Author: Phillip Chavira

  • The Angels Project Festival Report

    Intiman Theatre is proud to announce that our 2014 festival was a tremendous success. THANK YOU!

    The Angels Project CompanyChristopher Monsos

    What an incredible honor it was to bring Tony Kushner’s Angels in America back to the Intiman stage. Our festival company of 77 actors, artists, and administrators — a vibrant mix of seasoned professionals and young up-and-comers — achieved something truly remarkable. Our audiences enjoyed it, too:

    8,578 tickets were distributed for Angels in America and we achieved 115% of our ticket sales goal!

    Big check passing from Fred Hutch to Intaman Theater on Oct. 9, 2015.Robert Hood/ Fred Hutch

    Part of Intiman’s purpose is to link the world in which we live to the work we put on stageThat’s why we were thrilled to partner this year with Fred Hutch, our nonprofit neighbor and a global leader in the search for a preventative HIV vaccine. We truly believe that when a vaccine is discovered, it will be found right here in Seattle.

    This summer, our audiences donated $17,768 to Fred Hutch’s life-changing — and life-saving — research.

    Festival Events This year, we took a different approach to our flexible festival format, producing and partnering with a series of community events throughout the summer, inspired by themes in Angels in America:

    May — A Savage Chat with Tony Kushner at Town Hall SeattleRainbow Expansion Unit, Parts 1 & 2 (Six Pack Series Event) with Washington Ensemble Theatre at Velocity Dance Center

    June — Falling in Love Again with Seattle Men’s Chorus at the Paramount Theatre (STG)

    July — Henry VI & Orpheus Descending with The Williams Project at the Cornish Playhouse Studio; deepsouth documentary screening at SIFF Film Center

    August — Angels in America, Part 1 at the Cornish Playhouse at Seattle Center;  A Short-Term Solution to a Long-Term Problem by David Schmader at Velocity Dance Center

    September — Angels in America, Parts 1 & 2 produced in repertory at the Cornish Playhouse; The Normal Heart staged benefit reading with Strawberry Theatre Workshop at Fred Hutch

    October — Queer Russia with The Seagull Project at ACT Theatre

    Altogether, the festival spanned six months and featured two mainstage shows, one intern showcase, and nine community partner programs.

    internsElizabeth MacGregor

    We are particularly proud of our incredible intern company, seven of whom worked closely with out professional designers to create Angels in America; and all of whom helped produce and perform their own showcase, Tiny Kushner — a series of short plays by Angels author Tony Kushner.

    Our company of 25 interns spent three months in Seattle, produced six one-acts, and attended two master classes with renowned Seattle directors Sheila Daniels & Valerie Curtis-Newton.

     FHCRC VolsEric Gregory / Brilliant Vita

    Intiman’s mission is to create theatre that is relevant to our time and as diverse as the community in which we live. We know a key factor in achieving our mission is accessibility. That’s why we made a targeted effort to work with nonprofit partners and community organizations to expand the reach of Angels in America.

    We gave 310 free tickets to nonprofit & service organizations; 539 discount tickets to students, artists & nonprofit employees; and hosted three community partners in our lobby for audience engagement.

    Thank you for supporting Intiman Theatre and THE ANGELS PROJECT

  • “Altar of Remembrance” at ANGELS, Sept. 13 & 20

    Altar of Remembrance1The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence will host an Altar of Remembrance in the lobby of The Cornish Playhouse at Seattle Center during two performance days of Intiman Theatre’s Angels in America: Saturday, September 13 and Saturday, September 20.

    This community ritual invites individuals to participate by writing a message, lighting a candle, adding an object, or whatever action serves their expression of memory and tribute. With each contribution, the altar grows and changes to reflect the unique tapestry of human lives being honored.

    What can be placed on the Altar: Absolutely anything. Past altars have been populated with a rich collection of printed photos, sentimental trinkets, a loved one’s favorite food or beverage, letters, flowers . . . anything that holds meaning and connection.Altar of Remembrance 3

    Click here to buy tickets for our September 13 or 20 performances of “Angels in America.”

