil painting for The Life Model (On The Boards), choreography/performance in Magnifique (Julia’s on Broadway), LinkUp Concerts (Seattle Symphony), performance of unpublished Brahms arrangements (The Gilded Quire),Songs Of Fatherhood (WhateverandeverAmen), and Outdoor Trek (HelloEarth Productions).  Alexandra is currently working on an interview/portrait and figure drawing project with Seattle area professional dancers of all styles, exploring injury and dance.  You can keep up with her and find some of her visual art at Alexandrakronz.com.

    Join us for our Emerging Artist Showcase August 5-7 at Seattle Repertory Theatre. We will feature selections from three plays: The Owl Answers and A Movie Star Has To Star In Black And White by Adrienne Kennedy and Black Super Hero Magic Mama by Inda Craig-Galván. The show is free and open to the public. RSVP HERE.

  • Meet Our Emerging Artists: Stefan Richmond

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Stefan Richmond

    This is part of a series about our 2016 Emerging Artists. They will perform selections from three powerful plays by Black women, August 5-7, for Intiman Theatre’s Emerging Artist Showcase. Join us for this free show! LEARN MORE.

    Stefan Richmond | Actor

    Q: When did you know you wanted to dedicate your career to the arts?
    I think theatre has always been in my blood. Growing up, I can remember going through my parents moderately vast CD collection and putting on musical numbers in front of our fireplace for whoever would watch. It was my imagination running in full force. When I was in the 4th grade and I was a little bit older, my mom signed me up for a summer children’s theatre program. I found an open door the world of imagination and play. That world grew larger in high school and continued through college. Now that I am older and have continued to play, and grow my world, theatre has shown me that at the roots of that pure imagination and magic is truth and understanding. Once I opened that door for the first time I couldn’t see myself doing anything else but continuing to play and learn.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    Theatre forces me out of my comfort zone and challenges me to expand my view on what the world can be. It allows to me to find truth and understanding in every single story that I tell. It allows me to be on the forefront of current events and strips away the layers of humanity. It gives people the opportunity to be inspired and changed. As Vsevolod Meyerhold once said, “I want to burn with the spirit of the times. I want all servants of the stage to recognize their lofty destiny. I am disturbed at my comrades’ failure to rise above narrow caste interests which are alien to the interests of society at large. Yes, the theatre can play an enormous part in the transformation of the whole of existence.” There is no other place where both participants, Audience and Artists, willingly arrive with an eagerness to learn and understand and be understood. It is the catalyst for change.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    Coming from out of state, Intiman has given me a community and a family that I don’t think I would have found as easily without this program. It has allowed me to cultivate the artistic garden of soul and now expanded my world of play even further. The Emerging Artists program has been the perfect launching pad for my career as a theatre artist, here in Seattle. As a person of color there are social barriers and biases that can stifle the creative voice at times. The Emerging Artists Program is dedicated to being advocates for social change and equity and are giving diverse artists, like myself, the opportunity to have their voices heard.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: Our first week as Emergers was exhausting both spiritually and physically, to say the least. Everyday I loved being able to walk into the space knowing that everyone was willing to show up for each other and themselves 100 percent of the time. Our first day when we all arrived, we all were asked to present monologues or pieces of work that were an inspiration to us. Before the exercise started, you could tell that everybody was really nervous and anxious, since we all had only known each other for a total of 4 hours. As soon as people started to share you could feel the support and love in the room. Every single person in that room shared a piece of themselves in such honest ways, and I have never connected with a group so quickly.

    Q: Who is your biggest inspiration?
    That’s always a tough question for me to answer. I feel like I am constantly inspired by people and their stories daily. Currently the leader, activists and founders of the #blacklivesmatter movement — Alicia Garza, Opel Tometi, Patrisse Cullors — have been a source of inspiration for me. These women have taken an online social ideal and have been able to expand into more than just a hashtag but taken these ideals for justice to the streets. The are a FIERCE example of what radical action for change looks like.

