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Category: 2019 Season

  • 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.

  • Intiman Theatre presents CAUGHT, the Obie Award-winning play by Christopher Chen, directed by Desdemona Chiang

    Intiman Theatre presents CAUGHT, the Obie Award-winning play by Christopher Chen, directed by Desdemona Chiang

    For immediate release

    Contact: Joann Natalia Aquino, Marketing Contractor

    joann@intiman.org | cell: 206.931.3202

    INTIMAN.ORG

    Intiman Theatre presents CAUGHT, the Obie Award-winning play by Christopher Chen, directed by Desdemona Chiang

    Featuring Bradford Farwell, Justin Huertas, Jonelle Jordan, and Narea Kang

    On Stage March 7-30, 2019

    At 12th Avenue Arts, 1620 12th Avenue, Seattle

    Justin Huertas as Lin Bo. Photo by Naomi Ishisaka.

    SEATTLE, WA (March 7, 2019) — Intiman Theatre opens CAUGHT, the Obie Award-winning play by Christopher Chen, the first mainstage production of its 2019 WILD WICKED WOKE Season. Intiman’s production of CAUGHT is directed by Desdemona Chiang and features Bradford Farwell, Justin Huertas, Jonelle Jordan, and Narea Kang. CAUGHT is playing at 12th Avenue Arts from March 7-30, 2019.

    A labyrinthine exploration of truth, art, social justice, and cultural appropriation, where nothing is as it first appears, CAUGHT invites the audience to navigate a shape-shifting trail between truth and perception, authority and authenticity, illusionary art and real jeopardy.

    “I think CAUGHT itself is a really unique play,” says CAUGHT Director Desdemona Chiang. “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.”

    Chiang adds, “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.”

    The Intiman cast features Bradford Farwell as Bob (Intiman: John Baxter, All My Sons, Grapes of Wrath, Richard III, A Thousand Clowns. Broadway: Much Ado, The Miser. Seattle Repertory: Charles III, Photograph 51, You Can’t Take it With You, Imaginary Invalid, Twelfe Night, Noises Off, Great Gatsby. ACT: Daisy, Worse than Tigers, Seven Ways to Get There, Christmas Carol, Mary Stuart, Jekyll and Hyde. Seattle Shakespeare: Measure for Measure, Cymbeline, Julius Caesar. Strawshop: Breaking the Code, New Century Theatre Company: Festen, Asher Lev. 5th Avenue: Guys and Dolls), Justin Huertas as Lin Bo (Strawberry Theatre Workshop: Everybody; Seattle Repertory Theatre, Diversionary Theatre: Lizard Boy; Showtunes Theatre Company: Legally Blonde; Book-It Repertory Theatre: Welcome to Braggsville), Jonelle Jordan as Joyce/Curator (Off Road Shakespeare: A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Romeo and Juliet; Seattle Shakespeare Company: Arms and the Man, The Government Inspector, The Winter’s Tale; Wooden O: King Lear; ArtsWest: Frozen; Washington Ensemble Theatre: Every Five Minutes, 99 Ways to F***k a Swan; New Century Theatre Company: The Big Meal; Village Theatre: Crimes of the Heart; ACT Theatre: Bethany), and Narea Kang as Wang Lin (NYC – Ars Nova, New Ohio Theatre: Madonna col Bambino; Lyra Theater: Salty; Corkscrew Theater Festival: Hot Cross Buns; Regional – American Conservatory Theater: The Hard Problem, A Christmas Carol, and John; Livermore Shakespeare Festival: The Tempest; SF City Theatre Co: Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf; Seattle – Pork Filled Productions: The Clockwork Professor; Living Voices: Within the Silence; TV: Blue Bloods).

    The creative team for Intiman’s production of CAUGHT includes Lex Marcos (Set Designer), Natalie Shih (Co-Costume Designer), Christine Tschirgi (Co-Costume Designer), Reed Nakayama (Lighting and Projections Designer), Meghan Roche (Sound Designer), Cody Holliday Haefner (Assistant Director), Rebecca K. Hsia (Stage Manager), and Alex Weikle, (Assistant Stage Manager). (Please see their bios here.)