  • Julie Briskman Receives 2014 Lunt-Fontanne Fellowship

    Julie Briskman_photo credit © LaRae LobdellIntiman Theatre proudly announces the selection of our nominee, JULIE BRISKMAN, as one of ten actors who will participate in the 2014 Lunt-Fontanne Fellowship Program, a widely acclaimed national program to serve the future of American theatre.

    “Julie is a strong actress deeply rooted in our artistic community. Not only is she an impressive performer in both comedic and dramatic roles, she is also a community leader through initiatives like The Seagull Project,” said Intiman Producing Artistic Director Andrew Russell.

    “It was a difficult choice to narrow down and determine who to nominate for this – there are so many good actors in Seattle! – but it became clear that Julie stood out for a variety of reasons. She is as skilled as she is fun to be with, as vulnerable as she is daring, and an absolute team player.”

    David Hyde PierceJulie and her cohort of Lunt-Fontanne Fellows will join Master Teacher DAVID HYDE PIERCE for an intensive, weeklong master class and immersion experience at Ten Chimneys, the National Historic Landmark estate of theatre legends Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne in Genesee Depot, Wisconsin.

    Along with Julie, these nine actors have also been selected as the 2014 Lunt-Fontanne Fellows, with their nominating theatres:

    “What a gift this is — a chance to retreat and recharge, to connect with and learn from a diverse group of accomplished actors, and to remind ourselves, through Alfred and Lynn, of the theatrical lineage we all share.” – David Hyde Pierce, 2014 Master Teacher

     

  • MY TWO CLOSETS by Valerie Curtis-Newton

    Valerie-Curtis-Newton-2_CreditJoanneDeGeneresOriginally presented on Saturday, May 17, at Rainbow Expansion Unit: Parts 1 and 2, our second event in THE ANGELS PROJECT, co-produced as part of Washington Ensemble Theatre’s Six Pack Series and Velocity Dance Center‘s Speakeasy Series.

    My Two Closets

    by Valerie Curtis-Newton

    Before I get started. By show of hands, how many of you have ever seen that South Park episode in which Tom Cruise won’t come out of the closet? I love that one. Hilarious, right? And something a lot of us can relate to. Closets. We all have them, right? I mean identity closets. Everybody has at least one and everyone claims to want out. There is even a website called “Empty Closets” coming out resources and a safe place to chat.

    Like the closets we put our clothes in – identity closets seem to me to fall into two categories. They are either super organized, California closets neatly arranged and color-coded or they are like the exploding closets in cartoons. Bursting at the seams in a total jumble. Think about every comedy you’ve ever seen where the closet door gets opened and ton of crap comes crashing down on you. I think most of us hope that we can manage to get one of those California closets but end up standing in a ton of crap.

    Me, I‘ve done a lot of closet stuffing in my life. You know, how they say that when you finally figure out that you’re queer everything in your past makes a kind of sense. It was sort of like that for me. Not that all of the clues weren’t there in the open all the time. I know now that I have been bi-sexual since before I had words for it. I mean… I wore chukka boots and a skully hat for two years. Hell, I played softball for Christ sakes. But I also liked shopping and makeup and flirting with boys. (And pining over girls.) So, my closet stuffing started pretty early. When you’re a bi-sexual, Christian, you spend a lot time trying to figure out where is safe, where you fit in, where your tribe is.

    I remember when I was 12 I had these overwhelming simultaneous crushes on a boy named Michael Patterson and a girl named Aleta Crews. Michael Patterson was 12 too and lived in the house three down from mine on McGuire Air Force base. He had cocoa colored skin and the most beautiful hazel eyes. He was quiet and played sports and had bowlegs which for some reason really turned me on. All the kids in the neighborhood would gather at the park or on the quad to play. Usually, it was kickball or sometimes touch football. Mostly because the boys wanted to feel the girls up during the game. And I was the most athletic girl in the group. I could throw a ball with the best of them. But I digress.

