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  • Casting Announced For NATIVE GARDENS By Karen Zacarías

    Casting Announced For NATIVE GARDENS By Karen ZacaríasToday, Intiman Theatre announced the casting for its third mainstage production of its 2018 WILD, WICKED, WOKE Season: NATIVE GARDENS by Karen Zacarías, one of the most produced Latina playwrights in the nation. Intiman’s production of NATIVE GARDENS will be directed by Seattle-based director Arlene Martínez-Vázquez and will play at The Jones Playhouse from September 6-30, 2018.

    “There are a million reasons why I wanted to direct NATIVE GARDENS,” said Arlene Martínez-Vázquez, a director, translator, educator, and arts administrator currently serving as Education Director for Seattle Repertory Theatre. “First, I love what it does for Latinx representation on stage. These characters are highly educated AND funny, a combination rarely seen on our stages. Second, I love the approach it takes on the very timely border conversations plaguing our nation. It approaches the subject acknowledging the many perspectives and points of view and with great empathy. Third, I think at its core, NATIVE GARDENS is really about tolerance, understanding and balance, which really, is what the world needs now. Desperately.”

    In NATIVE GARDENS, cultures and gardens clash, turning well-intentioned neighbors into feuding enemies. Pablo, a rising attorney, and doctoral candidate Tania, his very pregnant wife, have just purchased a home next to Frank and Virginia, a well-established D.C. couple with a prize-worthy English garden. But an impending barbeque for Pablo’s colleagues and a delicate dispute over a long-standing fence line soon spirals into an all-out border dispute, exposing both couples’ notions of race, taste, class and privilege.

    Playwright Karen Zacarias, a native of Mexico who has lived in Washington D.C. since 1991, got the idea for the play after a dinner party where guests traded horror stories about feuds with their neighbors. “As I was going home, I thought, Wow, in a way, almost every single fight – internationally, locally, whatever – is about these things,” Zacarias told the Washington Post in an interview. “They’re about what your place is in the world and culture.”

    The Intiman cast features Julie Briskman as Virginia (Seattle Repertory Theatre: THE IMAGINARY INVALID, THE BEARD OF AVON, THE SERVANT OF TWO MASTERS; ACT Theatre: DIRTY BLONDE, ENCHANTED APRIL, THE WOMEN; Intiman debut), Sophie Franco as Tania (Seattle Shakespeare Company: the bilingual production of TWELFTH NIGHT; Forward Flux Productions: LAS MARIPOSAS Y LOS MUERTOS; Proof Porch Project & Thriving Artists: PROOF; Intiman debut), Jim Gall as Frank (Intiman: THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK; Taproot Theatre: JOYFUL NOISE; Seattle Shakespeare Company: TITUS ANDRONICUS, MOTHER COURAGE AND HER CHILDREN; Wooden O: OTHELLO, THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA), and Phillip Ray Guevara as Pablo (Intiman debut). The ensemble includes Gloria Alcala (Cornish College of the Arts: THE SINS OF SOR JUANA; Intiman debut) and Yolanda Suarez (Intiman debut).

    The creative team for Intiman’s NATIVE GARDENS includes Jennifer Zeyl (Intiman Artistic Director and Producer), Lex Marcos (Set Designer), Frances Kenny (Costume Designer), Robert J. Aguilar (Lighting Designer), Matt Starritt (Sound Designer), Liana Dillaway (Stage Manager), and Laura Owens (Assistant Stage Manager) (Read the bios of the cast and creative team here.)

    NATIVE GARDENS had its world premiere in January 2016 at the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, followed by The Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota in July 2017, where it was extended for one week. It was also produced at the Arena Stage in Washington D.C., Victory Gardens in Chicago, Old Globe Theater in San Diego, the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Trinity Repertory Theater in Providence, the Orlando Shakespeare Theater, Florida Studio Stage in Sarasota, Vermont Stage, and at the WaterTower Theater in Addison, Texas. Intiman Theatre‘s production of NATIVE GARDENS marks the Pacific Northwest premiere of the play.

    NATIVE GARDENS is a full-length, 90-minute play with no intermission. Single tickets range from $28-$38 and are on sale now via intiman.org/nativegardens or through the Intiman Box Office at (206) 315-5838.

  • Intiman Announces NATIVE GARDENS Cast

    For immediate release
    Contact: Joann Natalia Aquino, Marketing Contractor
    joann@intiman.org | cell: 206.931.3202


    INTIMAN ANNOUNCES CASTING FOR NATIVE GARDENS, A HILARIOUS HOT-BUTTON COMEDY BY KAREN ZACARĺAS, ONE OF THE MOST PRODUCED LATINA PLAYWRIGHTS IN THE NATION

    Featuring Julie Briskman, Sophie Franco, Jim Gall, and Phillip Ray Guevara; Directed by Arlene Martínez-Vázquez

    Karen Zacarías                                                                                  Arlene Martínez-Vázquez

    SEATTLE, WA (July 23, 2018) — Today, Intiman Theatre announced the casting for its third mainstage production of its 2018 WILD, WICKED, WOKE Season: NATIVE GARDENS by Karen Zacarías, one of the most produced Latina playwrights in the nation. Intiman’s production of NATIVE GARDENS will be directed by Seattle-based director Arlene Martínez-Vázquez and will play at The Jones Playhouse from September 6-30, 2018.

    “There are a million reasons why I wanted to direct NATIVE GARDENS,” said Arlene Martínez-Vázquez, a director, translator, educator, and arts administrator currently serving as Education Director for Seattle Repertory Theatre. “First, I love what it does for Latinx representation on stage. These characters are highly educated AND funny, a combination rarely seen on our stages. Second, I love the approach it takes on the very timely border conversations plaguing our nation. It approaches the subject acknowledging the many perspectives and points of view and with great empathy. Third, I think at its core, NATIVE GARDENS is really about tolerance, understanding and balance, which really, is what the world needs now. Desperately.”