    Stefan is a Colorado native, and could not be more humbled and thrilled to discover Seattle through the IEAP. He is currently working on finishing his undergraduate degree at the University of Northern Colorado with a B.A. in Acting/Dance, and minor in Recreation, Tourism, & Hospitality. Recent credits include The Transition of Doodle Pequeño (UNCO), Polaroid Stories (The Avenue Theatre), and Children of Eden (UNCO). He is beyond grateful to the Intiman family for cultivating  the necessary growth and journey of this new artistic venture.

    Join us for our Emerging Artist Showcase August 5-7 at Seattle Repertory Theatre. We will feature selections from three plays: The Owl Answers and A Movie Star Has To Star In Black And White by Adrienne Kennedy and Black Super Hero Magic Mama by Inda Craig-Galván. The show is free and open to the public. RSVP HERE.

     

  • Meet Our Emerging Artists: Inda Craig-Galván

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Inda Craig-Galván

    This is the first in a series about our Emerging Artists who will perform selections from three plays at Seattle Repertory Theatre, August 5-7 for the Emerging Artist Showcase.  LEARN MORE.

    By Inda Craig-Galván
    Emerging Artist Playwright | Black Super Hero Magic Mama

    I came to playwriting late in life. After a career in acting (if my face seems familiar, it’s because you’ve undoubtedly seen me on one of 30+ national commercials), I wanted something more in my control. I’d been writing sketch comedy — a lot of political and social satire as I’d been trained to do at The Second City in Chicago — and I was loving it. Part of the appeal I found in sketch was that it didn’t require the time commitment nor attention span necessary for crafting plays or screenplays. Three to five pages and you’re out! Done. But, ultimately, I realized that I had more to say than could be handled within a sketch.

    My kids were old enough that graduate school seemed like a viable option. I applied to graduate school… singular… one program. University of Southern California. And I was accepted into their Dramatic Writing Program. The program admits only three students each year, a fact that I was not aware of when I applied. That’s a good thing that I didn’t know, because I didn’t need one more excuse in my head to not do it. Sometimes ignorance really is bliss.

    I wrote Black Super Hero Magic Mama during the Fall semester of my second year of this three-year program. Almost a year ago. There were several shootings that went unpunished at the time. The image of Tamir Rice, in particular, on that playground…wow. It was stuck in my head. My own son was around the same age then, and I couldn’t even imagine having to stand at a press conference podium and do what his mother was expected to do. I couldn’t. But, God forbid, if I were in that situation, that is exactly what would be required. It angered me, the depths of how unfair that expectation is of the mothers. And it’s always the mothers. It all rests on them. That’s crazy. It shouldn’t be her responsibility to calm the masses and forgive the cop and lead the prayer. To do all of it so publicly and so soon. So soon. It’s unfathomable.

    And so I thought… what if? What if a mother refused? What if this woman went somewhere else instead. The concept of “somewhere else” is something that I deal with a lot in my writing. Whether it’s a destination in one’s mind or some different realm that actually exists but no one else knows about, there’s a place that helps us cope. A happy place, a secret place, whatever it’s called, it’s a coping mechanism that we see time and time again in fantasy stories. The only difference is that it’s usually some orphaned child (Harry Potter, Dorothy, etc.) who goes on an adventure that might not really be happening. What if it’s the mother? That’s how this play unfolded for me.

    The play follows Sabrina Jackson, a widowed Black mother to a lovely, brilliant, 14-year-old son, Tramarion. When she loses her boy, Sabrina cannot cope with the loss.

    Rather than herald the Black Lives Matter movement, Sabrina retreats inward. She refuses to be the media martyr that society has come to expect/demand of mothers in this type of horrible situation. Instead — whether by choice or default — Sabrina lives out a comic book super hero fantasy in her mind and chooses to stay there, fighting crime and dodging reality.