    About the Production:

    Produced by Intiman Theatre, CAUGHT is a full-length, 90-minute play with no intermission. CAUGHT runs from March 7 through March 30, 2019 at 12th Avenue Arts (1620 12th Avenue, Seattle). Tickets ranging from $35-$50 may be purchased online via intiman.org or through the Intiman Box Office at (206) 315-5838.

    About the Playwright:

    Christopher Chen is an Obie Award-winning playwright whose full-length works have been produced and developed across the United States and abroad, at companies such as the American Conservatory Theater, Arcola Theatre, Artists Repertory, Asian American Theater Company, Bay Area Playwrights Festival, Beijing Fringe, Berkeley Rep/Ground Floor, Central Works, Crowded Fire, Cutting Ball Theater, Edinburgh Fringe, Finborough Theatre, Firefly/Think Tank, hotINK Festival, Impact Theatre, InterAct Theatre, Just Theatre, Lark Play Development Center, Long Wharf Theatre, Magic Theatre, Playwrights Foundation, Playwrights Horizons, Rep at St. Louis, San Francisco Playhouse, Seattle Rep, Shotgun Players, Sideshow, Silk Road Rising, Sundance Theatre Lab, Theatre Mu, U.C. Berkeley/Zellerbach Playhouse, The Vineyard and The Wilma.

    About the Director:
    Desdemona Chiang is a stage director based in Seattle and the San Francisco Bay Area. Co-Founder of Azeotrope (Seattle). Directing credits include Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Guthrie Theater, Pittsburgh Public Theatre, Baltimore Center Stage, California Shakespeare Theater, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Playmakers Repertory Company, Long Wharf Theatre, Seattle Children’s Theatre, ACT Theatre Seattle, American Shakespeare Center, Seattle Shakespeare Company, Heritage Theatre Festival, Book-It Repertory, Aurora Theatre Company, Seattle Public Theatre, Shotgun Players, Crowded Fire Theatre Company, Azeotrope, Impact Theatre, Playwrights Foundation, Golden Thread Productions, Washington Ensemble Theatre, One Minute Play Festival, Ohio Northern University, University of Washington, and Cornish College of the Arts, among others. Assisting and dramaturgy credits include: Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Intiman Theatre, Playmakers Repertory Company, A Contemporary Theatre, California Shakespeare Theater, Arizona Theatre Company, Mark Taper Forum, Magic Theatre, Theatreworks, Rattlestick Playwrights Theatre, among others. Intersection for the Arts Triangle Lab Artist-Investigator. Adjunct Faculty, Cornish College of the Arts. Awards/Affiliations: Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Theatre, SDC Sir John Gielgud Directing Fellowship, Drama League Directing Fellowship, TCG Young Leader of Color, Lincoln Center Theater Directors Lab and Directors Lab West. Gregory Award Recipient for Outstanding Direction. BA: University of California at Berkeley. MFA Directing: University of Washington School of Drama.

    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 for Outstanding Musical & 2006 Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre, and is overseen by Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl, Executive Director Phillip Chavira, and Board President Daniel Nye.

    Since its founding in 1972, Intiman Theatre, has presented over 230 productions to Seattle audiences. Among the more recent of these are HIR by Taylor Mac, WILD HORSES by Allison Gregory, NATIVE GARDENS by Karen Zacarías, ANGELS IN AMERICA by Tony Kushner, TROUBLE IN MIND and WEDDING BAND by Alice Childress, BOOTYCANDY and BARBECUE by Robert O’hara, and DRAGON LADY by Sara Porkalob.

    Intiman produces in various venues throughout Seattle, which include the 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.

    For more information, visit www.intiman.org.