    In NATIVE GARDENS, cultures and gardens clash, turning well-intentioned neighbors into feuding enemies. Pablo, a rising attorney, and doctoral candidate Tania, his very pregnant wife, have just purchased a home next to Frank and Virginia, a well-established D.C. couple with a prize-worthy English garden. But an impending barbeque for Pablo’s colleagues and a delicate dispute over a long-standing fence line soon spirals into an all-out border dispute, exposing both couples’ notions of race, taste, class and privilege.

    Playwright Karen Zacarias, a native of Mexico who has lived in Washington D.C. since 1991, got the idea for the play after a dinner party where guests traded horror stories about feuds with their neighbors. “As I was going home, I thought, Wow, in a way, almost every single fight — internationally, locally, whatever — is about these things,” Zacarias told the Washington Post in an interview. “They’re about what your place is in the world and culture.”

    The Intiman cast features Julie Briskman as Virginia (Seattle Repertory Theatre: THE IMAGINARY INVALID, THE BEARD OF AVON, THE SERVANT OF TWO MASTERS; ACT Theatre: DIRTY BLONDE, ENCHANTED APRIL, THE WOMEN; Intiman debut), Sophie Franco as Tania (Seattle Shakespeare Company: the bilingual production of TWELFTH NIGHT; Forward Flux Productions: LAS MARIPOSAS Y LOS MUERTOS; Proof Porch Project & Thriving Artists: PROOF; Intiman debut), Jim Gall as Frank (Intiman: THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK; Taproot Theatre: JOYFUL NOISE; Seattle Shakespeare Company: TITUS ANDRONICUS, MOTHER COURAGE AND HER CHILDREN; Wooden O: OTHELLO, THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA), and Phillip Ray Guevara as Pablo (Intiman debut). The ensemble includes Gloria Alcala (Cornish College of the Arts: THE SINS OF SOR JUANA; Intiman debut) and Yolanda Suarez (Intiman debut).

    The creative team for Intiman’s NATIVE GARDENS includes Jennifer Zeyl (Intiman Artistic Director and Producer), Lex Marcos (Set Designer), Frances Kenny (Costume Designer), Robert J. Aguilar (Lighting Designer), Matt Starritt (Sound Designer), Liana Dillaway (Stage Manager), and Laura Owens (Assistant Stage Manager). (Please see the supplemental document for bios of the cast and creative team.)

    NATIVE GARDENS had its world premiere in January 2016 at the Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, followed by The Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota in July 2017, where it was extended for one week. It was also produced at the Arena Stage in Washington D.C., Victory Gardens in Chicago, Old Globe Theater in San Diego, the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Trinity Repertory Theater in Providence, Orlando Shakespeare Theater, Florida Studio Stage in Sarasota, Vermont Stage, and at the WaterTower Theater in Addison, Texas. Intiman Theatre’s production of NATIVE GARDENS marks the Pacific Northwest premiere of the play.

    NATIVE GARDENS is a full-length, 90-minute play with no intermission. Single tickets range from $28-$38 and are on sale now via intiman.org/nativegardens or through the Intiman Box Office at (206) 315-5838.

    About the Production:
    NATIVE GARDENS produced by Intiman Theatre runs from September 6 through September 30, 2018 at The Jones Playhouse (4045 University Way NE, Seattle). Tickets ranging from $28-$38 may be purchased online via intiman.org/nativegardens or through the Intiman Box Office at (206) 315-5838.

    About the Playwright:
    Karen Zacarías’s award-winning plays include the sold-out/extended comedy THE BOOK CLUB PLAY, the sold-out world premiere drama JUST LIKE US (adapted from the book by Helen Thorpe) at Denver Theater Center, the Steinberg – citation award play LEGACY OF LIGHT, the Francesca Primus Award winning play MARIELA IN THE DESERT, the Helen Hayes Award winning play THE SINS OF SOR JUANA, the adaptation of Julia Alvarez’s HOW THE GARCIA GIRLS LOST THEIR ACCENTS. Karen also has a piece in the Arena Stage premiere of OUR WAR. Her TYA musicals with composer Debbie Wicks la Puma include JANE OF THE JUNGLE, EINSTEIN IS A DUMMY, LOOKING FOR ROBERTO CLEMENTE, CINDERELLA EATS RICE AND BEANS, FERDINAND THE BULL, and FRIDA LIBRE. Her musical CHASING GEORGE WASHINGTON premiered at The Kennedy Center for Performing Arts and went on a National Tour. Her script was then adapted into a book by Scholastic with a foreword by former First Lady Michelle Obama. Her awards include: New Voices Award, 2010 Steinberg Citation-Best New Play, Paul Aneillo Award, National Francesca Primus Prize, New Voices Award, National Latino Play Award, Finalist Susan Blackburn, Helen Hayes for Outstanding New Play.

    About the Director:
    Arlene Martínez-Vázquez is a director, translator, educator, and arts administrator currently serving as Education Director for Seattle Repertory Theatre. Arlene holds a BA in Theatre, Hispano American Literature, and Foreign Languages from the University of Puerto Rico; and an MFA in Theatre Directing from Middlesex University, London. While in London, she studied Meyerhold & Biomechanics at GITIS Academy in Moscow and Theatre of the East at the Indonesian Arts Institute in Bali. Seattle directing credits include: PASSPORT by Gustavo Ott (bilingual staged reading) at ACT, THE PASSION AS TOLD BY ANTÍGONA PÉREZ at 12th Avenue Arts, THE LAST STOP IN MARKET STREET for Book-It Repertory Theatre’s touring education program, THE PROOF PORCH PROJECT (touring bilingual staging of David Auburn’s PROOF), and Karen Zacarías’ THE SINS OF SOR JUANA at Cornish College of the Arts.

    About Intiman Theatre:
    Intiman Theatre wrestles with American Inequities. Intiman Theatre is a professional theater company in Seattle, Washington who won the 2006 Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre and is overseen by Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl, Executive Director Phillip Chavira, and Board President Barbara Lewis. Since its founding in 1972, Intiman has presented over 225 productions to Seattle audiences. Among the more recent of these are 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.