    Join us for our Emerging Artist Showcase August 5-7 at Seattle Repertory Theatre. We will feature selections from three plays: The Owl Answers and A Movie Star Has To Star In Black And White by Adrienne Kennedy and Black Super Hero Magic Mama by Inda Craig-Galván. The show is free and open to the public. RSVP HERE.

    Black Super Hero Magic Mama won the 2016 Jane Chambers Student Award for playwriting. It will also receive a staged reading in August at Skylight Theatre in Los Angeles, directed by Deena Selenow.

  • #IntimanEmergers take over Seattle

    #IntimanEmergers take over Seattle

    Intiman Theatre’s Emerging Artist Program kicked off with a series of workshops with theatre professionals, equity training and a Seattle scavenger hunt. See them perform at our Emerging Artist Showcase August 5-7. RSVP Here.

    By Emily Van Loan
    Emerging Artist Production Assistant

    “The only tool you need is a curious mind,” Valerie Curtis-Newton encouraged this year’s emerging artists on the second to last day of their first week in the program.

    The first week of the Intiman Emerging Artist Program is accurately referred to as an intensive. In the first five days, 27 artists spent 55 hours in 12 workshops and meetings covering topics of racial equity, storytelling, viewpoints, teamwork and much more.

    Former emerging artists returned to lead workshops; Alice Gosti, Jéhan Òsanyin and Erin Murray came to share, teach, listen and create — all to prepare this year’s artists for their next 6 weeks.

    Day 1 was focused on getting to know each other and getting to know the city, playing games and participating in a scavenger hunt around the Seattle Center campus.

    emergers

     

    After that, each day’s goal was to bring the artists closer to each other and closer to their art; to make them think about the ways we make art and what we are trying to say as artists.

    With this seemingly daunting task set before them, Sheila Daniels reminds the artists to “dare to suck” and to “trust not knowing.”

    Moving forward, all 27 artists will check back in as one group occasionally for more workshops, but they will spend a lot of their time now rehearsing for the showcase.

    On the last day of their week-long intensive the artists got to sit down with some of the cast and creative team behind Stick Fly and actor G. Valmont Thomas left the artists with this: “Theatre, for me, has always been more than an art form, it’s about life.”

    Emerging Artist Showcase: Am I Allowed to Be Here?
    Seattle Repertory Theatre | FREE
    Friday August 5 at 7:30 pm
    Saturday August 6 at 7:30 pm
    Sunday August 7 at 1 pm

    CLICK TO RSVP

    Intiman Theatre is proud to welcome 27 artists to our 2016 Emerging Artist Program. We selected this incredible group of talented theatre artists from a pool of more than 200 applicants. Over the next six weeks they will learn new skills, connect with local artists and create a showcase production to share with industry professionals and the general public:

    Each performance features two plays by Adrienne Kennedy:
    The Owl Answers
    A Movie Star Has To Star In Black And White

    And introducing
    Black Super Hero Magic Mama
    by Emerging Artist Inda Craig-Galván

  • JOIN US FOR OUR FIFTH THEATRE FESTIVAL

    JOIN US FOR OUR FIFTH THEATRE FESTIVAL

    Stick Fly, our first major production of 2016, opens May 26.

    FROM PRODUCING ARTISTIC DIRECTOR ANDREW RUSSELL
    AND CO-CURATOR VALERIE CURTIS-NEWTON

    We cannot believe it has been half a decade since we reorganized Intiman Theatre into a smaller and more agile producing company. What a thrill it has been to evolve and grow with you as a new-old theatre company.

    Throughout Seattle – and America – people are having a growing conversation about how we see ourselves and our neighbors, and how we share space as community. With this dialogue comes a demand for bold and diverse stories. In response to this need, we’ve chosen to present a festival dedicated to great American plays by Black women in different venues.

    One of the benefits of our seasonal producing model is the opportunity to “deep dive” into our relationships and partnerships in order to create meaningful community engaged professional theatre. By doing this we enjoy the rich universal discoveries that come from spending time with specific communities.