    Anyway, I was crazy for Michael Patterson and he didn’t know that I was even alive. (Which I found completely hard to believe. Cause if I’m honest, I stalked the poor boy. I staked out his locker. I stood near him at lunch. I would watch him and his dad playing catch in the front yard from behind the curtains of my bedroom window.) One day, I was sitting on my porch waiting for him to come home from baseball practice with his dad. Eyeing him as he passed. Hoping against hope that he would say “Hi”. He just gave me the nod. You know the one. Who the hell ever invented the nod? I’d really like someone to explain it to me sometime. Anyway, on this one day, Michael Patterson’s dad, who always said “Hello” to me, stopped and said. “You really like my son huh?” I was completely embarrassed. Wishing the ground would swallow me up, I nodded.

    Then he said, “Well, if you want him to like you, you need to stop throwing the ball so good.” I told you the clues were there. But I was 12. I didn’t know that throwing the ball so well made me ineligible for Michael Patterson’s affections. And now I had a real dilemma. You see, I had to throw the ball well because my second crush, Aleta Crew played… you guessed it: Softball.

    Now, Aleta Crews was the exact opposite of Michael Patterson. She was older, 15, and tall and blonde. Like Scandinavian blonde and she played shortstop and her double play move was a thing of beauty to behold. I’d watch her from the bench – not in an “I’d love to kiss you” kind of way, more in a “looking at you makes me smile” kind of way. I kept hoping she would smile back. But it was a lost cause – Aleta Crews had a boyfriend.

    I never told anyone about my feelings for Aleta Crews. It didn’t seem right. So at night when I got home from practice – now this is a huge stepping out of the closet for me – I would sing show tunes – yes, show tunes – and put her name in them. My favorite was “Maria” from West Side Story. I would put the record on and sing at the top of my lungs “Aleta, I just met a girl named Aleta”. You laugh. Ok, but I can tell it is a laugh of recognition. You’re not fooling me. I know I’m not alone. Hey, I told you bi-sexual from the beginning.

    As I got older the stuff in my bi-sexual closet changed. You see, I went from hiding my “I Like Girls” stuff to hiding my “I Like Boys” stuff when I discovered that Lesbians don’t like bisexuals. Some don’t even believe we exist – we’re apparently on the continuum on the path to lesbianism, or we are posers unwilling to give up heterosexual privilege. Promiscuous. Indecisive. Blah blah blah.

    So as I moved into the Lesbian community I added the “I Like Boys” stuff to the “I Like Girls” stuff already in my cluttered identity closet. If there was a woman I wanted to date, it was sometimes easier not to mention the “I Like Boys” stuff too early. Always before sex but not usually on the first couple of dates.

    How am I still in the bi-sexual closet? I think it’s because my wife and I have been together for 17 years, so folks make assumptions. I am with a woman in a monogamous relationship – that makes me a lesbian, right? No, actually it makes me faithful. Even my beloved struggled with this early on. When we first decided to be monogamous, she declared me a Lesbian – with more than a little relief. (If I were a lesbian, she wouldn’t have to break her pledge never to get involved with the dangerous, will-leave-you-for-a-man-one-day bisexual.) Anyway, when she clapped the L Word on me I said, “nope, still bi”. She said, “But you’re in a lesbian relationship so that makes you a lesbian.” So then, I had to break it down for her.

    “Babe, I am a bi-sexual in a lesbian relationship. I live largely with in the lesbian community but I’m still bi-sexual.” The quizzical look on her face was kind of precious so I went on…. “You were in an interracial relationship for 4 years, right? Did that make you interracial? No, you were a black woman in an interracial relationship. Make sense.” She got it. Though I’m out to my wife and now all of you, most of time I just roll with the assumption that I’m a lesbian. After all there is nothing wrong with being a lesbian. I mean there are way worst things to be than a Lesbian…. like a Christian, for example.

