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  • DRAGON LADY Opens This Week! Get to Know the Dragon Lady, and more…

    Interview with the Dragon Lady Part 2
    by Joann Natalia Aquino of Intiman Theatre


    Over brunch in Seattle on a Monday morning, I met with the Dragon Lady, the title character of our next show, to learn more about her, and in turn, for us to learn about Intiman’s upcoming production. In Part 1, the Dragon Lady shared why she came to America and about her early life in this country as a new American. Here, she eases up and shares her secrets to staying young, her daily routine, and the dream that she holds on to. Read on.

    What is your secret to staying youthful and looking good?
    Ay, babe. Looking good? You don’t even know that these teeth are dentures, you know that. They had to pull my bottom teeth, and my dentist, ay, he’s so handsome… Anyway, how do I stay young? I always say my prayers every day. I make sure to say prayers for my family, for their good health. I also pray for the people who have sinned against me. I pray to Jesus to give me the strength to not go after the people who have sinned against me… I eat rice and eggs, and I don’t drink that caffeine, don’t have that. I’m in the garden every day ― fresh air is good. But then my neighbors come out and they start talking to me, and I’m like, “Go away, I don’t even like you.” But I have to pretend like I don’t know how to speak English so they leave me alone. So fresh air, no coffee and prayers.

    Do you have a daily routine? And if so, what are those?
    Oh yeah. Every day I do my stretches. I do something that’s kind of like Tai Chi, but not really ― it’s like pretend Tai Chi. I do it anyway. It makes me feel good. So I do my stretches, I touch my toes, I clean my house. I watch the news, you have to stay up to date on that. I watch the TFC (The Filipino Channel), I like to watch my shows and my soap operas. That is my routine. I mind my business. Nobody has a reason to bother me, I don’t bother them. Unless they piss me off then I kill them, but that hasn’t happened in a couple of years…

    What is a dream that you still hold on to?
    Ay, I want to have my own YouTube Channel. My grandbaby Sara, she’s always on that Facebook and that Instagramming. She texts me and she laughs because she is laughing at how I use slangs like LOL and and what is that other one? L, M, A, O… Laughing My Ass Off? Ay my God, she is so funny! But I want to have my own Youtube Channel and to bring all my original songs to the YouTube Channel and have people watch me and say, “Oh my God, that old lady can sing!” And I want to record my songs on the record and I want to go to Broadway with my granddaughter doing the show. I also want to buy my family a big house so we can all live in it, but not always around each other because that would be crazy, we would end up killing each other ― but at least in the same building so we could walk down the hall to say hello. That is my dream of all things. That is what I would like to have.

    “I mind my business. Nobody has a reason to bother me, I don’t bother them. Unless they piss me off then I kill them, but that hasn’t happened in a couple of years…”

    60 YEARS. 3 GENERATIONS. 1 FILIPINO GANGSTER FAMILY.
    September 5 – October 1, 2017


    Want to learn more about the themes of the show? Join the Community Talk Back Sessions every Sunday after the show.

    Sunday, September 10: Celebrating Grandmother’s Day/The Value of Intergenerational RelationshipsSeptember 10 is Grandmother’s Day! Intiman is offering a free ticket to your/a grandmother with a purchase of a ticket. Buy a regular ticket online and the complimentary ticket to your/a grandmother will be honored at the door. To ensure a seat, email boxoffice@intiman.org

    Sunday, September 17: A Conversation on Activism and Human Trafficking

    Sunday, September 24: How to Create for Social Change

    Sunday, October 1: Celebrating Filipino American History and Kicking Off the October Filipino American History MonthCommunity Partners: Filipino American National Historical Society (FANHS), Pride Asia, Hood Famous Bakeshop

    ​All DRAGON LADY ticket holders can attend any of the Community Talk Backs.