    Intiman kicked off its 2018 WILD, WICKED, WOKE Season with a SOLD-OUT co-production with ArtsWest of HIR by MacArthur “Genius” award-winning writer Taylor Mac and directed by Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl. The second mainstage production of the season showcased WILD HORSES by Allison Gregory and directed by Sheila Daniels at 12th Avenue Arts. The third and last mainstage show of the 2018 season, NATIVE GARDENS by Karen Zacarías and directed by Arlene Martínez-Vázquez, plays at The Jones Playhouse from September 6-September 30, 2018.

    For Calendar Listings
    Who: Intiman Theatre presents NATIVE GARDENS
    Where: At The Jones Playhouse, 4045 University Way NE, Seattle
    What: NATIVE GARDENS by Karen Zacarías and directed by Arlene Martínez-Vázquez
    When:  September 6-September 30, 2018; Wednesdays-Saturdays at 7:30pm | Sundays at 2:00pm
    Tickets: $28-$38. Tickets are now on sale via intiman.org or through Intiman Box Office at (206) 315-5838.

    Press Information
    Press tickets are available for Opening Night, Thursday, September 6 and during Opening Weekend, September 7-9. Please contact Joann Natalia Aquino at joann@intiman.org to make arrangements. To schedule interviews with the playwright, director, the cast and creative team, please also contact Joann Natalia Aquino at joann@intiman.org.   

     

  • A conversation with playwright Karen Zacarias

    A conversation with playwriting success story Karen Zacarias, author of NATIVE GARDENS

  • REVIEW Seattle Gay News “Strong piece with a singularly muscular solo performance”


    Wild Horses tells a 13 year-old’s tale
    by Miryam Gordon – SGN A&E Writer

    WILD HORSES
    INTIMAN THEATRE
    (AT 12TH AVENUE ARTS)
    Through June 24

    Allison Gregory has created a play that turns the idea of a short story, told around a campfire, into a visceral experience and a solo performance. She crafts a memoir told from the point of view of a woman who has survived some difficult moments in life, yet who can remember a seminal summer at the age of thirteen and implies that that summer formed much of who she later became.

    Dedra D. Woods takes on that role and Sheila Daniels makes sure that Woods’ transitions into the various people intersecting with her teenage self are portrayed with clean, clearly individuated characters.

    The woman at the bar has no name. She begins telling the story of her thirteenth summer by relating that there was a radio contest to ‘name’ ‘A Horse With No Name,’ a song by the band named America. It was released in 1972, so that links it to a very specific time. In fact, if the woman is supposed to be telling the tale in 2018, that would have to make her 59ish and Ms. Woods is not nearly 59. However, the atmosphere in this bar is a little unmoored in time, so maybe it’s being told a few years ago, too. The indistinct nature of theatre time…while being very distinct.

    The song, a beguiling and hypnotic poem, references freedom and horses and the idea that riding in the desert allows an escape from human pain and ridicule. As far as thirteen year olds go, many of us might consider that particular age as a fundamental moment in the shape of our lives. For this woman, that summer and horses are forever tied together.

    In fact, the story she tells is of three young teens, herself, brash Zabby, and ditzy, accident-prone Skinny Linnie, feeling the outrage and social-justice urge regarding a horse farm outfit they think has captured wild horses, and they determine to set them free. Certainly, from an adult perspective, this adventure has plenty of gaping holes in it. But that doesn’t exactly deter them from planning it anyway.

    It’s that seminal summer of challenging parental boundaries and trying things that sometimes we’re lucky we’ve survived. The teens steal booze from their parents and mix it in vile concoctions, because the point is not the taste, right? It’s just ‘some of the red, some of the clear, and some of the brown.’ Then, of course, they cover it up by putting any kind of liquids back in the bottles.

    We feel drawn into the story because we recognize ourselves and our discoveries in it. It’s got humor and pathos, difficult discoveries and trying to figure out a crazy, mixed up adult world.

    Sound designer Erin Bednarz peppers the story with moments of music from the period, evoking a sound memory of classic rock tunes. Even those way too young to have lived then may well know these tunes from golden oldies radio.

    Besides one small strange choice of staging with a mist machine adding nothing but confusion to the atmosphere, it’s a strong piece with a singularly muscular solo performance. Woods nails the emotions of the teens and the dual role of the surviving adult telling her personal story.

  • REVIEW City Arts Magazine “Woods’ performance is captivating”

    Drinking in Freedom and Boone’s Farm in ‘Wild Horses’

    Photo by Naomi Ishisaka

    Freedom, especially youthful, stolen freedom, is intoxicating. Watching Dedra Woods on a nearly bare stage at 12th Avenue Arts, arms spread wide and face upturned into an imagined night wind, I felt the tiny shiver that always came with those moments in my younger life: ballooning lungs and tingly skin that meant excitement, however ordinary, was coming.

    “Freedom takers,” is how our unnamed narrator in Allison Gregory’s one-woman play Wild Horses describes the trio of 13-year-old girls, herself and two friends, during the formative summer that comprises our story.

    Like a life, Wild Horses is a complete picture made up of countless smaller moments, capsules complete but insignificant, like a photo mosaic. Our narrator, The Woman, soon becomes the Girl, and we’re thrust back into a summer in the 1970s, navigating evil siblings, preferred siblings, overwhelming crushes, formative sexual experiences, the jaw-dropping realization of your parents’ fallible humanity. The eternal pretending of being 13.

    This story feels rubbed smooth and simplistic over years of our narrator’s remembering: She is the good but corruptible friend, Zabby the tough one and Skinny Lynny the innocent, accident-prone one. Together, they push each other toward bravery, trying things as a group that they never would alone. Egging cars, lying about knowing how to drive, sneaking out of their houses, drinking cocktails made of everything in the liquor cabinet including the peppermint schnapps. And, driven to the brink by a disintegrating home life, trying to free a team of neglected horses from a nearby ranch.

