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Author: Phillip Chavira

  • A LETTER FROM BOARD PRESIDENT KEVIN SHAH

    Dear Intiman Community,

    As we prepare to announce our next transformative season, I want to take a moment to celebrate the incredible achievements of our 50th anniversary Season and thank you for making it such a success. It was a season marked by rejuvenation, community, love, growth, and, above all, joy. 

    This was our most ambitious season in over a decade—a brave move at a time when professional non-profit theatres across the country are struggling to stay open – and you, our audience, members, donors, and supporters, stepped up to cheer us on in a huge way. Intiman did what we do best: we acted differently, doubled down on our mission and values, and listened to our community. Our Artistic Director, Jennifer Zeyl, curated a season that was vibrant and unapologetic. Intiman brought back Black Nativity, premiered The Lion Tells His Tale, staged a 14-actor ensemble of The Lower Depths with The Seagull Project, and addressed women’s reproductive rights with Cindy of Arc. We welcomed more than 10,000 audience members (3x more than last year) who were more diverse than ever: 46% BIPOC and nearly 50% under the age of 55. Wow!

    We have an incredible team that deserves all the hugs, love, praise, and gratitude. They are making a significant impact in our community by working for a non-profit in a for-profit, capitalist system. Intiman’s education programs continue to stand out as beacons of hope for future generations, as we build a pipeline of technical artists and inspire young people to pursue their passion for storytelling.

    None of this would be possible without you – thank you. Your membership, engagement, donations, love, and support of our mission are what keep Intiman thriving. We serve because the community has voiced a need and desire for our mission. As we look ahead to building on the impact of our previous seasons, we need you more than ever. We need you to continue engaging, supporting, and bringing new people to our performances. Sharing on social media is helpful, but bringing just one person who has never been before is transformative. Intiman is changing how we all see the world, and we can continue to expand this impact through your care and support.

    My vision for Intiman is a theatre that continues to grow audience, impact, and community. A place where the staff and artists are well-compensated so they can focus on telling powerful stories and providing quality educational opportunities to Seattle area youth. I look forward to an exciting new season ahead, as our team creates new experiences and explores untold stories. I can’t wait for you to hear what’s in store!

    Please share your vision for Intiman with me – I would love to hear from you.

    In service, with gratitude,

    Kevin Shah
    President
    Intiman’s Board of Trustees

  • SHARE THE LOVE 2024: Celebrating Langston Hughes

    Celebrating Langston Hughes

    A Panel Conversation
    Wednesday, March 27, 7:30pm
    Erickson Theatre, 1524 Harvard Ave.

    A panel conversation discussing the life, legacy, and cultural and artistic impact of Langston Hughes, playwright of Black Nativity. Langston Hughes was an American poet, social activist, novelist, playwright, and columnist from Joplin, Missouri. One of the earliest innovators of the literary art form called jazz poetry, Hughes is best known as a leader of the Harlem Renaissance. Hosted by Vivian Phillips,  a communications professional, arts leader, and founder of ARTE NOIR.

     Lobby opens at 6:30pm, and the panel will begin at 7:30pm. The lobby bar will be open, including snacks and alcoholic beverages.. 

    Become an Intiman Member for $5 Tickets to this event!

    Intiman Members receive $5 tickets to this event (regular price: $35)! Membership starts at just $8/month. Members also receive 15% off at the lobby bar, first access to tickets for our mainstage season, and 30% off tickets to all Intiman productions. Members can purchase the ticket tier marked “Intiman Member” for $5 tickets to this event.

    Meet the Panelists

    Vivian Phillips

    Vivian (she/her) is a communications professional and arts leader.  She is the founder of ARTE NOIR, which launched in May 2021 as an online publication celebrating Black art and culture from the African diaspora.  In September 2022, ARTE NOIR opened as a physical space in the historic Central District featuring a state-of-the-art exhibit gallery and retail store featuring products and the work of Black artists and makers.  In 2020, Vivian teamed with veteran arts journalist Marcie Sillman to create and produce the doubleXposure podcast, giving voice to the ways in which arts, creativity, and culture shape our lives and community. 