    For Calendar Listings

    Who: Intiman Theatre presents CAUGHT by Christopher Chen

    Where: At 12th Avenue Arts, 1620 12th Avenue, Seattle

    What: CAUGHT by Christopher Chen and directed by Desdemona Chiang

    When:  March 7-March 30, 2019; Wednesdays-Saturdays at 7:30pm | Sundays at 2:00pm

    Tickets: $35-$50. Tickets are on sale via intiman.org or through Intiman Box Office at (206) 315-5838.

    More info: www.intiman.org

    Press Information

    Press tickets are available for Opening Night, March 7 and during Opening Weekend, March 8-10. Please contact Joann Natalia Aquino at joann@intiman.org to make arrangements. To schedule interviews with the director, the cast and creative team, please also contact Joann Natalia Aquino at joann@intiman.org.   

  • 2019 Season Announcement Press Release

    2019 Season Announcement Press Release

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    January 14, 2019
    Contact: Joann Natalia Aquino, Marketing Contractor
    joann@intiman.org | (206) 931-3202

    Intiman Theatre Announces Its 2019 WILD WICKED WOKE Season
    Get CAUGHT in an intricate web of ideological truths, come bear witness to THE EVENTS, and revision our collective liberation with BULRUSHER.

    Season package go on sale today, Monday, January 14, 2019 via intiman.org.

    Seattle, WA (January 14, 2019) — Intiman Theatre has 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.

    “2019 finds Intiman in part 2 of our WILD WICKED WOKE Season,” says Intiman’s Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl. “We continue to explore narrative that confronts American inequities; centering intellectual property, artistic license, our collective struggle for liberation and our need to understand the abhorrent.”

    Intiman’s 2019 WILD WICKED WOKE Season kicks off with CAUGHT by Obie award-winning playwright Christopher Chen. Directed by Seattle/San Francisco-based director Desdemona Chiang, CAUGHT is a labyrinthine exploration of truth, art, social justice and cultural appropriation, where nothing is as it first appears. CAUGHT opens on March 7 and plays through March 30, 2019 at 12th Ave Arts in Capitol Hill.

    Following CAUGHT is THE EVENTS by Scottish-born playwright David Greig. A timely exploration of violence, obsession, and our desire to fathom the unfathomable, THE EVENTS excavates the humanity found even in circumstances of extraordinary evil, examining the actors on both sides of an unimaginable tragedy. Directed by Seattle-based director Paul Budraitis, THE EVENTS is playing at the Erickson Theatre in Capitol Hill from July 18-August 10, 2019.

    Closing out Intiman’s 2019 Season is BULRUSHER by Eisa Davis, a 2007 finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Drama. Passionate, lyrical, and brimming with down-home humor, BULRUSHER is an unforgettable experience in revisioning community. Directed by Seattle-based director Valerie Curtis-Newton, BULRUSHER is playing at the Jones Playhouse at UW from August 22-September 14, 2019.

    Since its founding in 1972, Intiman Theatre, has presented over 230 productions to Seattle audiences. Among the more recent of these are HIR by Taylor Mac, WILD HORSES by Allison Gregory, NATIVE GARDENS by Karen Zacarías, ANGELS IN AMERICA by Tony Kushner, TROUBLE IN MIND and WEDDING BAND by Alice Childress, BOOTYCANDY and BARBECUE by Robert O’hara, and DRAGON LADY by Sara Porkalob. These incredible stories encourage civic dialogue and personal reflections about the issues we face as a community, in our country and on the planet. Intiman believes there is a connection between what we choose as entertainment and the questions we ask about what it means to be human; that connection is the foundation of every play in Intiman’s season.

    “Intiman has a passion for social justice and we strive towards liberation through artistic activism,” says Phillip Chavira, Intiman’s Executive Director. “We look at inequities plaguing our country and talk about these injustices in our theatrical productions, work through these injustices in our educational programs, and we evaluate our own policies within community to check our own institutional injustices. Intiman has come a long way from the 1972 company Margaret Booker started, and we’re proud of the artistic and activist evolution we have gone through. We have a strong future because the Seattle arts community said yes to art.”