  • An Interview with the Dragon Lady

    by Joann Natalia Aquino of Intiman Theatre

    Over brunch in Seattle on a Monday morning, I met with the Dragon Lady, the title character of our next show, to learn more about her, and in turn, for us to learn about Intiman’s upcoming production. Here, we share that conversation. Read on.

    Intiman: Kamusta po. (Kamusta is a greeting or “How are you?” in Tagalog, a language spoken in the Philippines; and “po” is added to sentences to show respect to elders.) Thank you for meeting with me.
    Dragon Lady: Oh, you’re very welcome.

    Let’s start with why you came to America?
    I came to America because the Philippines couldn’t handle how awesome I was. I wanted to be a movie star, and I also wanted to give my children the best education that there was for them in the world -— and I heard that it was in America.

    How old were you when you came to America?
    I was… Ay ‘sus (“Oh my God”), how old was I? I was 23, I think… I was 23 years old.

    And how old are you now?
    Ay, baby, you are not allowed to ask me that! It is older than 50 and younger than 80.

    Okay, I will go with that. Please tell me, what was your life like when you came to America? 
    It was very hard, babe. I had all these dreams, but I didn’t understand that America, even though it was the land of the free and the home of the brave, it is actually a very racist country. I was a Navy wife and I met other Filipina ladies who were married to American men, but all of the other white people would look at us like we were gago (“stupid”), like we were crazy —- you know that. They made fun of our accents. But then, when we would all go to karaoke and we would sing, they would look at us like they were jealous.

    How did you deal with racism back then and how did you remain strong?
    You know it was hard, because I had five children. I had to work all the time, because you know how much rice five children can eat. I think the thing that kept me strong, even when it was hard, was knowing that one day my children wouldn’t have to do what I was doing for their lives. That I was working hard now, so that I can rest later. It is hard to be strong, especially if you don’t have your family here to talk to and your children don’t understand what you’re going through, because you know they’re babies running around crying, “feed me, feed me!” — and they don’t want to hear about your emotions.

    So you raised five children by yourself?
    You know, my husband was there but he was in the Navy, so all the time he was on the boat going out to sea, going out to sea… We divorced when my youngest one was born, in 1982 or 1983, and after that, I was definitely a single mom. But because he was gone so much, it felt like I was raising them all by myself.

    Looking back, now that your children are older and your grandchildren are also older, what do you want them to know about your story?
    Ay, my God… You know, it is hard because I tell them things and my children will say, “Mom, that’s not true. That can’t be true.” And then I tell my grandchildren, and they’re like, “Ay, grandma. That is so cool. You are so gangster, badass lady!” And I think more than anything, when I die, when I drop dead, I hope that they keep telling my story, because I don’t want to have nobody forget me. I want other people to know my story that even through hardship and difficulties, I am a happy person now. I have made peace with all that.

    And what is “all that?”
    Ay, babe. You want to know what “all that” is, you come see my granddaughter’s show! She put it all out there for everyone to see! The first time I saw her show I said, “Ay, my God, why is she telling everybody my secrets?!” And she does this thing, and I go, “Ay, that isn’t how it happened.” But the next time she does it, I’m like, “Oh, that is actually how it happened.” If you want to know what “all that” is, come and see DRAGON LADY. Maybe I’ll be there too.

    Stay tuned for the part 2 of the conversation. And come and see the show!

  • What is a Dragon Lady?

    by Sara Porkalob, Intiman Co-Curator and creator of the new musical DRAGON LADY

    “Dragon Lady” was a term created in the 1930’s by the West to describe Asian women who were strong, sexual, deceitful, and domineering. The opposite of the Dragon Lady was the “Madame Butterfly”: demure, passive, alluring in her naiveté about the opposite sex, and a martyr. Essentially, both of these terms are racial slurs, aimed at objectifying and negatively portraying Asian women as one dimensional stereotypes: either we’ve evil and sexual, or we’re martyred and passive.