    Valerie Curtis-Newton

    Valerie (she/her) is currently the Head of Directing and Playwriting at the University of Washington School of Drama, and she serves as the Founding Artistic Director for The Hansberry Project, a professional African American theatre lab. Intiman credits include directing Bulrusher, Trouble in Mind, and The Wedding Band. She has worked with professional theatre’s across the country including: The Guthrie Theatre, Steppenwolf Theatre, Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Seattle Rep, Playmakers Repertory Company, Actors’ Theatre of Louisville, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Seattle Children’s Theatre, The Mark Taper Forum, New York Theatre Workshop, and Southern Repertory Theatre among others. Awards: 2020: Seattle Times Most Influential People of the Last Decade; 2019: Theatre Puget Sound – Gregory Falls Award for Sustained Achievement; 2016: Seattle Times Footlight Award (Best in Show) 2014: Stranger Genius Awards in Performance and the Crosscut Courage Award for Culture; 2012: Gypsy Rose Lee Award for Excellence in Direction; 2001: Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation’s (SDCF) Gielgud Directing Fellowship 1997-1999: NEA/TCG Career Development Fellowship for Directors.

    Lanesha Debardelaben

    For over twenty years, LaNesha (she/her) has helped lead the growth of Black museums. She has served as the award-winning President & CEO of the Northwest African American Museum in Seattle where she led innovative, transformational growth.  While President & CEO from 2017 to 2023, she founded the African American Cultural Ensemble (ACE), the nation’s first permanent, ongoing museum choir. She established the museum’s annual Malcolm X Day, Juneteenth Week, Freedom Weekend, NAAM-Smithsonian partnership, and revitalized its annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. She also founded the Elders Circle, the James Baldwin Circle, the Descendants Series, and Knowledge is Power, a cultural literacy program that freely distributed 25,000 new, beautifully illustrated African American children’s books to children.  She did all of this while leading the museum through the pandemic into a new strategic plan with a relevant new mission statement and elevating its fundraising to record-setting levels. She is currently on a multi-year sabbatical from museum work in order to finish her PhD. Laneshadebardelaben.com

    Jordan Charlton

    Jordan Charlton (he/him) was born in Florida. His writing has been published in The Adroit Journal, Quarter After Eight, Ruminate, West Branch and elsewhere. He is a Pushcart Prize and Best New Poets nominee and former Associate Editor in Nonfiction for Prairie Schooner currently editing his debut poetry collection Slow Kill, which has been accepted for publication with Finishing Line Press in the Fall of 2024

  • SHARE THE LOVE 2024: My Name is Rachel Corrie – Play Reading

    My Name is Rachel Corrie: Play Reading

    A Play Reading And Panel Conversation
    Wednesday, March 20, 7:30pm
    Erickson Theatre, 1524 Harvard Ave.

    A play reading of My Name is Rachel Corrie, followed by a panel conversation. 

    My Name is Rachel Corrie
    Taken from the writings of Rachel Corrie, edited by Alan Rickman and Katharine Viner
    Directed by Kaytlin McIntyre
    Performed by Cheyenne Barton

    On March 16, 2003, Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by an Israeli Army bulldozer in Gaza as she was trying to prevent the demolition of a Palestinian home. The play, composed from Rachel’s own writings, shows an activist in the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Join us for a staged reading of My Name is Rachel Corrie followed by a panel conversation discussing the role of art in times of war and our local response to global issues. 

    Lobby opens at 6:30pm, and the panel will begin at 7:30pm. The lobby bar will be open, including snacks and alcoholic beverages.

    Runtime: 75mins

    Become an Intiman Member for $5 Tickets to this event!

    Intiman Members receive $5 tickets to this event (regular price: $35)! Membership starts at just $8/month. Members also receive 15% off at the lobby bar, first access to tickets for our mainstage season, and 30% off tickets to all Intiman productions. Members can purchase the ticket tier marked “Intiman Member” for $5 tickets to this event.

    Meet the Panelists and Creative Team

    Cheyenne Barton

    Cheyenne Barton (she/they)  is honored to be a part of this reading of My Name is Rachel Corrie. Previous credits include: Little Women (Seattle REP), Sense & Sensibility (Village Theatre), Teenage Dick (Seattle REP), The Wolves (ACT). When not acting, she can be found making art on the internet full time. She sends all her love to her family back in Houston, who always support her creative endeavors, whatever shape they may take. Thank you to Ares, Soph, and Pep for being the lights in her little life. Free Palestine.