    You can almost hear the line “we were never the same again after that summer” echoing in the background of Wild Horses, directed by Sheila Daniels and produced by Intiman Theatre. There’s a reason why the coming-of-age story remains perennially popular. We all grew up—or at least got older—so there’s always something to connect to in hearing or seeing another person’s experience of doing the same. Many of us had a Zabby, or a Skinny Lynny, a misguided crush, a sibling we thought our parents liked better. “What’s a dildo?” the Girl asks her sister. Been there.

    Woods’ performance is captivating, her easy physicality drawing you into her storytelling web first as her adult self, holding court in the dingy bar where the Woman tells us her story. Later, as the Girl, her shoulders tighten and we see the uncertainty she’s trying to hide, her voice flipping from character to character with clarity but subtlety.

    Beyond her exceptional performance, however, there’s very little reason for Wild Horses to be a play. The beautiful writing seems more like a short story or memoir translated unevenly into spoken dialogue. The moments when the Girl or the Woman addresses the audience are descriptive in a way that makes vivid sense as prose but raises eyebrows as dialogue, to the extent that even a talent like Woods can’t always pull it off naturally: “I snake my searching legs through the dark. Around the rope. Clutching the knots like stolen gems,” our narrator says, describing a breakout from her childhood bedroom.

    That’s not writing a 13-year-old girl, that’s writing a story about a 13-year-old girl. The omniscient narrator is hard to pull off in theatre outside of direct literary adaptations, and while heightened language is a marvelous thing, inconsistently heightened language is more confusing than anything else. With the exception of an intro and outro as the Woman, our narrator relays the story as from her role as a first-person participant, the Girl, slipping as needed into the other characters in the Girl’s story. In moments of pure narration, her perspective is unclear.

    Given the sparseness of the story and the design (Intiman AD Jennifer Zeyl handled the appropriately minimal set and costumes), Daniels’ impulse toward stage business that mirrors the text is understandable, though elements that feel subtle in novels can feel heavy-handed on stage when they’re coming at you as narrative, linguistic, visual and aural elements all at once. When Wild Horses by the Rolling Stones played in the show’s final moments, I was crestfallen, because while Woods’ performance is worth the price of admission, it’s always disappointing when a play doesn’t trust its audience to put the pieces together on its own.

  • Drama in the Hood Review “Unforgettable Production”

    CATCH ALLISON GREGORY’S WILD HORSES AT 12TH AVE ARTS

    Posted by  on 01 Jun 2018

    Even as adults, some people struggle to define their identities and find their place in the world.

    But it’s no better as an adolescent, according to talented playwright Allison Gregory, whose breathtaking coming-of-age story Wild Horses debuted to rapturous applause last night at 12th Ave Arts on Capitol Hill.  This one-woman show stars the incomparable Dedra D Woods and is headed by veteran Seattle director Sheila Daniels, who has over twenty years experience working in local theatre.  Produced by Intiman Theatre as their second mainstage production during their ongoing WILD, WICKED, WOKE season, Wild Horses features an all-woman artistic and creative team working tirelessly behind the scenes to provide an unforgettable production focused on a Woman’s reflections of her past.  Faced with youthful rebellion, young love, testable friendships, and struggles with morality, the Woman relates a sympathetic and winding tale of the first sumer she fought to define herself.

    Dedra D Woods stars as the Woman, and set many years after the youthful summer experiences in question, she relates the story to the audience from the comfort of a bar in her hometown of Soap, Oregon.  As a child, some of the Woman’s regular antics with her friends Skinny Lynny and Zabby ranged from egging passing cars, to stealing liquor or sneaking out, to driving a car with no prior knowledge of how to properly operate an automobile.  And yet, her summer isn’t all fun and games; at home, the Woman struggles to cope with an abusive father, her knowledge of her mother’s secret affair, and her fourteen year-old sister Carrie Ann’s secret relationship with the twenty-six year-old who lives across the street.

    After she’s accused of stealing, the Woman is punished by her father and grounded, though the installment of emergency rope ladders in each of the home’s bedroom windows soon allows the Woman an easy avenue to freedom.  But when the Woman and her friends break into the fenced pasture of a local ranch at night, the accident prone Lynny trips over the body of a dead horse lying in the field, hobbled with wire.  Determining the death of the animal to be no accident, the girls reason the other horses to be in danger from the ranchers and begin hatching a plan to break the horses out.

    Their lives only grow more complicated as the summer progresses, with Zabby’s cruel older brother Dean tormenting the girls as frequently as he can.  However, while Dean proves himself an enemy, Zabby’s brother Don-O is a friendly and sympathetic older presence the young women can count on to treat them with respect, and eventually the girls recruit him into their plan.  Finally, on the appointed night, the girl’s gather at Zabby’s house before their heist, only for most everything to go awry, leaving the young women to muster their collective spirit and attempt to save the horses, but not without undertaking great personal risks in the process.

    Woods delivers an electric performance, and her easy swagger as she engages the audience and performs the story captivates and entrances.  Even when the specifics of the experiences she relates don’t personally register with audience members, the overall emotion of each moment in question is relatable.  The Woman’s behaviors and emotions prove sympathetic and understandable, and Woods’ antics as she involves scenery into her storytelling is both unexpected and uniquely refreshing to watch.  Unlike other plays, in which the audience sees two actors play off each other in a scene, Woods must act alone, while simultaneously performing the voices and motions of each character in a scene.  As the Woman, she easily flows between the roles of parents, siblings, and friends, talking with the believable authority of a person who lived a life with the people about whom she speaks.

    Although the costuming and scenic design for Wild Horses fails to present extravagant clothing or sprawling set pieces, nor would the performance be better with such complex designs.  Costume and scenic designer Jennifer Zeyl dresses Woods’ Woman casually; she wears sandals and sports a jean jacket and scarf, which she quickly removes at the bar counter before elaborating upon the entire summer ordeal, reenacting the motions performed by each of the people in her life that threshold season.