    Growing up, these were the only representations of Asian women I saw in mainstream media, and yet, there I was, an Asian woman being raised by strong, complex Asian women. Why wasn’t I seeing their experiences portrayed on TV, in the movies, and in books? Was I a Dragon Lady or was I a Madame Butterfly? Or was I neither?

    I began developing DRAGON LADY in my senior year of college. I felt ill-prepared to enter the professional world of theater and I had spent the last four years studying the works of old white men, who, like those TV shows and movies of my youth, either completely ignored the experiences of women of color OR depicted them as gendered and racial stereotypes. I knew I didn’t want to perpetuate/be involved in that work, but what did I want to do? What did I have to say? What was I fighting for?

    I decided to investigate my past. And when you’re lost, what do you do? You look back and retrace your steps. I started retracing my steps and no matter what fork I took in the road, the path always led back to my family — back to the people who made me who I am today. Their story is my story, so if I could find a way to tell their story in all its beautiful complexities, then I would know what my story is. And if I know what my story is, I can share it and help carve out a space for other people’s stories — and all of our stories can be the things that change, challenge, and destroy the stereotypes.

    To me, a “dragon lady” is a woman taking control of her narrative  a woman who knows where she came from, where she’s going, and a woman who is not afraid to burn some shit down.

    Photo: Sara with her grandmother. Courtesy of Sara Porkalob.

    60 YEARS. 3 GENERATIONS. 1 FILIPINO GANGSTER FAMILY.
    DRAGON LADY by Sara Porkalob, directed by Andrew Russell

    Tickets Available Now

  • DRAGON LADY SNEAK PEEK

    DRAGON LADY SNEAK PEEK

    “DRAGON LADY is, at its heart, a love note to my family.”

    60 YEARS. 3 GENERATIONS. 1 FILIPINO GANGSTER FAMILY. Intiman Co-curator Sara Porkalob will portray multiple family members from three generations in this hysterical, moving and musical about what it means to be brown, poor and newly American. Learn more about this new production from Sara and get your tickets here!

    What inspired this story? When I was a senior at Cornish College of the Arts, the everyday burden of white supremacist America became too much to bear and I found that my identity as a woman and POC was being swallowed by it. In order to fight my way out of that abysmal, oppressive hole, I started investigating my identity and it always led back to my family. DRAGON LADY is, at its heart, a love note to my family honoring their sacrifices and stories because those things have made me who I am today.

    In three words, what does this musical mean to you? Family, forgiveness, and Filipina badassery (ok, sorry, that was more than three words).

    Why are you excited to share this with Seattle? There is nothing like DRAGON LADY that exists in Seattle right now and yet there are so many people who want what DRAGON LADY has to offer. There’s a demand and do I ever have the supply.

    Why this story and why right now? When it comes to equity, diversity, and inclusion on Seattle theatre stages, this city has a lot of work to do. We need diverse narratives and we need them not only on stage but also in areas of design, production, admin, etc. Those who have power, individual and institutional, need to cede their power and create space/advocate for all of these voices, all of the time. DRAGON LADY and my position as Intiman’s Co-Curator is the perfect example of stories and individuals can push the needle on equity in Seattle theatre, and theatre beyond. DRAGON LADY is about strong POC celebrating their legacy and finding redemption in family so that’s awesome too.

    What sneak peek can you give us about the play? My Grandma is making a special guest appearance!

     Dragon Lady runs September 5 – October 1

  • Q+A With Andrew Russell

    Intiman Producing Artistic Director Andrew Russell and Executive Director Phillip Chavira talked about how Intiman shaped Andrew for the last nine years, some of his favorite moments, and where he is going next.

    PC: So Andrew, why do you feel this was the time to pass on artistic leadership at Intiman?