    Kaytlin McIntyre

    With over a decade of experience at Seattle Rep, Kaytlin McIntyre (she/her) recently joined the Artistic Leadership Team at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival as their Director of New Works. Originally from Kansas City, McIntyre began her journey at Seattle Rep as an intern, eventually joining the senior leadership team and leading the new works program, The Other Season. Kaytlin is also a director and theatre artist, most recently writing and performing in the autobiographical “House Fire Project”. She has directed and developed work by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, Keiko Green, Courtney Meaker, Benjamin Benne, Jaclyn Backhaus and more. She is an alumni of the Lincoln Center Director’s Lab and an Associate Member of SDC.

    Jennifer Zeyl

    Jennifer Zeyl (she/they) is Artistic Director of Intiman Theatre and a Community Instigator.  In 2006, Jennifer  walked into Seattle Repertory Theatre with, in one hand – a dog-eared script for My Name is Rachel Corrie (which a colleague had smuggled out of the Royal Court in London) and, in the other hand, the hand of Marya Sea Kaminski.  Jen and Marya were Founding Co-Artistic Directors of Washington Ensemble Theatre, hungry to tell this story and so happy that The Rep agreed. This was Braden Abraham’s Rep directing debut.  Braden would go on to become The Rep’s Artistic Director. Jen would become Intiman’s AD and Marya would become AD at Pittsburgh Public Theatre. Great futures were started by this project and, by saying YES to using our stages to confront and personalize global injustice.

    Farheen Siddiqui Ahmed

    Farheen Siddiqui Ahmed (she/her) is an Intiman board member of nearly 4 years and Seattle native. She is passionate about dialogue during times of global conflict and the human right to exist with dignity. Farheen has co-led Seattle’s Day of Dignity, a day of serving our homeless patrons in Seattle, and is part of local Muslim organizations such as Wasat. During the day she consults in tech as well as helps Seattlelites reach their real estate goals through O+F Group with her husband.

    Jesse Roth

    Jesse Roth (she/her) is a writer, theatre artist, educator, and organizer. Her writing has been published in The Stranger and Bitter Pill Press’ An Apple a Day. She is the communications manager at The Feast (Formerly The Williams Project) and writes the newsletter Art Gardening. She is a white cis queer woman of German Jewish and Western European descent who experiences chronic pain. She lives in Capitol Hill.

    Hala Saleh

    Hala Saleh (she/her) is a Tatreez (traditional Palestinian cross-stitch embroidery) artist who lives in the Seattle area. Hala practices the art of Tatreez both as a way to connect to her heritage and culture, but also as a way to resist the erasure of Palestinian identity. Hala recently started a local Tatreez circle for Palestinians (Seattle Resistance Tatreez). We believe that our existence is resistance, and practicing our ancestral craft reaffirms our humanity, our ties to our indigenous land of Palestine, and our pride in our heritage. Hala is a software technology executive by day and a Palestinian all day every day.

    Gabriel Teodros

    Gabriel Teodros is a musician, writer and educator from South Seattle who first made a mark with the group Abyssinian Creole, and reached an international audience with his critically-acclaimed solo debut Lovework. He has released over 10 projects since and set stages on fire all over the map from the US to Canada, Mexico, Cuba, Ethiopia and South Africa; often in combination with workshops on creative writing, music, history, science fiction and media literacy. His latest album From The Ashes of Our Homes just released this past fall. For more information check www.gabrielteodros.com

    Anahita Sepehri (Stage Manager)

    Anahita (she/her) is a versatile artist with a profound love for theatre’s transformative magic. Her journey has been marked by memorable productions, including “The Tempest,” “Little Women” at Seattle Rep, “The Comedy of Errors”, “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” with Seattle Shakespeare Company, and Village Theatre’s “Hello, Dolly!” and “Sense and Sensibility.” Anahita’s passion for diverse narratives shines through in works like “The Forgotten History of Mastaneh” at Seda Iraianin Ensemble Theatre, and “Not Our Town” at Pony World Theatre. Her artistic path has embraced both profound and whimsical tales, as seen in “None Sense and Beauty” and “OR” at Theatre 22. She firmly believes Theatre is the mirror where we can examine our reflections, question our beliefs, and discover the profound truths that bind us all. Next up: English at ArtsWest
     
  • SHARE THE LOVE 2024: Gorky & Chekov: Theater as Revolution

    Gorky & Chekov: Theater as Revolution

    A Panel Conversation
    Wednesday, March 13, 7:30pm
    Erickson Theatre, 1524 Harvard Ave.