    We felt it wasn’t enough to ask one play by a Black woman to speak for the entire canon of remarkable plays by Black women. We are making it possible for our patrons to hear from almost 20 different Black writers who are women – through main-stage productions, training programs, readings, summits and more.

    Together, we are creating a moment worthy of national attention. One that says these writers are valued even in the fifth whitest city in the country. That says: look at how rich the fabric of our community is, look at how we embrace the challenge of bridging our differences , look at how we are willing to face the fear around confronting the issue of race. We believe that the stories these writers are telling are important, entertaining and will be moving – for everyone.

    Stick Fly is the perfect play to kick-off this year’s festival. Lydia R. Diamond penned an all-American play where the struggles and joys that come out around the dinner table of one family represent the struggles and joys of an entire country. This play is sharp, funny, illuminating, and timely. We could not ask for a better cast, creative team, or director to bring it to life.

    We are also proud to partner with the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute and the Office of Arts and Culture. They have been remarkable partners and we look forward to working with them again on future productions.

    While we intentionally alter our way of producing each year to serve the content and plays we produce, what you are experiencing is a model we plan to continue – producing at theatres throughout the city, collaborating with community partners, and finding new and innovative ways to connect community to professional theatre.

    Thank you for your support, and for joining us at this production. We’ve been using this a lot this year, and it seems smart to conclude in this way. In the words of Lorraine Hansberry: “If you want to do something, you have to do something.” Together, we are doing something.

    “If you want to do something, you have to do something.”
    — LORRAINE HANSBERRY, AMERICAN PLAYWRIGHT

  • Meet Stick Fly Author Lydia R. Diamond

    Meet Stick Fly Author Lydia R. Diamond

    From May 24 – October 2, Intiman Theatre’s 2016 Festival will highlight about 20 plays by Black women including Diamond, Alice Childress, Dominique Morisseau and Adrienne Kennedy.

    Intiman Theatre is excited to kick off it’s 2016 Festival with a production of Stick Fly, a play by one of America’s most influential modern voices, Lydia R. Diamond. 

    Diamond explores themes of families, class and identity in her works and brings Black characters and communities to the stage. Her other award-winning plays — including Harriet Jacobs, The Bluest Eye, The Gift Horse and Smart People — have been produced across the country.

    “I remember standing in line for The Color Purple with my in-laws and my mother,” Diamond said in a 2005 interview with the New York Times. “and seeing Black audiences lined up around the block twice. That was sort of mind blowing for me. I thought, I don’t know why we don’t see more things like this here if there are this many people lining up to see them.”

    Stick Fly uses humor and drama to tell the story of a well-to-do Black family with plenty of secrets to hide. As characters reveal more about themselves, Stick Fly shows the joys and struggles of family and the power of connection.

    “The Play explores the painful imperfections of family,” Intiman Theatre’s Stick Fly director Justin Emeka said. “It’s our family who holds us up but family also holds us down. We can’t outrun those flaws and strengths.”

    Five Facts | Lydia R. Diamond

    1. Diamond’s Stick Fly opened on Broadway in 2012 and the cast included the TV and movie actor Mekhi Phifer and the stage veteran Ruben Santiago-Hudson.
    2. In 2005, Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre Company premiered Diamond’s dramatic adaptation of Toni Morrison’s novel The Bluest Eye, which won the Black Arts Alliance Image Award for Best New Play.
    3. After graduating from Northwestern University, Diamond started her own theatre company called Another Small Black Theatre Company.
    4. Diamond started writing Stick Fly when she was working on Voyeurs de Venus, a play about based on the true story of a 19th century African woman named Saartjie Baartman.
    5. Diamond studied acting at Northwestern University, before finding her calling in playwriting and earned a degree in theatre and performance studies in 1991.

    Diamond’s work has won the African American Arts Alliance of Chicago Black Excellence Award, an American Alliance for Theatre and Education Award, a Back Stage Garland Award, a Black Theatre Alliance’s Negro Ensemble Company Award for Best Play and Lorraine Hansberry Award for Best Writing, an Independent Reviewers of New England (IRNE) Award, an LA Weekly Theater Award, and a Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award. She received an Illinois Arts Council Grant and has been in residence at the Steppenwolf Theatre in Chicago through the NEA/TCG Theatre Residency Program for Playwrights.