    Performed in a black box theatre, the openness of the stage and the overall minimalist set design allow for Woods’ performance to intentionally draw audience attention away from the surrounding set, and instead directs the viewer to focus on the emotional journey undertaken by the Woman and her friends as they engage in all sorts of activities.  Onstage, an aged red cooler is offset to one side while a bar counter and corresponding barstool occupy the center stage. Candles, glasses, and napkins are organized neatly atop the counter, from where the grown Woman sometimes sits and sips her drink as she tells her story. All the while, the skull of a horse dangles ominously above the bar, dimly lit with spotlights in front of a long, midnight blue curtain which hangs from the ceiling.  Additionally, on several occasions, a light, smokey haze filters out from behind the curtain to help establish the atmosphere and setting of several scenes taking place late outdoors. This lack of static distractions on the set only further emphasizes the humanity of Woods’ performance, and her characters’ relatable struggles with identity, loyalty, and love.

    Though they serve little functional purpose in lighting the stage, several strings of lights droop from the ceiling, switched off-and-on throughout the show to further alter the atmosphere between scenes, or sometimes during scenes.  Woods herself remains brightly lit throughout the performance, and with little in the way of set pieces onstage, there’s never a moment where the view of the performance is blocked by the set design or hampered by poor lighting.

    While those in attendance might recognize the sounds of alternative and indie rock playing before curtain, once the performance actually begins, music from a multitude of varying genres is frequently incorporated.  Each of the songs played during the performance are well-known, hugely popular songs, though each of their uses is short-lived and it can occasionally prove difficult to hear Woods speaking over the background noise of a song, or over laughter from the audience, so it should be noted that people with hearing difficulties may find it a more enjoyable experience to pick seating closer to the stage.

    Gregory’s work is a masterpiece of adolescent disobedience and awkward teenage interactions that is sure to elicit both raucous laughter and groans of discomfort from its viewers while reminding them of good times past and mistakes made.  As such, Wild Horses reminds the audience of the reckless emotion with which young people too often spillover, and offers a golden opportunity to retreat into the shared glories and misadventures of our individual childhoods.

    Go catch Wild Horses while you still can.

    Wild Horses, written by Allison Gregory and produced by Intiman Theatre. Showing at 12th Ave Arts, 1620 12th Ave. Seattle, WA 98122. Located on Capitol Hill at the corner of 12th Ave. and E Pine St. May 31st to June 24th Wed to Sat @ 7:30pm and Sundays @ 2:00pm.

  • BWW Review: “The storytelling is powerful and vivid”

    BWW Review: WILD HORSES at Intiman Theatre is a Wild Ride into Adolescent Memories

    BWW Review: WILD HORSES at Intiman Theatre is a Wild Ride into Adolescent Memories
    Wild Horses at Intiman Theatre
    Photo Credit: Naomi Ishisaka
    Wild Horses is a one-woman show that tells the story of one summer of her youth, a summer that changed everything. Summers used to be different. Kids and teens had to find their own ways to fill their time. With seemingly endless hours of opportunity and friends by our side, temptations and adventures awaited. Coming of age stories are always appealing because they are so relatable. The things we felt but didn’t dare speak, the confusion and excitement of growing up – we’ve all been there. Playwright Allison Gregory takes us back to the summers of our youth. Although this story is specific, we know it; we can feel it too.

    Dedra D. Woods commands the stage recounting this youthful adventure as a first person narrative. When necessary, she embodies the spirits and voices of the others in the story as well, and these are some of the funniest bits in the show. We never know the name of the main character, perhaps because that character is really all of us. We are invited into the story, to claim it, and remember our own stories. Woods’ voice is at once soft and strong, resonant and retreating, hypnotic and harsh. The teenage years are hard, and none harder than those first few. In Woods we see the adult who is still the thirteen year old. They are not separate but one and the same.

    The story Woods is telling includes her thirteen year old self, her best friends, Zabby, and Skinny Lenny along with the bully Dean, and crush, Don-O. It is the summer of a radio contest to name “the horse with no name” from the song by America. Their adventures that one summer include a bit of everything from sneaking alcohol, to peer pressure, to discovering a great wrong and trying to make it right. Like most teens, they confide in each other and not their parents. Their discoveries also include details of their parents’ lives that they find shocking. They learn that everyone – parents, siblings, neighbors, and even themselves have secrets. The storytelling is powerful and vivid. Gregory’s words and Woods’ performance paint an almost movie-like scene before you.

    Jennifer Zeyl serves as Artistic Director, Costumer, and Scenic Designer for the show. Her work is carefully crafted simplicity. Each piece is needed and used in multiple ways. A scarf becomes the knotted rope to climb out the bedroom window. The thoughtfulness and intention behind every item is apparent. They allow Woods to move about and tell her story in a full-bodied way that adds to the power of her words.

    If you wanted to find a symbol for youth, there could be no better one that a wild horse, maybe even a horse with no name. For the horse is not specific, but rather representative of all youth. It has power, often unbridled power, and can be timid and bold. The eyes of a horse hold so many unspoken words, just like the eyes of teenagers. Despite having all been there once, adults have crossed a divide that makes to so hard to communicate with teens. This show reminds us that we each have our own past and hidden within are the universal truths of growing up.

    Wild Horses is playing at Intiman Theatre through June 24th. For tickets or information, www.intiman.org.

  • Q & A with Sheila Daniels, Director of WILD HORSES

    I just get where this woman is, and it feels deeply personal to me.
    -Sheila Daniels

    Fresh off the heels of The WOLVES at ACT Theatre, Sheila Daniels — who has been making theatre as a director, choreographer and educator in Seattle since 1994, including as the former Associate Artistic Director of Intiman Theatre from 2007-2009 — returns to Intiman to direct WILD HORSES, a one woman play by Allison Gregory, starring Dedra D Woods.