    A panel conversation discussing discussing the life, friendship, political landscape, and cultural and artistic impact of Gorky and Chekov. Maxim Gorky wrote The Lower Depths, recently seen at Intiman in a co-production with The Seagull Project. Learn more about the times and politics of Russia in the early 1900’s when the controversial play premiered.

    Hosted by Misha Berson, with Gavin Reub, Mark Jenkins, and Dr. Barbara Henry.

    Lobby opens at 6:30pm, and the panel will begin at 7:30pm. The lobby bar will be open, including snacks and alcoholic beverages.

    Become an Intiman Member for $5 Tickets to this event!

    Intiman Members receive $5 tickets to this event (regular price: $35)! Membership starts at just $8/month. Members also receive 15% off at the lobby bar, first access to tickets for our mainstage season, and 30% off tickets to all Intiman productions. Members can purchase the ticket tier marked “Intiman Member” for $5 tickets to this event.

    Meet the Panelists

    Misha Berson

    Misha Berson (she/her)  was the theater critic for the Seattle Times from 1991-2016.  She is the author of several books, most recently Something’s Coming, Something Good: West Side Story and the American Imagination (Applause), and has taught courses at University of Washington, Seattle University and SF State University.  She has been a Pulitizer jurist several times, and is co-chair of the New Plays contest committee for the American Theatre Critics Association.

    Gavin Reub

    Gavin Reub (he/him) is a director, producer, and dramaturg. He is the Artistic Director of The Seagull Project, for which he has directed at ACT Theatre, Hugo House, Lewis and Clark College, and the Ilkhom Theatre in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. He was the recipient of the Gregory Award for Outstanding Production for The Seagull Project’s 2015 The Three Sisters. Gavin was a founding member of the interdisciplinary group Cheat Day, which premiered their full-length concert/immersive event at Nii Modo in 2018, and performed in Seattle, NYC, and Lima-Peru. He was the Co-Founder and Director of Creative Development for Umbrella Project. He currently teaches at Path With Art, Coyote Central, and Seattle University. He graduated from the University of Washington, is a member of artsEquity, a 2021 resident artist at Jack Straw Cultural Center, and a member of the 2014 Lincoln Center Directors Lab. For more: IG @gzreebz

    Mark Jenkins

    Mark Jenkins (he/him) is Professor Emeritus at the University of Washington School of Drama and was head of the UW Professional Actor Training Program from 2003 to 2011. Mark is also a Co-Founder of Seattle’s Freehold Theatre Lab, and is an ensemble member of The Seagull Project. He has been an actor for over thirty years, working in New York, Hollywood, and Seattle. He has appeared on and Off-Broadway, in dozens of television series including his own and several feature films, among them Apocalypse Now. He has played major roles at Seattle Repertory Theatre, Intiman, Empty Space, and ACT. He is lifetime member of the famed Actor’s Studio. He has collaborated with Russian Stanislavski master, Leonid Anisimov in Russia, Japan and the U.S. and with the Ilkhom Theatre in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. He was instrumental in bringing the Ilkhom Theatre Company to Seattle’s ACT Theatre and to the UW in the spring of 2008 and returned to Ilkhom to work and teach in the summer of 2009. His McCarthy-era play All Powers Necessary and Convenient has been produced by the School of Drama and was published by the University of Washington Press. Intiman Acting Credits: Jungle of Cities, The Wild Duck, Dram Play, A Doll’s House, The Seahorse. Directing Credits: Golden Boy, Long Days Journey into Night, Othello Playwright Credits: All Powers Necessary and Convenient, Red Earth Gold Gate Shadow Sky.

    Dr. Barbara Henry

    Dr. Barbara Henry (she/her) is associate professor in the Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures and affiliate faculty at the Stroum Jewish Studies Center at the University of Washington. She teaches classes on 19th and 20th century Russian and Yiddish literature and drama. She is the author of Rewriting Russia: Jacob Gordin’s Yiddish Drama (UW Press) and the forthcoming Tales from the Russian Underworld (Cornell U Press).

     
  • Union strong

    Union strong

    Intiman Theatre stands in solidarity with SAG-AFTRA and WGA as they strike in pursuit of a fair contract. We are proud to remain a full union theatre.

    Intiman works with all of the theatrical unions including IATSE and AEA and will continue to provide union jobs to Seattle artists. Every Member, donor, sponsor, and ticket buyer at Intiman is helping to make Seattle union strong!