    Diamond has been a W.E.B. DuBois Institute Fellow and a Huntington Playwrighting Fellow and is a member of the Theatre Communications Group board and the Huntington Theatre Company’s Council of Overseers.

  • Emerging Artists Week #1 – Fortuna Gebresellassie

    Emerging Artists Week #1 – Fortuna Gebresellassie

    This is the first in a series of weekly blog posts by our 2015 Emerging Artists, Intiman’s summer training intensive for a diverse cohort of up-and-coming theatre artists.
    Today’s post is written by Fortuna Gebresellassie, a BFA Acting student at New York University. Fortuna wants to use theatre to give strength to different cultures rather than oppressing them, and to help those who have been through traumatic experiences.

     

    What happens when you take 30 distinctly different individuals in age, size, background, experience, and education and put them in a room together for roughly 7 hours a day, twice a week?

    You find the construction site of a new home. You find the development of new friendships as people travel from around the world and country to come and participate, which would have otherwise never been possible. Through the sharing and generation of ideas, thoughts, and wonders — you create a family, really.

    A family of vastly curious, high-spirited, ever-so-dedicated, strong-willed, compassionate, and gleamingly brilliant individuals yearning for change, for greatness, for a voice that will shine some much needed light onto the world.

    In number, there is strength, in knowledge, there is power, and in art, there is star-striking light. Put those three in a room together and you’ve got yourself one hell of an unbreakable journey.

    That is what one-week with the IEAP has shared with me. And to think I’ve got 6 more!

     

    What Do You Bring To A Room

    In the first week, we were introduced to a handful of workshops, starting with “What Do You Bring To A Room,” where we identified for each other how casting directors may perceive us at first glance, simply by the way we enter a room.

    I found that our impressions of each Emerging Artist, once we wrote them down in black-and-white, significantly diminished the presence of the individual. Instead of crafting a full-blown detailed painting, each description became a skeleton for a one-size-fits-all of that person.

    It’s important for actors to understand how we initially portray ourselves as an individual when going into an audition room, so as to better plan and formulate the character we create for the audition.

    We also spent a great deal of time talking about the importance of networking. We obtained some insight from “Actors in the Field” about life as an actor, and tips on “Looking Your Best For Headshot,” just to name a few.

    It’s been a week full of fun and games, serious discussions and debates about the social challenges we face today within and outside our community. We’ve spent a great deal of time thinking about how we as artists can deal with, and better address, these challenges.

    This week has left me wondering more now then ever before, what does it really mean to be an artist? A silly question to some, but one that haunts many of us who have chosen to pursue this field for a career.

     

    “These artists are excited to change the world.”

    That is the last point on the “Five things you should know about the Emerging Artist Program” blog post. But what does that exactly mean, “changing the world?”

    How can we — 30 individuals all in different positions of our lives, with significantly different backgrounds and creative minds and understandings — possibly manage to “change the world?” What does that even mean? And more importantly, does anyone even care that we want to?

    Although it may seem like it to many, we don’t just dance around and cry on stage “for fun” all the time. There is meaning to it all. Every story has a lesson, whether one chooses to see it or not.

    And the story I’ve learned this week is: We all have a need to try and understand the joys and downfalls of humanity, the strengths and scars of others, so as to not only try and understand our own strengths and scars, but to understand each other in a way that creates a path wide enough for us all to walk on together.

    In this tease of a world where love and hate has managed to beautifully and distinctively coexist at all times, it’s easy to get lost. But if we try and open ourselves up to someone else’s life, free of judgment, maybe we can find one another when we get lost. That is what we have been welcomed and encouraged to do at the IEAP.