    Here, Intiman’s Marketing Contractor Joann Natalia Aquino talks to Sheila about directing the play, her process and reflections on this journey.

    JNA: Do you typically direct shows back-to-back?
    SD: No, I try not to, but when Jen (Zeyl) contacted me about WILD HORSES, I just felt like I had to do it. And so I looked at the schedule and thought, okay, I think I can make this work — and I did a lot of work on the show actually before I started the rehearsals for THE WOLVES because I knew that it was going to be a busy schedule. Normally I won’t do stuff back-to-back, but I just couldn’t say no to this wonderful story and Allison Gregory (playwright) is a very dear friend.

    JNA: What is it about WILD HORSES that made you want to be a part it?
    SD: First of all, I love Allison’s writing. I find her to be a magical writer. I feel like I often see myself in her work somewhere and so it always feels really deeply personal for me. I also think that I’m actually the age of “The Woman” (anchor character of the show) and my experiences with memory, and particularly memory of my childhood and preadolescence, has been really profound in the last five years. I think you enter a really different relationship with memory in your forties than you have when you’re younger, even in your thirties — but there’s something about getting into your forties. I think because you just stop giving a shit about so much stuff that you just have more space to reflect on what has my life been about and what’s not done yet.

    JNA: What was your process like preparing for WILD HORSES?
    SD: When it was in its very early stages (in 2014), I heard it read in the playwright’s living room by the actress Amy Thone, so I knew it. And my process since then has been to really break the script down into what the events are of the play, then list what I feel is the underbelly of the story, then work through the script beat by beat. When I was a younger director, I used to pre-stage everything and I just don’t do that anymore. I come in with ideas, but I’ve loosened into the value of actors as collaborators.

    JNA: Dedra D Woods is the star of the play. How do you work together?
    SD: I’ve wanted to work with Dedra since the first time I saw her work, since WEDDING BAND especially. Dedra has a switch that clicks and I’ve seen it when she performs and I’ve seen it when she auditioned. She has that ability to transcend the moment and really go to a different place and really take me to the fiction of the play.

    JNA: How is WILD HORSES different from all the shows you’ve directed?
    SD: I just get where this woman is, and it feels deeply personal to me. And I think also with all the music that’s in it — I think about theatre very musically. I think about directing plays like conducting an orchestra and WILD HORSES is like an orchestra of poetry and orchestra of song together.

    JNA: How would you describe your style as a director?
    SD: I feel like it really changes depending on the play that I’m directing. I would say that I’m a collaborative director, I believe in the value of the actor and the actor’s point of view. I also ultimately believe that there are things the director can only see from the outside. I feel like as a director, I look into every emotional possibility for the character at any given moment and how we can create the world visually, aurally, sensually. I think of myself as a sensual director, not in a sexual way, but what is the entire world of this play — not just the world of the words themselves but the entire world that the world evokes. And I like messy theatre. I feel like life is messy and I want theatre to be messy and to reflect life.

    JNA: You’ve been making theatre in Seattle since 1994, how do you think the Seattle theatre scene has changed since then?
    SD: When I moved here in ‘94, there was a lot of great theatre going on, but outside of the Group Theatre, Alice B., and NWAAT (Northwest Asian American Theatre), it was all theatre that I feel was written and made by and for definitely white people, and being made almost exclusively by white men… Now, I think a change is beginning to happen. I think people like to think it’s happened, but no, it’s just starting to happen.

    JNA: What other work still needs to be done for a more inclusive theatre community?
    SD: I feel like for many years, it’s been, “we should hire more women and people of color because it’s the right thing to do.” And I feel like what is starting to happen and what we realize is, “oh, we should hire more women and people of color and tell more of their stories because it actually makes theatre better.” It’s actually better theatre when theatre represents everybody. When there’s true equity to what stories are being told.

    JNA: Why should people see WILD HORSES?
    SD: It’s the root of theatre. It celebrates and opens the wonderful, crazy things we do when we’re reckless kids. It takes you back to that wonderful time when you were like, “fuck the rules,” because you just didn’t know any better. I think it’s such a beautiful story about the ways in which we stay connected to who we were and that we honor who we were. It’s a wild ride.

    Intiman Theatre presents WILD HORSES
    12th Avenue Arts, 1620 12th Avenue, Seattle WA 98122
    May 31-June 24, 2018; Wednesdays-Saturdays at 7:30pm | Sundays at 2:00pm
    Tickets: $28-$38
    Tickets are now on sale via intiman.org/wildhorses

  • KUOW on Starfish Project

    PHOTOS: South Seattle students perform their own stories, not Broadway’s

      MAY 17, 2018

    The end of the school year is a time for students to show off — debates, sports championships and performances abound. And for high schools around the state, it’s musical theater season.

    At Seattle’s Roosevelt High School, drama students will present “Fiddler on the Roof.” You can catch a production of “The Wiz” at Franklin High School in Mt. Baker.

    But you won’t find Broadway standards at Rainier Beach High School. The community-based Columbia City Youth Theater is taking over the RBHS performing arts center May 18th with “As Told By Us,” an evening of monologues, music and dance created by teen participants.

    The material is sourced from the students’ lives, along with stories from community members.

    Donte Felder, who leads Columbia City Youth Theater and teaches at Orca K-8 alternative school, is the driving force behind the production. He and two other adult mentors worked with the students to shape the individual monologues and the overall staging.

    But Felder sees himself in a backseat role.

    “The students are responsible for writing, directing and producing — the whole shebang,” Felder says. “Our job is to coach and guide them. Assist them in making quality decisions.”

    Dancers with Baile Dior Studios get ready to perform their dance to the song ‘Desperado’ by Rihanna during a rehearsal on Tuesday, May 15, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Essence Roberson laughs while her peers try on their costumes during a rehearsal on Tuesday, May 15, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Mentor Tariq Sahali, left, goes over lighting with sophomore Flora Saelor, right, during a rehearsal on Tuesday, May 15, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Felder is concentrating on the artistic content. And Intiman Theatre’s fledgling Starfish Project is providing a technical training program, in which students work on everything from scenic design to running the lights and sound system.