    DAMN, more stuff for the closet. Living in a time when the word Christian offends so people, this may be the toughest closet to navigate. A religious practice is supposed to bring you closer to god and the people, As an organized religion, Christianity is often strident and judgmental and flat-out mean. It’s no wonder that so many queer folks of faith are closeted. Church may just be the largest walk-in closet of them all. From pastors to deacons to choir directors to Sunday school teachers, church is full of queers.

    It’s true of all churches to some degree but black church has it own special flair. Not just those men in yellow suits with matching shoes and hair fried died and laid the side. Or all those single women church secretaries with their – “roommates” – who sit together in the same pews next to each other for decades. I mean, come on, the gays are all up in the church. And why not, people go to church looking for their tribe. And many of us find it there. Often it’s no more dysfunctional than our families.

    You know, before moving here to Seattle – 20 years ago, I contemplated going to seminary. I’m really not supposed to come out like this but…It’s true. I diligently went to bible study, prayed, fasted, preached, spoke in tongues and holy danced in the aisles. Yep, all of that. You’re not supposed to do or say any of that if you’re a woman or queer. After all, religion these days reeks of patriarchy and misogyny and homophobia, right?

    In the church’s closet, “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” is in full effect. The telling comes at a very high price. When I got involved with my wife and moved out of the closet at church, I lost a lot of friends from the “faith community”, folks who “loved the sinner” but hated the sin. Who could no longer come to our house or have us at theirs. It was tough.

    The other shoe is that when I say that I’m a Christian in the gay community, my queer family sometimes moves away just as fast. Nowhere to run. Nowhere to hide. Then again what’s the point of running. I’m not a literalist or a fundamentalist. Yes, I believe in God. I believe in Christianity as a philosophy. I live in its contradictions and find comfort and wisdom and peace in it. In it’s mysticism, it’s rituals, it’s optimism, and it’s community. I believe in its call to be our highest, best selves. I believe in faith and kindness. But the fear of rejection in the church and in the world makes it too easy to stay silent. Overstuffing the closet.

    A couple of years ago, I wrote a not great screenplay about a woman who leaves her husband for a woman and has a spiritual battle with her preacher father and in the penultimate scene on the script, as she is being driven out of church by her father’s preaching, she’s rescued by that “gay guy” in the yellow suit – the one brave out person in every church. He tells her, that God is with her; that he sent her to that place for a reason. He says, “In this moment, right now. You might feel lonely and beaten. But God is here for you. He brought us here to this place for a reason. Our being here means change can happen.” Change can happen. She finds the courage and peace to hold her place in the church as an out person.

    So, that’s what I’m doing, trying to be brave enough to push open my closet doors. Out in the open is where all the good stuff is: all the laughter and the sharing, all the responsibility and the expectations, all the intimacy and the community. In the open is where all the love is. So, you know, maybe it’s not so awful when our closet doors burst open and the crap comes crashing down… And as crazy as it can look sometimes, here I am standing on my pile of crap: bisexual, Christian, and most importantly out.

     

    Photo Credit: Joanne DeGeneres

     

  • ANGELS Creative Team Reveal #3: Robert Aguilar

    Robert Aguilar HeadshotIf you’ve seen a show recently at Seattle Repertory Theatre, 5th Avenue Theatre, or Village Theatre, chances are good you’ve seen the inventive and impressive lighting design of Robert J. Aguilar, our Lighting Designer for Angels in America Parts 1&2. Of his new role, Robert says, “This show at this place at this time; perfect.”

    Robert’s recent designs include Little Shop of Horrors (5th Ave), Next to Normal (Contemporary Classics/Balagan Theatre), and A Crack in Everything (zoe|juniper). Other notable designs include: Bo-Nita, I Am My Own Wife, Of Mice and Men, The K of D an urban legend (Seattle Rep); Hairspray in Concert, Titanic: The Concert (5th Ave); Trails (Village Theatre); The Yellow Wood, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee and Zanna Don’t! (Contemporary Classics); The Lady with All the Answers (ACT); and If You Give a Mouse a Cookie (Seattle Children’s Theatre). Robert is the managing director and resident lighting designer of Contemporary Classics, and the lighting associate for Seattle Repertory Theatre.