    AR: I thought I would move to Seattle for three to five years, but the Pacific Northwest has a bewitching spirit, and I got caught in its spell. Thank goodness I did. Because of this magical place I’ve had a journey that’s been one of the most challenging and important experiences of my professional and person life, and I will forever be grateful for it and the hundreds of friends and collaborators who I’ve connected with along the way. I began working for Intiman Theatre in the spring of 2009 as the Associate Producer, and then partnered with the board in summer of 2011 to begin plans to re-open the theatre with a new producing model and revived mission. I had a sense at that time that my role in the long arc of Intiman’s history was to re-open the company, create something new that was needed, and then step away when the timing was right. And now, the timing is right. Why is now the right time? Because it is important for artistic leadership to change so that the perspectives of guidance shift and grow with the times, because it is time for others to bring their incredible skills and talents around the big table – I’ve used my midwestern might to move us this far and now we need a new approach, and because we need more women and people of color in leadership.

    PC: When are you stepping down as our Artistic Lead, and where are you going next?

    AR:Watch out Seattle, and watch out Intiman – you will never fully free yourselves from me. When I showed up I was 27 with no tattoos and had never hiked a mountain, and now I’m 34 with with over 10 tattoos and I could bike that mountain for you. So, even though I’m moving on I will always call Seattle my home. I will remain in my position at Intiman until the end of 2017 to direct Sara Porkalob’s masterpiece DRAGON LADY, to assist in a healthy transition, and to celebrate all that this city and this theatre company can do together. After that I will live in NYC and focus on writing and directing several musicals that have been born, bred, and buttered in Seattle and have exciting steps in the future. What I’ve learned – thanks to my time in Seattle – is that I love making work based on real people who have done bold and audacious acts and have changed their communities, and the world. These include;

    • STU FOR SILVERTON which was commissioned and developed at Intiman in 2013. This musical by Breedlove and Peter Duchan tells the story of Silverton, Oregon and their choice to elect America’s first transgender mayor.
    • THE LONG GAME which was developed with Cynthia Stroum, The 5th Avenue Theatre, and Seattle Repertory Theatre. This is a musical I am co-writing with Richard Gray about whistleblowers and journalists, and asks: what does it take to tell truth in America? The story features Dorothy Kilgallen, Laura Poitras, Jack Ruby, and Edward Snowden.
    • THE RUMBLE WITHIN which is being developed with The 5th Avenue Theatre, and written with Richard Andriessen. This crazy little musical sings the story of the Seattle fasting expert Linda Hazzard, and the murder of dozens of wealthy health-seekers including Daisy Haglund. I like to call it a mix of Jenny Craig and Sweeney Todd.
    • I’m also working on developing a musical with and about the life of Big Freedia, an incredible bounce artist and icon out of New Orleans.

    PC: Can you name your favorite Intiman memory?

    AR: This is an impossible question to answer, as there are so many. I will never in my life forget watching the climax of Stu For Silverton as the Westboro Baptist church were chased away as the fictional and the real Stu of STU FOR SILVERTON were on either side of me watching – both in tears. I will also never forget the hysterical and moving conversation between two of my most influential mentors – Dan Savage and Tony Kushner in conversation at Town Hall. Nor will I ever forget producing both WEDDING BAND and MIND by Alice Childress, and getting to collaborate with Valerie Curtis-Newton so deeply. Nor will I forget the first time Marya Sea Kaminski descended from the sky in our productions of Angels in America. Nor will I forget the first time I saw Ryan Purcell and The Williams Project perform their transcendent ORPHEUS DESCENDING. Or the opening night of the just about perfect production of BOOTYCANDY. I won’t ever forget collaborating with Jennifer Zeyl every step of the way. If you want to make a fella cry, just ask him to think about how much this woman has done for Intiman, Seattle, and me. Damn this is a hard question. And damn it is hard to say goodbye.

    PC: What is Intiman’s financial state right now?

    AR: When the theatre paused operations in 2011, the Board made the bold choice to re-open and since then we have worked hard to satisfy our debt obligations and are scheduled to retire all debt in 2018 – that means we will have negotiated or paid down almost $2 million. This is one of the other reasons I feel comfortable moving on – the theatre is in strong shape financially and can now think about important questions like: where do we perform, where do we consider home, and what is this next step of growth? I’m looking forward to what Phillip Chavira and my successor will do in years to come.