    The Western Washington Training Program pays for members of the IATSE union to mentor Starfish participants. IATSE represents stagehands and other backstage theater artists.

    Mentor Tariq Sahali says he’s a product of mentorship himself, and he feels it’s important to pass on his skills to the next generation.

    Sophomore Mason Reyes squeezes between cables before helping to adjust the counterweight system that balances the stage lights on Thursday, May 10, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Intiman Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl piloted Starfish last year at Franklin High School. She wanted to create a path for students — particularly students of color — to learn about what goes on backstage, and to receive the kind of training that will pave the way to union-wage jobs.

    Baile Dior Studios dance instructor, TiQuida Spellman, center, watches the dancers during practice on Thursday, May 10, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Ray Adams waits on stage during a rehearsal before practicing his act on Tuesday, May 15, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Intiman specifically wanted to identify youth of color for Starfish. Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl explains: “Producers call me and say, ‘Who are the black lighting designers in town?’ Well, we don’t have any, because we didn’t make any.”

    From left, Baile Dior Studios dancers Jada Yamashita, Dyamond Dorsey, Yizjuani Watson, Queen Howell, and Simya Gibson listen to their dance instructor, TiQuida Spellman, far left, during a practice on Thursday, May 10, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Dance teacher and choreographer TiQuida Spellman’s students have been working with Columbia City Youth Theater for several years. Spellman, a former public school physical education teacher, hopes her young dancers are inspired to pursue college degrees.

    Sophomore Oanh Duong works on the light board during a rehearsal on Thursday, May 10, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Shayla Lockart listens to feedback after performing during a practice on Thursday, May 10, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Seventeen-year-old Shayla Lockart, who performs a monologue about a teenage girl whose parents are behind bars, talks of personal and academic problems, of feeling lost and alienated. Felder tells her she needs to reach even deeper into her true emotions in order to touch the audience members.

    Messiah Fagerholm waits on stage before performing during a rehearsal on Tuesday, May 15, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER
    I don’t hate you. I hate myself for not having the guts to tell you I love you.

    Some of the monologues touch on racism or violence, but not all. Eighteen-year old Messiah Fagerholm’s monologue is about unrequited love.

    “I don’t hate you,” he tells an unseen young woman. “I hate myself for not having the guts to tell you I love you.”

    Donte Felder, Director of the Columbia City Youth Theater Group, poses for a portrait on Thursday, May 10, 2018, at Rainier Beach high school in Seattle.
    CREDIT KUOW PHOTO/MEGAN FARMER

    Felder believes art saved his life when he was younger. In fifth grade, a teacher recognized his intellectual potential and pushed him to write a play.

    “She said, ‘Donte, you’re a great storyteller,’” he remembers. “And I said, ‘No, I’m not.’ She said, ‘Write this play.’”

    Felder wrote the play and went on to earn an MFA in creative writing. Now, he wants to use his experience to help young people find their own paths.

    As Told By Us” runs Friday, May 18; Saturday, May 19; Friday, May 25 and Saturday, May 26 at Rainier Beach High School’s performing arts center.

  • WILD HORSES All Womxn Creative Team

    Meet the womxn bosses of Intiman’s next mainstage production of WILD HORSES by Allison Gregory


    (left to right)
    Jamie Nathan [Technical Director], Jordan Kelly Andrews [Stage Manager], Jennifer Zeyl [Set & Costume Designer], Dedra D Woods [Actress–The Woman], Sheila Daniels [Director], Erin Bednarz [Sound Designer], & Vada Briceño [Lighting Designer] (not pictured)

    CAST

    Dedra D Woods (she/her) Woman
    Dedra is an actor, teaching artist and facilitator. She holds a BFA in Acting from SUNY Purchase. She is currently in AN OCTOROON at ArtsWest. Dedra’s other credits include: THE LITTLE PRINCE (Seattle Children’s Theatre), I KNOW WHY THE CAGED BIRD SINGS (Book-It Rep), WEDDING BAND (Intiman), A CIVIL WAR CHRISTMAS (Tap Root), BRING DOWN THE HOUSE, MEDEA (Seattle Shakespeare Co), VIOLET, DEATH OF A SALESMAN (ArtsWest). INTIMATE APPAREL (Artist Repertory Theater) and WE ARE PROUD TO PRESENT… (Pony World Theater). She has also enjoyed working with ACT’s Construction Zone Series, Hedgebrook Women’s Playwrights Festival, The Hansberry Project, Seattle Reps Writers Group Showcase, Northwest Playwrights Alliance and Playwrights’ Circle. Dedra is also a member of Barefoot Theatre Company NYC/LA.

    CREATIVE

    Allison Gregory (she/her) Playwright
    Allison’s plays have been produced all over the country, and she has received commissions, grants, and development from Oregon Shakespeare Festival, South Coast Repertory, The Kennedy Center, Indiana Repertory Theatre, the Skirball-Kenis Foundation, GEVA, ACT Theatre, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Orlando Shakespeare Festival, New Harmony Project, National New Play Network, Northwest Playwright’s Alliance, Seattle Children’s Theatre, LATC, Amphibian Stage Productions, Theatre Lab@FAU, BANFF Playwright’s Center, and Austin Scriptworks. Her work has been the recipient of the Julie Harris Playwriting Award, South Coast Repertory’s Playwright’s Award (Forcing Hyacinths), Garland & Dramalogue Awards (Fall Off Night, Breathing Room), Seattle Times Best New Play Award (Burning Bridget Cleary). NOT MADEA (O’Neill & BAPF finalist), and WILD HORSES (O’Neill semi-finalist) received National New Play Network Rolling World Premiere productions across the country. MOTHERLAND (O’Neill finalist, American Blues Blue Ink Award finalist, Harriet Lake Playfest selection) was selected for NNPN’s Showcase of New Plays. She currently has workshops of DARLING BOUD (as in Loud) at the Playwright’s Center, Banff Playwright’s Colony, and Launch Pad at UC Santa Barbara. Allison’s plays for young audiences include GO DOG. GO!, adapted from the P.D. Eastman book, co-written with Steven Dietz; EVEN STEVEN GOEST TO WAR (“Zoni” Best New Script Award; AATE and UPRP awards; Kennedy Center New Visions/New Voices selection); PETER AND THE WOLF (Seattle Times Best New Play Award; National tour). Her adaptation of JUDY MOODY is a seven-theatre commission and will be produced at all seven theatres through 2019. Allison is a Core Member of the Playwright’s Center, and an alumni of LATC’S Wordsmiths and Hedgebrook. She splits her time between Seattle and Austin, where she is the co-founder of the Marthas, a playwright collective. Her plays are published by Playscripts, Smith & Krauss, Dramatic Publishing, and Rain City Press. allisongregoryplays.com