    Erik Andor for Intiman by LaRae Lobdell | PhotoSister.comFun Fact: This will be the third season at Intiman for Robert’s dog, Ole (a Shiba Inu/Shitzu mix). Robert’s boyfriend, Erik, worked on both our past festivals, so the pup’s always been around – and we’re excited to have him back.

    How did you first encounter Angels in America?

    Angels is a show that has been important to me since the very first time I read it as an undergrad at the UW. I’m pretty sure it was an assigned reading but from the first sentence “Hello and good morning” to the last “The Great Work Begins” [how fitting is that!] I couldn’t put the script down.

    I remember finishing it sometime around 2am and just sitting there in stunned silence digesting all if it, then I read it again. Initially I connected to the play as a young gay man — a Gay Fantasia on National Themes? I have no idea what that means but I know I’m going to love it!

    Nowadays I find myself deeply fascinated by the humanity of the plays; these characters live and breathe, laugh and cry, fight and fuck on the page. It’s brave storytelling and beautiful poetry.

    What’s the most challenging production you’ve tackled?

    In 2011 I designed the Seattle Repertory Theatre’s production of Of Mice and Men. It’s an incredibly well-known story and the pressure to do it right was huge. Happily I can say that we more than succeeded. It was a coordinated effort with an excellent director (Jerry Manning), fantastic design team (including Intiman’s own Jennifer Zeyl and Deborah Trout), and superb cast. Having the right people in the room is everything.

    What do you love about Seattle?

    Dark coffee, cold beer, handsome men. What’s not to love about Seattle?

  • ANGELS Creative Team Reveal #2: Mark Mitchell

    Mark Mitchell Headshot_PhotoCreditStevenMillerIntiman is thrilled to welcome renowned artist/designer Mark Mitchell to his first Intiman festival experience, as our Costume Designer for Angels in America Parts 1 & 2.

    Mark is an artist, designer, and teacher whose performance and subsequent exhibition of Mark Mitchell:Burial at the Frye Museum in September 2013 drew record attendance and was critically acclaimed. Angels in America is Mark’s return to “legitimate” theater after a break of some 20 very odd years.

    Fun Fact: Mark lives in a pagoda with his partner Kurt and their beloved “Boston-like” rescue terrier, Glouchester.

     

    How did you first encounter Angels in America?

    I came to Angels through the HBO miniseries production. My partner came home to find me a blubbering mess, and had to fill me in that I had only watched the first part! I am rather an idiot sometimes.

    What’s the most challenging project you’ve tackled?

    My most challenging project so far has been my Burial collection, which I showed at the Frye Museum in September of 2013. I’ll be returning to Burial II in January 2015, and then that will be my most challenging project to date.

    What do you love to do in Seattle?

    My favorite things to do in Seattle are gardening and enjoying the fantastic mild weather year-round. I actually prefer the cooler grayer months. They suit my mosslike nature.

    Photo Credit: Steven Miller

     

  • ANGELS Creative Team Reveal #1: Jennifer Zeyl

    Jennifer Zeyl HeadshotIf you’ve seen even one Intiman festival show in the past two years, then you’ve seen the exceptional, award-winning scenic design of Jennifer Zeyl.

    Not only is she our Production Manager, Jennifer has designed the set for every single show of our 2012 and 2013 festivals. And she’s back again this year, as the Scenic Designer for Angels in America Parts 1&2.

    Jennifer has created award-winning designs for numerous theatres in Seattle, including Seattle Repertory Theatre (I Am My Own Wife, Of Mice and Men), ACT Theatre (Pilgrims Musa and Sheri in their New World), Seattle Children’s Theatre (Jackie and Me), Village Theatre (TRAILS), Balagan Theatre (Hedwig and the Angry Inch), Book-it Repertory Theatre (Little Women, Even Cowgirls Get the Blues), and Washington Ensemble Theatre (13 Shows including Crave, Finer Noble Gases and Crumbs are Also Bread), where she served as a Founder and Co-Artistic Director from 2004-2008.