    Be courageous, be bold, be curious, flourish in our thoughts and wonders through the words that have been carefully crafted for us to use. Through the people we speak to and speak of, through the stories we share and learn, through the voices that have seemed lost, forgotten, shut out or taken away… We find ways of bringing them out and up into the fruitful life they deserve. We are encouraged to fulfill and act on our need to think, speak, and live.

    Photo Credit: Pamela M. Campi Photography

  • Orpheus Descending: An Inside Look with Director Ryan Purcell

    Orpheus Descending: An Inside Look with Director Ryan Purcell

    In just a few weeks, we’ll open the first anchor production of our 2015 festival: Tennessee Williams’ Orpheus Descending on the 12th Ave Arts Mainstage (Capitol Hill), developed by and featuring our Company-in-Residence, The Williams Project (TWP).
    Earlier this week, TWP founder and Orpheus director Ryan Purcell gave our Board of Trustees an inside look at his bold new re-staging of this Williams classic. Now, we’re sharing his sneak peek with YOU!

     

    OrpheusButtonOrpheus Descending is about a small town disrupted by an outsider – and what happens when that outsider taps into dangerous community undercurrents that eventually erupt in brutality and mayhem.

    For Intiman’s production, Ryan (a Seattle native and former Intiman festival artist) will bring Orpheus to life in front of – and among – the audience.

    Though we’ll begin in a virtually empty black box studio, by the end of the play we’ll have experienced a fully staged production.

    Ryan has also heightened the stakes of this American classic with diverse casting – but he didn’t cast roles with particular racial dynamics in mind.

    Instead, he tossed his casting net wide to discover a diverse pool of exceptional talent, then put the best actors in the best roles… and we’ll see what happens when they take the stage July 10 – August 2 on the 12th Ave Arts Mainstage.

    2015-Festival-BuyTickets

  • Five Things You Should Know About the Emerging Artist Program

    Five Things You Should Know About the Emerging Artist Program

    1. We promote diversity of age, education, race, and gender.

    Our Emerging Artists this year range from 18 to 41 years old. In the professional theatre world, artists collaborate with people of all ages, and we want to encourage cross-generation collaboration through our program. We have Emerging Artists with BFAs in Theatre, MBAs in Marketing, and even one Certified Medical Laboratory Scientist MLS(ASCP). More than 70% of our participants are people of color, and more than half are women.

    2. We train artists today to employ them tomorrow.

    There’s been a lot of conversation around Seattle recently about a lack of diversity in casting. That’s why we’ve focused our Emerging Artist program on giving underrepresented artists the tools they need — from headshots to master classes to on-stage experience — to become a vibrant part of our professional community.

    Many of our applicants asked us “why” we’re doing this program – in other words, what does Intiman get out of it? As a theatre for the public good, Intiman has created this program to serve the city of Seattle by raising up the next generation of diverse storytellers. It’s also good for us – we hope many of our Emerging Artists will appear on the Intiman stage in future festivals.

    3. Artists emerge in all kinds of ways.

    Some of our artists are young talent that you’re used to seeing in these kinds of programs. Others are from traditionally underrepresented communities who haven’t emerged on the “mainstream” scene yet. We have established artists exploring theatre for the first time, and just the same we have great theatre artists who are new to Seattle and need to emerge here.

    4. We’ll showcase their work.

    On August 4-6 at the Center House Theatre, our Emerging Artists will showcase their work with a short play by Lillian Hellman, a new play inspired by Lillian Hellman, and a new work inspired by our 2015 festival theme, “The Hunt is On.”

    5. These artists are excited to change the world.

    Emerging Artist Arthur Allen shared, “I think humanity can LIVE without art; I’m not entirely sure it can LOVE without it.”

    Fellow Emerging Artist Anna Saephon writes, “I can’t wait to work with Intiman because they are giving me this amazing opportunity to learn, grow, create art, pursue my passion, make a difference, and achieve my dreams!”

    Pictured: 2015 Emerging Artists Fortuna Gebresellassie, Averil Kelkar, and Pallavi Garg