    PC: If you could name your biggest accomplishment at Intiman, what would it be?

    AR: Although I am so proud of re-opening the theatre company with this amazing Board of Trustees and community members in 2011/2012, it is the last few years that have made me the proudest. Our mission is solidified in this city – to produce theatre that wrestles with American inequities – and the quality of our work has remained top notch. Plus we have education programs now that bring our mission to life – the work we are doing in Franklin High School, our Emerging Artist Program, our corporate training program – and we are working with the artists and community leaders that reflect that mission – Valerie Curtis-NewtonSara PorkalobDedra WoodsC. Davida IngramMalika Oyetimein, our new Executive Director Phillip Chavira, and the list goes on. I’m proud that I could offer a jumpstart, but even prouder that our community and mission are off and running.

    PC: What will you miss the most Intiman Family?

    AR: You you you you you you you. All of these people who have shaped and shoved me into who I am today. I am really good at technology and FaceTime and emojis and and will stay so connected but I am already missing the incredible community of humans. Seattle is at such a point of change, and is an entirely different city now than the one I entered in 2009. I will miss very much the chance to continue shaping it into the “next” city that it will become. What I know for certain is that as Seattle grows and changes, more than ever we need theatre, and more than ever we need a theatre company like Intiman. I’m thrilled to see Intiman through its own period of growth and can’t wait to see what the future brings for the organization. Ever since the theatre was founded in 1972 it has had a tendency to consider bravery and activism in its choices, and that is the the legacy that we’ve focused on in our re-opening and in our programming choices.

    60 YEARS. 3 GENERATIONS. 1 FILIPINO GANGSTER FAMILY.
    DRAGON LADY by Sara Porkalob and directed by Andrew Russell.

    Single tickets go on sale Tuesday, July 11.

  • Introducing our 2017 Emerging Artist Program Cohort

    Introducing our 2017 Emerging Artist Program Cohort

    Intiman Theatre’s Emerging Artist Program kicked off this week with a series of workshops with theatre professionals, equity training and a barbecue. See them perform at our Emerging Artist Showcase August 4-6. RSVP Here.

    For the third year in a row, Intiman is producing the Intiman Emerging Artists Program (IEAP), a free program that brings up-and-coming diverse local artists together during the summer for professional training and development that prepares them to work professionally in the region. Intiman Theatre is proud to welcome 20 artists to our 2017 Emerging Artist Program. This week they are getting to know each other (and Seattle) as they settle into this intensive summer program.

    This year’s Showcase Production will feature performances by our Emerging Artists, with leadership and guidance from Co-Curator Sara Porkalob. Audiences will have the opportunity to hear original stories that illustrate the new American dream.

    “The Seattle community is full of narratives that deserve a full voice, and having a seat at the table with Intiman means I can give power to those narratives,” Porkalob said. “I’m learning that our group of people this year are more awesome than we thought. They are thrilling, hilarious and moving. I’m so excited to work with them.

    This week our 2017 cohort learned from local artists as part of the program’s intensive boot camp week. In the first five days, 20 artists spent over 60 hours in 15 workshops and meetings covering topics of racial equity, storytelling, viewpoints, teamwork and much more.

    Former emerging artists and local artists including Alice Gosti, Timothy Piguee and Desdemona Chaing came to share, teach, listen and create  — all to prepare this year’s artists for their performances.

    Day 1 ended with a barbecue where Emergers had a chance to get to know each other and reflect.

    “So far the program has surpassed my expectations,” Emerging Artist Kenju Waweru said. “I’m honing my craft with such a diverse group of artists and Sara’s guidance and mentorship.”

    (Photo: IEAP Facilitator Dedra Woods and Co-Curator and IEAP Artistic Lead Sara Porkalob.)