    Fun Fact: Jennifer received the 2006 Stranger Genius Award in Theatre.

    How did you first encounter Angels in America?

    I saw the production at Trinity Repertory Theatre in 1993 while in undergrad at The University of Rhode Island. I became obsessed, bought the scripts and then the films when they where available.

    What’s the most challenging production you’ve tackled?

    You’re about to see it.

    What do you love to do in Seattle?

    I love to walk my dog in Seattle parks. I love to eat my husband’s cooking. Most of all, I love to make theatre here.

     

  • ANGELS Cast Reveal #8: Marya Sea Kaminski

    Marya Sea Kaminski HeadshotOur final cast reveal is the immensely talented Marya Sea Kaminski: Award-winning actor, writer, solo performer, and returning repertory member.

    You may remember Marya (how could you not?) from our original festival, where she portrayed Janet in Dan Savage’s Miracle!, the title role in Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, and The Nurse in Romeo and Juliet.

    On the Seattle stage, Marya has also starred in the original rock musical Riddled (Richard Hugo House), Other Desert Cities (ACT), Clybourne Park (Seattle Rep), Electra (Seattle Shakespeare Company), and more, including several shows at Washington Ensemble Theatre, where she was a founding member and co-artistic director from 2004-08.

    Marya will portray the Angel, whom Tony Kushner refers to as “four divine emanations, manifest in one; the Continental Principality of America.” She descends from heaven to give Prior Walter, a man suffering with AIDS, an important message.

    Fun Fact: Marya is a Genius Award winner in Theater from The Stranger.

    How did you first encounter Angels in America?

    I had a work-study job at the Annenberg Center in Philadelphia when the first national tour came through town. I was a Theatre Arts student at the University of Pennsylvania and was lapping up every experience I could, on stage and off. I had never seen anything like these productions. I’d seen big Broadway musicals and small intimate dramas, but never a play so epic, so authentic, smart, heartfelt and beautifully realized. These plays made me fall in love with the Bethesda Angel and, since that time, I have never taken a trip to New York City without stopping in Central Park to visit with her.

    What’s the most challenging role you’ve tackled?

    Wow, I have had the great luck to chew on many challenges over the last decade of my career. My favorite challenges are the plays that keep unfolding, like some tightly bound bud that starts to bloom on the first read, or in the audition. And when it first starts to open, you see how beautiful it is, but then you realize you are only seeing the first insights of a deep, deep beauty – that’s when things get terrifying and delicious. Electra at Seattle Shakespeare was a role like that. Hedda Gabler, too, I’ve played her a few times now and I feel like I am only beginning to get close to her secret heart.

    What do you love to do in Seattle?

    I love to go to the Frye Art Museum. It’s free and close to my house and is always, always inspiring. Someone once told me that you should choose at least one museum to become good friends with; the Frye is probably the closest I have to a companion museum. I can always write there, and have that exquisite experience of being alone with other people among beautiful works and tremendous ideas.

  • ANGELS Cast Reveal #7: Adam Standley

    Adam Standley HeadshotAdam Standley is a recent familiar face at Intiman, performing in three of last year’s festival shows (Stu for Silverton, Trouble in Mind, We Won’t Pay! We Won’t Pay!).

    He has also worked with award-winning casts at Seattle Children’s Theatre, Seattle Shakespeare Company, and the Washington Ensemble Theatre, and he is a founding member of the Satori Group.

    Adam will portray Prior Walter, who begins the play with a committed boyfriend (Louis) and a crushing diagnosis (AIDS) and goes on to become the recipient of several heavenly visions.

    Fun Fact: The Satori Group, which Adam co-founded, originally got its start in Cincinnati.

