Celebrating Lorraine Hansberry

A Panel Conversation & Cocktail Hour
January 10th, 7-9pm
Erickson Theatre, 1524 Harvard Ave.

Join Intiman Theatre, The Williams Project, and The Hansberry Project for an evening celebrating the legacy of activist-playwright Lorraine Hansberry. Learn more about Hansberry’s life and the political movements that influenced her work in advance of Intiman and The Williams Project’s Seattle debut co-production of her final work, The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window.

During her all-too-brief life and career, Hansberry shattered barriers and left a searing mark on the American stage that still burns bright today. The Williams Project’s Producing Director, Dedra D. Woods will be joined in a panel conversation by Hansberry expert and theatre director Valerie Curtis-Newton, and novelist Rebecca Brown.

Cocktail hour begins at 7pm and the panel begins at 7:45pm.

Join the Inti-Club for FREE tickets to this event!

Join the Inti-Club today to receive free tickets to this event, and more! Membership starts at just $8/month and is fully tax-deductible. In an effort to increase equity, all Inti-Club Members will receive equal access to all perks. Thank you in advance for signing up at the level that is meaningful to you. In addition to a free discount code, you will also receive 50% off tickets to all Intiman productions. Your discount codes will be emailed to you immediately after joining.

Our Presenting Partners

The Williams Project

The Williams Project is a national professional theatre ensemble, building ambitiously re-imagined productions of American plays. The company’s mission is to make theatrical excellence accessible to diverse and engaged audiences, while paying artists a living wage.

We create theatre that is:

  • Entertaining enough to make everyone feel welcome and part of a community;
  • Ambitious enough to risk humiliating failure;
  • Powerful enough to move people to love each other more, even in the face of the temporary nature of theatre and life.

We make theatre in a manner consistent with our belief that professional artists are vital to our culture and deserve to be compensated in a way that recognizes their value. Great theatre artists are working class heroes, who sacrifice greatly to make meaningful work. We strive to pay artists living wages in order to support that work.

The Hansberry Project

The Hansberry Project is a professional black theatre company dedicated to the artistic exploration of African American life, history and culture. From initial sketches to fully-realized productions, the Hansberry Project promotes and supports black theatre artists of diverse interests and disciplines, speaking on a range of themes and working in a variety of styles. 

Founded in 2004 and officially launched in 2006, The Hansberry Project was created as an African American theatre lab, led by African American artists and designed to provide the community with consistent access to the African American artistic voice. 

The Hansberry Project is rooted in the convictions that black artists should be at the center of the artistic process, that the community deserves excellence in its art, and that theatre’s fundamental function is to put people in relationship to one another. Our goal is to create a space where the entire community can be enriched by the voices of professional black artists, reflecting autonomous concerns, investigations, dreams, and artistic expression.

Meet the Panelists

Dedra D. Woods

Dedra D. Woods is the Producing Director at The Williams Project. She is an Actor/Storyteller/Creator/ and Change Agent.  She has been working in the Seattle Arts scene since 2012. She has had the privilege to perform with several companies around Seattle including, The 5th Ave Theater, Seattle Children’s Theater, The WIlliams Project,  Seattle Public Theater Seattle Shakespeare Company, Upstart Crow,  Book-It Repertory Theater,  and ArtsWest. She has performed regionally at Pittsburgh Public Theater and Artists Repertory Theater.  Dedra has also worked in television, film and as a voiceover artist. She is the creator and curator of Artists of Color in Seattle, AOC(S), a social media platform that celebrates Black, Indigenous and POC artists in Seattle and their work, while inviting everyone to bear witness to their humanity and artistry. 

Valerie Curtis-Newton

Valerie Curtis-Newton is currently the Head of Performance – Directing at the University of Washington School of Drama. She also serves as the Founding Artistic Director for The Hansberry Project, a professional African American theatre lab. Valerie has worked with theatre’s across the country including: The Guthrie Theatre, Playmakers Repertory Company, Actors’ Theatre of Louisville, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Intiman Theatre, Seattle Children’s Theatre, The Mark Taper Forum, New York Theatre Workshop, Tacoma Actors’ Guild, Southern Repertory Theatre, Capitol Repertory Theatre among others. 

Awards: 2016: Seattle Times Footlight Award (Best in Show) 2014: Stranger Genius Awards in Performance and the Crosscut Courage Award for Culture; 2012: Gypsy 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.

Rebecca Brown

Rebecca Brown is a queer American novelist, essayist, playwright, artist and teacher, and the author of 14 books published in the US and abroad. Her most recent title is You Tell the Stories You Need to Believe (Chatwin, 2022). She was the first writer in residence at Richard Hugo House, (1997-99), co-founder of the Jack Straw Writers Program, and served as the creative director of literature at Centrum in Port Townsend, Washington from 2005 to 2009. Brown’s best-known work is her novel The Gifts of the Body, which won a Lambda Literary Award in 1994. Rebecca Brown is a former faculty member in the MFA in Creative Writing Program at Goddard College in Plainfield, Vermont and UWBothell.  She is also a visual/collage artist whose work has been displayed in galleries such as the Frye Art Museum, The Hedreen, Simon Fraser (BC, Canada).