    2017 Emerging Artist Showcase
    Free to the public
    The Marleen and Kenny Alhadeff Studio Theater at the Cornish Playhouse

    Friday, August 4 | 7:30 pm (Doors open at 7 pm)
    Saturday, August 5 | 7:30 pm (Doors open at 7 pm)
    Sunday, August 6 | 2 pm (Doors open at 1:30 pm)

    Click on a date above to reserve your seat.
    Limited seating available at the door.

  • POWER rehearsals begin with a conversation about the 13th Amendment

    POWER rehearsals begin with a conversation about the 13th Amendment

    Photo: POWER director and Black Lives Matter cofounder Patrisse Cullors.

    Black community members from the Seattle area are gathering to create original storytelling that addresses State violence in collaboration with Black Lives Matter cofounder Patrisse Cullors for Power: From the Mouths of the Occupied. Join us Oct. 20-21 at Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute.

    Participants from the Seattle area met for the first time last weekend to begin rehearsals, which included discussions about policies and practices that target and suppress the Black community.

    “We spent some time talking about the 13th Amendment and how it is written in the constitution to disempower and re-enslave those who were previously disenfranchised,” POWER Project Manager Sadiqua Iman said.

    Ratified at the end of the Civil War, the amendment abolished slavery, with one exception: The amendment mandates that there shall be no slavery “except as a punishment for crime.” Some courts have interpreted the punishment clause more broadly, holding that prisoners are categorically exempt from the 13th Amendment’s protections. (UCLA Law Review).

    This one exception contributed to the mass incarceration of the Black community and other communities of color. As part of a national effort to end State violence, Power: From the Mouths of the Occupied will feature the stories of Black community members who have been targeted by law enforcement and denied basic human rights in a collaborative performance that amplifies experiences that are typically unseen and unheard.

    This is the first time the Seattle community will participate in Patrisse Cullor’s national production. Seattle participants will tell their stories to help transform our community and create change as part of this performance, which is directed by Cullors and co-produced by Seattle artist C. Davida Ingram.

    “Seattle is home to many talented black artists and community members who believe liberation is a creative act. Seattle is also part of a national effort to end overincarceration and criminalization for communities of color,” Ingram said. “The local victories for Block the Bunker and organizing to stop the youth jail were possible because of love and people who believe that Black Lives Matter. Power brings these three vital tools—love, community organizing and art—to bear and I am deeply excited about Patrisse Cullors helping to galvanize the work of our communities with her vision of art that heals.”

    Participants’ personal narratives will be combined with live performance, spoken word and visual media as they become part of a collection of national reflections. Through their stories they will explore what it means to be Black in Seattle.

    “The fight for collective wellbeing for our communities and an end to State violence not only requires clear strategy and organizing, it depends also on cultivating the creativity necessary to heal from past harms and envision a new future together,” Cullors said.

    Storytelling creates an opportunity for sharing, healing and progress. Theatre has a unique power that can move the national conversation on State violence against Black communities forward and into action. The stories in Power will speak directly to the brutality of State violence and offer a sense of resilience through community engagement and movement building.

    Join us Oct. 20-21 at Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute.
    Get your tickets.

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  • Meet Our Emerging Artists: Melanie White

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Melanie White

    Melanie White is one of 27 talented Emerging Artists who are participating in Intiman Theatre’s Emerging Artist Program for 2016.