    A leader in the Seattle community, Intiman has received national recognition and many honors, including the 2006 Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre, a 2018 Teeny Award for Most Transformative Production and 2018 Gregory Award for Outstanding Production of a Musical.

    Intiman will announce additional programming and special events throughout the year. Stay tuned for more announcements to come.

    Calendar Listings

    INTIMAN THEATRE
    2019 WILD WICKED WOKE SEASON
    PRESENTS

    CAUGHT
    March 7-March 30, 2019
    By Christopher Chen
    Directed by Desdemona Chiang
    At 12th Ave Arts, 1620 12th Avenue, Seattle

    An art gallery hosts a retrospective of the work of a legendary Chinese dissident artist who was imprisoned in a Chinese detention center for a single work of art. Recently profiled in the New Yorker, the artist himself is present, and shares with patrons the details of an ordeal that defies belief. A labyrinthine exploration of truth, art, social justice, and cultural appropriation, where nothing is as it first appears. This irreverent new genre-bending work invites you to navigate a shape-shifting trail between truth and perception, authority and authenticity, illusionary art and real jeopardy.

    • New York Times Critic’s Pick: “An intricately constructed, unrelentingly destabilizing puzzle of a play about the anatomy of truth and the provocative power of illusion… As perceived realities dissolve, the one thing spectators can be sure of is that they are inside a production that is also a kind of art installation, and that it is messing with them. ” – Laura Collins-Hughes, The New York Times
    • “You’ll leave with a better appreciation of life’s shifting perspectives” – LA Times

    THE EVENTS
    July 18-August 10, 2019
    By David Greig
    Directed by Paul Budraitis
    At Erickson Theatre, 1524 Harvard Avenue, Seattle

    In the wake of a mass shooting, lone survivor Claire yearns to find the compassion, understanding, and peace she needs to overcome her trauma— but thoughts and visions of the shooter haunt her every step. A timely exploration of violence, obsession, and our desire to fathom the unfathomable, THE EVENTS excavates the humanity found even in circumstances of extraordinary evil, examining the actors on both sides of an unimaginable tragedy.

    • “A solemn, searching and ultimately very moving play about a faith-shattering act of violence” – The New York Times
    • “Best theatre of 2013, No 1: The Events… David Greig’s quiet, moving drama was a thoughtful and bruisingly honest attempt to understand the repercussions of a mass shooting.” – The Guardian

    BULRUSHER
    August 22-September 14, 2019
    By Eisa Davis
    Directed by Valerie Curtis-Newton
    At Jones Playhouse, 4045 University Way NE, Seattle

    In 1955, in the redwood country north of San Francisco, a multiracial girl grows up in a predominantly white town whose residents pepper their speech with the historical dialect of Boontling. Found floating in a basket on the river as an infant, Bulrusher is an orphan with a gift for clairvoyance that makes her feel like a stranger even amongst the strange: the reserved schoolteacher who adopted her as a baby, the madam who runs her brothel with a fairness and discipline, the Black logger with a gentleness and a passion for living, and the guitar-slinging white boy who is after Bulrusher’s heart. Just when she thought her small world might stifle her, she discovers an entirely new place in her identity, when a black girl from Alabama comes to town. Passionate, lyrical, and brimming with down-home humor, this play is an unforgettable experience in revisioning community.

    • “[Davis] tickles the ears of her listeners…moving scenes on the banks of the pebble-strewn river…feel utterly true.” – The New York Times
    • “Davis explores her themes in unexpected and evocative ways…The still waters of Bulrusher turn out to run pretty deep.” – The San Francisco Chronicle
    • “An engrossing rush…Eisa Davis’ gleaming marriage of poetry and myth… has a big heart and a wide-open soul.” – Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune

    TICKETS
    Season package go on sale today, Monday, January 14, 2019, via intiman.org.


    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 for Outstanding Musical & 2006 Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre, and is overseen by Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl, Executive Director Phillip Chavira, and Board President Daniel Nye.

    Intiman produces in various venues throughout Seattle, which include the 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.

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