  • Intiman Announces Free Tickets for Everyone for upcoming production of THE EVENTS

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    May 2, 2019

    Contact: Wesley Frugé, Consulting Marketing Directorwesley.fruge@gmail.com | (936) 714-2732

    Seattle, WA (May 2, 2019) — Intiman Theatre is thrilled to announce that tickets for their upcoming production of THE EVENTS will be free for everyone. The production will play July 18 – August 10, at The Erickson Theatre (1524 Harvard Ave, Seattle, WA 98122). The play explores our search for healing and forgiveness in the wake of a mass shooting, and it will integrate a different community choir into the performance for each showing.

    These free tickets are made possible by generous support from Lauren Dudley, Cynthia Sears, Marcia & Klaus Zech, and US Bank. These and other donors are underwriting the cost of every seat for the production, allowing Intiman to give away all the tickets, while maintaining the highest quality professional production.

    Intiman Theatre recently retired all of their debt, and the company is moving forward boldly to engage the community in WILD, WICKED and WOKE storytelling. Together with the board, Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl and Executive Director Phillip Chavira are excited to make this ticketing policy shift for the newly debt-free company.

    “I believe access to art is a human right and storytelling is how we create the necessary empathy to heal. In the US today, we experience traumatic mass shootings with escalating frequency. It’s too much to process and the conversation is so polarized.  This is an invitation for us to hold space as a community and process together.” says Intiman Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl.

    “Theatre’s purpose has always been to bring people together and invest in the ritual of storytelling with the goal of self-transformation. I am proud that Intiman is championing this remarkable endeavor by opening the doors wide for all to enter.” says Lamar Legend, Board Member.

    “At U.S. Bank, we power the potential of community partners, like Intiman Theatre, that strive for betterment and simplicity everyday. We’re proud to continue our long standing relationship with Intiman, and celebrate the organization on this innovative, industry-defining new approach,” says Masoud Torabi, AVP Digital Lead for U.S. Bank Seattle Market.

    Intiman Executive Director Phillip Chavira says, “the executive staff at Intiman want to flip the model of non-profit producing and find ways to share the art on our stage with more people in the community. I’m so proud of our staff, board, and supporters for their willingness to explore this free ticket model as we seek to expand our audience and welcome everyone into the theatre, from those who have been with us for 47 years, to those who have never seen a play.”

    To receive free general admission tickets for THE EVENTS, audiences can go to intiman.org or show up in person to the box office on the day of the show beginning 2hrs before curtain. Each person can receive 1 or 2 free tickets online or in person – Intiman is guaranteeing walk up ticket availability for all shows. Once all tickets for a performance have been given away, a waitlist will be started at the box office for cancellations / no shows. For those audiences who may prefer a more traditional experience, a small amount of advance reserved seating is available for a fee, pending availability (free tickets have priority).  

    Intiman would like to thank the local and national theatres who have blazed the trail for this free ticketing model, including Mixed Blood in Minneapolis and Theatre Battery in Kent. We are looking forward to seeing you at the show this summer!

    ABOUT INTIMAN THEATRE:

    Intiman Theatre wrestles with American Inequities. Intiman Theatre is a professional theater company in Seattle, Washington who won the 2018 Gregory Award: Outstanding Production of a Musical, DRAGON LADY and 2006 Tony Award: Outstanding Regional Theatre.

    On January 14, Intiman Theatre announced its 2019 WILD WICKED WOKE Season featuring three mainstage productions, which include CAUGHT written by Christopher Chen and directed by Desdemona Chiang, THE EVENTS written by David Greig and directed by Paul Budraitis, and BULRUSHER written by Eisa Davis and directed by Valerie Curtis-Newton.

    Intiman produces in various venues throughout Seattle, which include the Erickson Theatre at Seattle Central, Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute in Central District, 12th Avenue Arts, Velocity, UW Jones Playhouse, Seattle Center Theatre, Seattle Repertory Theatre, the Alhadeff Studio and Cornish Playhouse at Seattle Center.

  • KUOW: Seattle’s Intiman Theatre has a new plan to grow audiences: Give away all the tickets. For free.

    HOSTED BY Marcie Sillman

    Ever since the 2008 recession, arts funding has been on the decline. Coupled with the rise in digital entertainment options, cultural organizations have been trying to figure out how to attract and retain audiences.

    To address the problem, Seattle’s Intiman Theatre has come up with a novel — and perhaps radical — plan: The nonprofit organization plans to give away tickets to its next production. All of them. For free.