    Sheila Daniels (she/her)  Director
    Sheila has been making theatre as a director, choreographer and educator in Seattle since 1994. She served as Associate Director to Bartlett Sher at Intiman from 2007 through 2009, and is honored to be affiliated with the company ever since. Directing credits include A STREET CAR NAMED DESIRE, ABE LINCOLN IN ILLINOIS, CRIME AND PUNISHMENT, THE CHILDREN’S HOUR, LYSISTRATA (Intiman) THE RAMAYANA (co-creator, A Contemporary Theatre) DANCING AT LUGHNASA (Seattle Repertory Theatre, TANTRUM Theatre), JACKIE & ME (Seattle Children’s Theatre), LYDIA, THE NORMAL HEART, BREAKING CODE, THE BRIDGE OF SAN LUIS REY (Strawberry Theatre Workshop)According to Coyote (Seattle Children’s Theatre Company, Children’s Theatre Company of Minneapolis), A WINTER’S TALE, MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING, ELECTRA, PERICLES, MACBETH (Seattle Shakespeare Company), THIS WIDE NIGHT (Seattle Public Theatre), CRIME AND PUNISHMENT (Theater Under Ground/CHAC), WAITING FOR LEFTY, GOD’S COUNTRY, ARCADIA (CHAC), RUBBLE WOMEN (co-creator, UMO Ensemble), ANAPHYLAXIS (Throwing Bones/IRT, NYC) BURNING BRIDGET CLEARY (Ladykiller Productions), THE LAST STATE (On the Boards), VAYA CON LOLA, SHOCK BRIGADES; WOMEN IN COMBAT (Baba Yaga). As a producer, Sheila has served as Associate Artistic Director at CHAC, Artistic Director of Theater Schmeater, and co-founded Baba Yaga and Theater Underground. She served as an Affiliate Artist at ACT, a member of Intiman’s Collective, and is currently an Associate Artist with Seattle Shakespeare Company. Sheila has been on the faculty of Cornish College of the Arts from 1998 to the present, where she teaches collaboration, devising and acting, She is a two-time recipient of the Excellence in Teaching Award. She also has served on the faculty of University of Washington, Seattle University, the Seattle Children’s Theatre and as a guest director at University of Texas , Austin. She is a 4 time nominee and 2 time recipient of the Gregory Award for Outstanding Director. Sheila will be directing Sarah DeLappe’s The Wolves at ACT in April of 2018.

    Jennifer Zeyl (she/her)​ ​Intiman’s Artistic Director, ​WILD HORSES ​Costume & Scenic Designer
    ​Jennifer​ ​is so grateful for the opportunity to make WILD HORSES with this amazing team of wonder womxn. Zeyl is a Seattle-based scenic designer, director and producer, she designs locally at ACT Theatre, Seattle Repertory Theatre, On the Boards, Intiman, Seattle Shakespeare and Seattle Children’s Theatre and nationally at The Guthrie, The Public, The Rose and Two River Theatre Company. She is a Founding Co-Artistic Director of Washington Ensemble Theatre, winner of the Stranger Genius Award in Theatre and two-time Gregory Falls Best Scenic Designer. Jennifer is the grateful recipient of funding for her own generative work from: The Seattle Office of Arts and Culture, Artist Trust, 4Culture, and The NEA. Jennifer works for CityArts Magazine as the Creative Director of Genre Bender and is the Proprietress of Canoe Social Club, a salon for civic-minded artists. BFA Directing, BFA Theatre Design – University of Rhode Island 1996, MFA Scenic Design – University of Washington, 2003.

    Vada Briceño (she/her) Lighting Designer
    Vada is a freelance lighting designer currently working with Orangelite Inc. She served as the 2016-2017 Lighting Design Intern for Seattle Repertory Theatre. She designed Intiman’s 2017 Emerging Artist Program, and assisted on Intiman’s productions of BARBECUE and DRAGON LADY. She is excited to make a return to Seattle for this production of WILD HORSES alongside this inspiring group of artists and friends.

     

    Erin Bednarz (she/her)​ Sound Designer
    Erin is an interdisciplinary artist having worked with 40+ arts organizations over the last nine years. She serves as company member with Washington Ensemble, LiveGirls!, and Annex Theaters, and is co-founder of new play accelerator Umbrella Project. Erin’s work in sound design has grown to national and institutional levels. Her produced work has gained literary nods from HowlRound, CityArts + Encore. As a teaching artist, Erin’s knowledge of design + performance has been shared throughout universities in communities across Washington state.

    Jordan Kelly Andrews (she/her) Stage Manager
    Jordan is the Production Coordinator at Seattle Children’s Theatre and former Production Manager for the University of Northern Iowa. She has previously worked at the Dallas Theater Center, Casa Manana, Circle Theatre, Amphibian Stage Productions, Summer Theatre of New Canaan, The Trinity Shakespeare Festival. She is pleased to be at Intiman for her first show since moving to Seattle. Jordan is a proud member of AEA and would like to thank her wife Leigh’Ann for her amazing love and support.

     

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