    Melanie White | Director

    Q: How did you first get involved with theatre?
    A: I started doing theatre in high school because I had a crush on a boy who did theatre. The relationship never took hold, but a love for theatre did. Within a couple of years, I was fortunate to spend a summer as the youngest apprentice at the Williamstown Theatre Festival, working 12 hours a day 6 days a week. I fell deeply in love with everything about the experience and from that point on, I don’t think I ever considered that I would do anything else. Initially I thought I wanted to act, but I came to understand that working behind the scenes as a director is the way I feel most engaged and alive.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: Theatre is the way we tell our stories as a society. It is a truly communal artform, requiring not only collaboration from those involved in the creation of a theatre piece, but also the participation of an audience. In today’s digital world, it remains an experience that requires physical presence, emotional investment, and conspiracy – literally, the act of breathing together.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A:  The opportunity to work and collaborate with so many talented, generous, dedicated people! It makes me so happy to know that this is my cohort and that these people will be my confederates as we navigate the program and continue to make work in the future. They make me feel like anything is possible.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: My realization somewhere around the middle of the third day of our Intensive week that these people were no longer strangers – that they were family, colleagues, and most importantly, collaborators.  I suddenly recognized that we had achieved a level of trust and intimacy that is rare and valuable, and that I felt richer for it.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: I love to travel, to read, and to daydream. I get my greatest inspiration from being open to new experiences and ideas and chasing after the things that excite me.

    Melanie White is a director, dramaturg, stage manager, and teaching artist. Her directing work has been seen in New York, London, Seattle, and Los Angeles. She received the Editor’s Choice Award from the Off-Off-Broadway Review for Love Is Not Concerned, and her production of Gertrude Stein and A Companion was nominated for two LA Weekly Awards. She has been artistic director of Hamlet’s Janitor Productions, Open Circle Theater, and Off-Center Opera, and directed Julius Caesar at Green Hill Detention Center. She has worked as a stage manager at Teatro ZinZanni for the past ten years.
 Melanie received her BA from Brown University and her MA in Contemporary Shakespearean Performance from the University of Essex, England. She has three frequently delightful children.

  • Meet Our Emerging Artists: Adera L. Gandy

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Adera L. Gandy

    This is part of a series about our 2016 Emerging Artists. They will perform selections from three powerful plays by Black women, August 5-7, for Intiman Theatre’s Emerging Artist Showcase. Join us for this free show! LEARN MORE.

    Adera L. Gandy | Actor

    Q: When did you know you wanted to dedicate your career to the arts?
    A: I’ve been involved in theatre since I could form words. Growing up, my mom had this flip calendar featuring various African-American pioneers, one for every day of the year, and I would memorize their biographies and recite them as monologues in front of her friends. If she had guests over, I would bug her about performing something for them before they left. She would give a grand introduction and everything; I loved entertaining people! I knew I wanted to dedicate my life to the arts when I was cast in play as someone’s daughter at age seven. During the very first rehearsal, the actress playing my mother sang a song and looked into my eyes. I was so moved, I cried. I cried until I got into the car and my parents asked me what was wrong. I didn’t have the words for what I was experiencing at the time, but I knew I wanted to affect people in the way she affected me.

     

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: Theatre is transformative for the actor and the audience. It is confrontational and healing at the same time. I find the theatre to be a sacred, magical space where most anything can happen. We as actors are called to explore new frontiers, new ideas, and different thoughts and feelings on stage; in that exploration we create a world all our own that the audience gets to be part of. It’s a unique practice because it’s all live performance. Members of the audience get to watch real life play out on stage. We are in the creation together. Theatre is a tool to inspire change and self-discovery through an experience that is both intimate and powerful.

     

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: I’m excited to be surrounded by so many creative, young geniuses! At times I almost don’t feel worthy of their company. This group is so talented and creative; everyday I’m inspired over and again, which is something I’ve been craving in my personal life for a while now. I feel truly blessed to get to work with such amazing people who work with such passion and personal conviction. It’s been beautiful and I’m grateful for each and every person I’ve connected with thus far.

     

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: The viewpoints exercise with Sheila Daniels remains a stand out for me. I had done viewpoints before, but it was different this time. I felt like my soul left my body that day. I was blown away at how working my body so intentionally hard actually allowed me to be more present than ever. I am in my head a lot, so it was very, very nice to relax my mind and get in deeper touch with my physical self. After 23 years, I felt I was being introduced to my body for the first time. I thought to myself “Ohhh, THIS is what you can do!” I definitely have a greater appreciation for this vessel now. It was fascinating!