    Intiman’s executive director, Phillip Chavira, says this isn’t as crazy as it sounds. He sees it as the best way to increase access to Intiman’s artistic output.

    “Providing free tickets is one step to removing barriers to access,” says Chavira. “It’s one step, but it’s the largest we can take.”

    In July, Intiman will present the two-person drama “Events,” inspired by the 2011 mass shooting in Norway. Intiman artistic director Jennifer Zeyl says that even though the tickets will be free, Intiman will honor its existing union contracts with actors and backstage artists.

    If the theater company succeeds in its mission to attract new audiences and stay on an even financial keel, Intiman says it could extend the free tickets policy to future productions.

    Giving away your product for free, however, is not without risks.

    Most nonprofit arts groups operate with funds from three main sources: ticket sales (earned income), private donations from individuals and businesses (contributed income) and various public granting agencies.

    Chavira says only 20% of Intiman’s operating budget has come from earned income. He’s confident they can raise that amount, or more, from people who share the company’s vision of free access to professionally made art.“Frankly, I’m sick and tired of seeing empty seats in our theaters. I think we do a disservice in the nonprofit arts. We ask you to participate in this amazing art, but ask you for a fee.”INTIMAN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR PHILLIP CHAVIRA

    Intiman’s board of directors approved the free ticket initiative earlier this year, after the company finally retired an outstanding debt of almost $2 million.

    The debt dated back at least a decade, and financial problems had forced Intiman’s temporary closure in 2011. When the theater company reopened the next year, it pledged to pay back its debt while operating with lean annual budgets raised before the company committed to each artistic season.

    Once the debt burden was out of the way, Chavira and Zeyl were free to dream about a new path for Intiman.

    “And we were sort of ‘What are we doing now?’” says Zeyl. “Are we going to break ground on another arts monolith?”

    They decided to buck the traditional wisdom and try something completely new.

    “Frankly, I’m sick and tired of seeing empty seats in our theaters,” says Chavira. “I think we do a disservice in the nonprofit arts: We ask you to participate in this amazing art, but ask you for a fee.”

    To Chavira and Zeyl, giving away tickets is about more than simply expanding their audience.

    They see it as a concrete manifestation of the theater company’s mission statement: to wrestle with American inequities.

  • Interview with CAUGHT playwright

    Intiman sits down with Obie winner Christopher Chen to talk about #CHENMINDFUCK

    Intiman Theatre, March 2019

    Christopher Chen in Seattle’s
    Chinatown-International District.
    Photo by Joann Natalia Aquino.

    “I guess what my whole philosophy is about is the ethos of digging deeper, but not to any particular end… Most of my plays are about the journey of being forced out of your comfort zone.”

    ​Christopher Chen likes to take risks and make his own rules. An Obie Award-winning playwright whose full-length works have been produced and developed across the United States and abroad including at the American Conservatory Theater, Artists Repertory, Asian American Theater Company, Beijing Fringe, Edinburgh Fringe, Magic Theatre, Playwrights Foundation, Playwrights Horizons, Sundance Theatre Lab, and many others, Chen’s plays examine the hidden patterns beneath complex systems: the socio-political, the psychological and other systems of power.

    Chen’s esteemed plays include THE HUNDRED FLOWERS PROJECT, THE LATE WEDDING, MUTT, YOU MEAN TO DO ME HARM, and CAUGHT —Intiman Theatre’s first mainstage production of its 2019 season, on stage from March 7-30, 2019 at the 12th Avenue Arts in Seattle’s Capitol Hill.

    During his recent visit in Seattle, Chen met with arts marketer/writer Joann Natalia Aquino over dim sum in Chinatown-International District to talk about truth, his writing process and his life as a playwright in San Francisco. Read on.

    You were born and raised in San Francisco, went to U.C. Berkeley for your undergrad and got your MFA from San Francisco State University. Why have you not left San Francisco for New York or Los Angeles where many playwrights and theatre industry folks migrate to?
    I had always planned to go to New York at some point, but I guess I found a way to make it work because I started to have a New York presence without having to move there and so that’s all I needed was to have a presence and a foot in the door there. I started to really like just having a place separate from the hard-coreness and competitiveness of New York, and I kind of just like being in San Francisco as an endless writing retreat. In San Francisco, I’m able to be with my own thoughts more, my own head — and hopefully that gives me a unique voice too.