    How did you first encounter Angels in America?

    I read Angels in America my freshman year in college. I was asked to do a large report on it, and I always felt like it I was cheating cause I was so enraptured with the play. Like I was afraid that my teacher was gonna find out that I was enjoying myself, and make me switch it up or something. I then watched a video of my college’s production of it, which was top-notch and starred, interestingly, a female Roy Cohn, who had all the power of a titan. I will say that it’s one of those plays that I read and see the play onstage as I’m reading it.

    What’s the most challenging role you’ve tackled?

    There’d probably be an argument for either the Marquis de Sade in Doug Wright’s Quills, or Keith Harring, the line artist from the 80’s, in a musical called Radiant Baby. The Marquis was an exercise in exposure and storytelling. He knew something about how the human mind wants the next bread crumb, and it was a real lesson in anticipation.

    Keith Harring was a beautiful and selfish man. As an actor, being selfish onstage is tricky because it contrasts with the work of the actor, which is rooted in the other. Challenges in roles though are when it’s good. I think most actors know what I’m talking about when I say that it’s much more dangerous when you are generating challenges to keep alive onstage. Prior, I’m sure, will be rich in challenges.

    What do you love to do in Seattle?

    I love to watch my dog at Marymoor Park. He’s a hunting dog in breed, and there’s something classically satisfying about watching him bound through tall grass after something. My partner, my dog and I on park day, not much better.

  • ANGELS Cast Reveal #6: Quinn Franzen

    Quinn Franzen by LaRae LobdellBorn and raised in Hawaii, Quinn Franzen now calls Seattle home. We’re excited to welcome Quinn back to the Intiman boards, where he portrayed Romeo (Romeo and Juliet) and Frank (Dirty Story) in our 2012 festival.

    Quinn is a company member of the Satori Group, and has produced and performed a bunch of new work in collaboration with them over the years. This May, he will perform in Satori’s new play Returning to Albert Joseph, written by Spike Friedman. He is currently working on Algernon in The Importance of Being Earnest with Seattle Shakespeare Company.

    Quinn will portray Louis Ironson, a word processor working for the Second Circuit Court of Appeals who struggles to accept and cope with his boyfriend’s battle with AIDS.

    Fun Fact: Quinn’s sixth-grade homeroom teacher, Mrs. Teske, made him attend afterschool drama club as punishment for being obnoxious in class.

    How did you first encounter Angels in America?

    I had heard of the play when I was in high school, but somehow got the idea that it was like this feel-good Christian comedy. Like if Neil Simon wrote “Touched by an Angel” or something. I don’t know. (Sometimes things get lost in translation en route to Hawaii.) I ended up reading it in college and was blown away. Its humor is so absolutely innocent and disarming one moment, and then seriously brutal the next. A wicked one-two punch. Just reading it is such an emotionally messy and exhausting ride.

    What’s the most challenging role you’ve tackled?

    Oof. God, I don’t know. I have a really hard time thinking of roles as more or less difficult than each other. I mean, obviously not every role is going to be a mammoth like Hamlet… but I think any role is basically an impossible venture when you look at it baldly — that is, that we’re trying to replicate a breathing human life here. And then present it at a size and volume digestible for a few hundred people in two hours. It’s an absurd and beautiful undertaking. But, in terms of most insurmountable: my high school put on a production of A Streetcar Named Desire and I was cast as Stanley Kowalski. I was 16 or 17. Jesus. I’m not saying I know that much more now than I did then, but at least now I know I don’t know, and I really didn’t know I didn’t know back then. I like to think that helps. And I am excited and terrified to bring my know-nothing approach to Louis.

    What do you love to do in Seattle?

    My absolute favorite thing in Seattle are those first teasingly bright days in early spring where the trees go ape shit with buds and everyone starts wearing t-shirts and shorts even though it’s barely 50 degrees. The best thing to do is drive up and down Lake Washington Boulevard between Madison Beach and Seward Park. Steal a vehicle if you have to. It’s worth it.