     

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: One of my greatest inspirations is Angeline Jolie, for how she uses her artistry as a platform to incite activism and further humanitarian efforts.

    “Artists are visionaries. We routinely practice a form of faith…Sometimes we are called on pilgrimages on its behalf and, like many pilgrims, we doubt the call even as we answer it. But answer we do.”

    Adera is an Emerging Artist who was born and raised in Des Moines, Washington. After completing high school in spring 2011, she moved to Washington DC where she studied the theatre arts as an acting student at both Howard University and the Studio Theatre Acting Conservatory. She is still learning to be vulnerable, to be free, and most importantly, true Forgiveness. These are lessons she hopes to incorporate all throughout her work as a performing artist.

    Join us for our Emerging Artist Showcase August 5-7 at Seattle Repertory Theatre. We will feature selections from three plays: The Owl Answers and A Movie Star Has To Star In Black And White by Adrienne Kennedy and Black Super Hero Magic Mama by Inda Craig-Galván. The show is free and open to the public. RSVP HERE.

  • Meet Our Emerging Artists: Sadiqua Iman

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Sadiqua Iman

    This is part of a series about our 2016 Emerging Artists. They will perform selections from three powerful plays by Black women, August 5-7, for Intiman Theatre’s Emerging Artist Showcase. Join us for this free show! LEARN MORE.

    Sadiqua Iman | Director

    Q: How did you first get involved with theatre?
    A: Church, school, playgrounds, all were backdrops to my grand imagination. My sister and I use to coordinate the neighborhood youth into a full circus troupe. We made tickets to give to our parents and even had our own mistress of ceremony. If we were not turning the playground into a circus, I was turning the dinner table into  a stage and performing every song choreography mash up I knew, or could make up on the spot. I did not have a choice in this entertainment thing, as you can see,it is my birthright.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: Theatre is important to me, because it is an agent for change. People may not talk about race or sex around mixed company, but they will discuss their viewpoints on a show publicly and proudly. These reactions to art, to theatre in particular, are the first steps to social justice in my opinion.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: As a performer, it is very exciting to finally be seen in a new light. Directing is my new light, and being introduced to the Seattle theatre scene as such, with so much support from Intiman, is a game changer.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: Valerie Curtis-Newton came and spoke to us about producing impactful, honest work that we are proud of. She drilled into our heads that we are all amazing, bu sometimes we will suck and to get over it. She held space for those of us who wanted to actively talk about race relations in the theatre world, then made space for those who felt like they were not a part of the conversation. Valerie made it clear that my desire to make a difference through theatre was not only valid, but required.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: My sister Alia Kache is my biggest inspiration. She has done everything I want to do as an artist and more. She is a dancer and choreographer with such a unique style that every dancer she encounters leaves with an essence of her lingering on their aesthetic for the rest of their dance career. She was my first scene partner for stage and for life, the first reality check that I could not wear the light make up my white counterparts wore, and the most elegant performer I have ever witnessed. She is my muse and my best friend.

    2016 TCG Rising Leader of Color, Sadiqua Iman, is an independent director, producer and founder of Earth Pearl Collective, a queer womyn of color social justice arts non-profit organization.  As an interdisciplinary artist and activist, she challenges preconceived notions of marginalized identities through theater, dance, and poetry workshops and performances. Sadiqua teaches womyn’s empowerment through burlesque workshops, and you can find her featuring as the character Namii in her one womyn show, Swing at the 2016 Bumbershoot Festival. “That unruly curl. That shapely, textured, shift of consciousness springing forward with bounce, giving non linear expression to unspoken boundaries.”- Sadiqua Iman.

    Join us for our Emerging Artist Showcase August 5-7 at Seattle Repertory Theatre. We will feature selections from three plays: The Owl Answers and A Movie Star Has To Star In Black And White by Adrienne Kennedy and Black Super Hero Magic Mama by Inda Craig-Galván. The show is free and open to the public. RSVP HERE.

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