    You were able to join Intiman’s First Preview for CAUGHT. What did you think of it? How is Intiman’s production different from the other productions you’ve seen?
    I loved it! I thought it was a fantastic production and I’m not just saying that. All the productions I’ve seen of Caught are very similar yet very different too — just because of the nature of the art gallery is very different for each place…

    I’ve seen this play so many times, but I was still actually surprised at the moments at which I’m supposed to be surprised because that’s the fun of the piece — the moments when the rug is pulled out. I thought that the design team, the actors and Desdemona (Caught director) completely transformed the space, and instantaneously, for example in Scene 2 — that I was even like, ‘Oh my God, that’s so cool!’ as I was watching it… As long as the different productions go with the same ethos — which is surprise  and rug-pulling, then it always works.

    So, I’d like to talk about that surprise element in your plays. I interviewed Desdemona Chiang previously and she said that what she loves about your plays is that there’s something a little sinister about your writing that things aren’t always what you think they are. In fact, a Bay Area critic actually created the hashtag: “#CHENMINDFUCK” in honor of your playwriting style. What do you get out of that surprise factor?
    To me, it’s actually very meaningful and it’s not just a gimmick or to say, “Ha ha, gotcha.” Most of my plays are about the journey of being forced out of your comfort zone, not in a way that should anger you per se, although that’s useful too at times — but there are ways of going outside of your comfort zone that could lead to enlightenment or the process by which you can train your mind to be more open, be more questioning, be more active and be more engaged. So this is more about the way to train the mind to be more active. That’s what this play is more about.

    How do you come up with your story ideas?
    I guess what my whole philosophy is about is the ethos of digging deeper, but not to any particular end. There’s a line in the play in Scene 3 where Wang Lin says, “It’s not a matter of end goals landing, it’s only a matter of journey.” And that’s kind of like my personal philosophy. It’s a documentation of the digging process, not to reach a final conclusion but actively engage with the audience as they’re watching to make them question things and think in real time.

    What is your writing process like?
    Occasionally I’ll talk to students and I use this term, “The Art to Rule Making” —   of making your own rules. So that’s what I feel is my greatest strength as a playwright — making my own rules for each different play.

    What tips would you give to aspiring playwrights?
    All methods are good. There’s a million different ways. It really is to find the way that works for you.  As a general rule, don’t be afraid to go really, really, really deep into what you’re writing about. And when you think you’ve reached what you thought is the theme or when you think you’ve reached a point that you’ve thought all about it, there’s always more that you can do. Also, I’m a big proponent of putting yourself into your play: your own insecurities, your own fears, your own prejudices — to explore that and to take risks, because that’s how you can be the most truthful.

    Interview by Joann Natalia Aquino, a Pinay, an arts marketer, a publicist and freelance lifestyle writer.

  • An Interview with CAUGHT Director Desdemona Chiang

    An Interview with CAUGHT Director Desdemona Chiang

    Intiman Theatre, March 2019

    ” I’m very story-focused and plot-focused — get me some good characters and relationships and I can make a good story.”

    Desdemona Chiang
    Photo by Naomi Ishisaka.

    Known for her visceral, no-nonsense approach with her distinct point of view as an immigrant and Asian American woman, Desdemona Chiang tackles theatre making with the questions, “What is the thing that we’re not talking about? What is the thing that we think we’re talking about, but we’re not talking about, or no one’s ever bothered to think about?”

    Here, arts marketer/writer Joann Natalia Aquino interviews Desdemona Chiang, theatre director of Chinese descent and co-founder of Azeotrope, a Seattle-based theatre company specializing in new work that focuses on bringing voice and representation to the marginalized and invisible.

    You were born in Taipei, Taiwan and migrated to the United States when you were three years old. How do you identify in America?
    It’s interesting. I actually discovered this through a friend of mine: I think I identify as Chinese and American, and not Chinese-American. It’s not about a hyphenated hybrid identity and more of a dual identity. It’s something I’m still figuring out… For a long time, I never really called myself Chinese American, I would just say, “I’m Chinese.” Even though I’m more fluent in English than I am in Mandarin, but Mandarin is my first language. I still very much feel like I don’t fit in, but at the same time, I’m quite mainstream and I’m very assimilated.  It’s weird. I’ve always felt very centered in my identity and partially because I grew up in an immigrant community and I never felt like an “other” growing up.

    How did the directorship for CAUGHT come about?
    I’ve been a big fan of Jennifer Zeyl (Intiman’s Artistic Director) for a long time and I thought I would love to work with her someday. In the last couple of years, we got a chance to know each other socially in Seattle and we had talked about trying to find a way for me to work with Intiman and it was just a matter of the right play, the right time and scheduling, and this happened to be the one that worked out.

    Why Christopher Chen’s CAUGHT?
    We went through many plays and CAUGHT came up, but it was already done by the Seattle Public Theatre in 2016, so we let it go for a while and it sat on a shelf and we read more plays. But this play was just so attractive and it’s so compelling and really useful right now because we’re in this moment of questioning truth and challenging paradigms of who you trust, who do you not trust… It felt very appropriate to do it right now and we’re hoping that it will ring differently in 2019.  

    How is CAUGHT different from all the other plays you’ve directed?
    I think CAUGHT itself is a really unique play. Christopher Chen is one of the smartest playwrights I’ve ever known in my entire life. He’s interested in ideas and his writing is really smart and also taps into something about an existential fear that is really interesting to me. There’s also something a little sinister about Christopher’s writing — that things aren’t what you think they are and people mean more than what they’re saying. There’s always a little tinge of suspicion when I read Chris’s plays. CAUGHT is about going to a dark place that you didn’t expect… This play is a bit more disorienting. With CAUGHT, a lot of it is working with space: our relationship to space, our relationship to theatre and theatre going. One of the primary premise is that the play is about a visual artist, so the play embraces both theatre and visual art as part of its language.

    How would you describe your directing style?
    I think I’m a very actor-centric director. I tend to focus a lot on relationships and circumstance. There are some directors who are visionaries and I don’t think I’m a visionary. I’m very story-focused and plot-focused — get me some good characters and relationships and I can make a good story.

    What can the audience expect from this production?
    They can expect to be really confused, in a good way. They can expect to have perceptions challenged. They can expect to be surprised.

    Interview by Joann Natalia Aquino, a Pinay, an arts marketer, a publicist and freelance lifestyle writer.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • BWW Review: CAUGHT at Intiman Theatre Will Catch You Off Guard

    by Kelly Rogers FlyntMar. 9, 2019

    BWW Review: CAUGHT at Intiman Theatre Will Catch You Off Guard
    Narea Kang, Jonelle Jordan, Justin Huertas,
    Diretor Desdemona Chiang, and Bradford
    Farwell of CAUGHT at Intiman Theatre.
    Photo by Naomi Ishisaka for Intiman Theatre.

    CAUGHT presented by Intiman Theatrewill catch you off guard and make swiss cheese of all your theories of what is art and what is theater. Christopher Chen‘s play combines visual art and theater into a playground of ideas. What is truth, your perception, and intention are all challenged with thought-provoking dialogue and action. Just when you think you have grasped the essence of the piece, it shifts direction and reveals a twist, another level, and leaves you once again wondering what is real.

    The show contains a play within the play, and actors portraying actors. The central story focuses on the character of Lin Bo (Justin Huertas) who has shared the story of his experience as an artist in China and in prison. As layers are peeled back we learn that all truth is not black and white and the approach to intention and storytelling varies from culture to culture. The actors lead the audience on a journey of theoretical exploration where every turn presents a question, a challenge, and a bit of humor. It is impossible to discuss more of the storyline without giving away the surprises that are best experienced rather than read.

    Justin Huertas as Lin Bo is simply everything. He is commanding, sympathetic, brimming with passion and hurt, and yet completely approachable. Jonelle Jordan as Joyce and the Curator is the embodiment of the emotional roller coaster the audience experiences. Frustrated, yet caring, she walks the path seeking understanding but only finding more questions. Bradford Farwellas Bob shows the audience the perils of persisting in your own world-view as the only legitimate view. His physical interactions with the visual art were in many ways cathartic for not only his character but also the audience. Finally Narea Kang as Wang Min is a powerhouse. Her comedic timing with both Jordan and Huertas was perfection. Her delivery of theoretical explorations of art and truth and perception were like that of a Sensei speaking to a wide-eyed youth dressed in a new gi, hopeful for illumination.

    Director Desdemona Chiang sets the story in motion that masterfully uses the space and light to reinforce the exploration that is happening on a theoretical level. The work of Lighting Designer Reed Nakayama and Set Designer Lex Marcos add yet another level to the story. The avant garde production is not your usual night at the theater, but that is the point entirely, except that maybe it’s not. Come ready to leave your accepted notions behind. Come ready to explore, question, and think. But above all, just come. This is a show and experience you won’t want to miss.

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