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  • Meet Our Emerging Artists: Alex Bernui

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Alex Bernui

    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.

    Alex Bernui | Stage Manager

    Q: How did you first get involved with theatre?
    A:  Growing up, and still today, I was surrounded by the arts. My family was involved in community theater, my parents are musicians, and my younger sibling loves visual art. I’d always loved the arts, but I had never considered going into theater as a career until I started taking classes and volunteering at Nashville Children’s Theater when I was around 15. It was there that I learned that not only was theater a bunch of fun, but that it had the power to move people. I got involved wherever and whenever I could, and asked way too many questions to some very patient people. After talking to anyone who would listen, seeing incredible shows, and realizing the sciences were really not for me (sorry Dad, I tried), I realized that theater was what I wanted to do.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A:  Theater is unique in that everyone involved has a say in the story. From audience members to actors to the light board operator to the ushers—each individual has something different that they bring into the room.  Theater is important to me because in that room is where conversations happen. Everyone comes into that room thinking one way, and then leaves that room changed in some way. I don’t think any other art form can do that, and that is why I love theater.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: I’m so excited to be surrounded by so many skilled theater artists and to be able to learn and create with them. Intiman is providing tools for us to succeed, and I’m thrilled to see where this takes all of us.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: My favorite experience thus far is hearing the amazing Inda’s play read out loud for the first time, and then talking about it with her afterwards. I haven’t had many experiences where I get to discuss a play that I love with the person who created it, and that was really exciting.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: My biggest inspiration is my advisor in school, Justin Emeka. He one of the most intelligent people I know, and he really has pushed me to think and find answers to things I didn’t know I had answers to. He knows how to listen, and when to stick to his choices, and when to take someone else’s advice. He always seems calm and relaxed, something I always aspire to at least appear to be (but really have yet to achieve). He provides the space to excel and the space to fail and grow from it. He genuinely cares for his students and provides us with opportunities for successful careers. He inspires me to do the best I can, and I’m always going to remember what he’s taught me.

    Alex Bernui is a Nashville native who is very excited be in IEAP! He is a senior Theater major with a concentration in Directing at Oberlin College. Favorite stage management credits include Fiddler on the Roof and The Signal Season of Dummy Hoy at Bucks Rock Performing and Creative Arts Camp and What We Are at Oberlin College. Most recently he directed The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee with Oberlin College Student Theater, and he will be directing Deoxyribonucleic Acid by Dennis Kelly with the Oberlin College Theater Department.

    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: Jay O’Leary

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Jay O’Leary

    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.

    Jay O’Leary | Producer

    Q: When did you know you wanted to dedicate your career to the arts?
    A:  Very quickly, while growing up, I began to realize that I found joy in and a palpable degree of readiness to inspire others. “What do you want to be when you grow up”? My answer was, at one point, to be a motivational speaker. A handful of “grown-ups” informed me that one would have to survive some crazy experience and live to tell the tale in order to do something like that. I discovered this information was very much incorrect. I took to peer tutoring in high school, offered students I didn’t really know advice, wrote furiously in my poem-journal words of wisdom for people to be better and how. The minute I found myself in a rehearsal being asked to analyze the behaviors and events of characters in a play, I felt the center of myself grow fiery hot. Directing and teaching is my medium to motivate people. To help them uncover and cultivate parts of themselves they didn’t know existed. To move them closer to their truth and in turn, I am brought closer to mine.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: Theatre continually forces us to look at largely undealt-with issues. It forces us to feel whether we are prepared to or not. Theatre catches us off guard and in doing so—reveals truths about ourselves and others we might not have otherwise paid attention to. All of this is done in hopes of inciting change. The change could be a father accepting his role and becoming more of a solid figure in his children’s lives, or instilling empathy into a person previously closed off to a certain idea or people. The effects are innumerable and could be as simple as a family going to see a production together when everyone is usually “too busy” to be in the same place at the same time. Connection will always happen. Truths will be revealed. Theatre makes it impossible not to.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: The blessing of being surrounded by gorgeous minds has been almost unbelievable. Each artist has such a gift and I am grateful to not only know them, but to watch them blend their talents together in order to create something crave-worthy. I can’t wait for who gets to experience them next. They will be better for having known them.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: Just one?! Hahaha oh Lord. Let’s see. There was a day devoted to physical work. We were doing an activity that involved moving through space using all of our limbs at varying intensities and speeds. The room turned into this beautiful dance choreographed only by our openness and readiness to connect and really listen to each other. I will never forget that moment.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: Rita Moreno.

    Jay is an actor, director, choreographer and teaching artist. She was the recipient of Best Actress in the Rochester Fringe Fest 2014 for her portrayal of Monica in W.A.C. Iraq.  In addition to starring in a one woman show, Women On Fire, other notable roles include, Carly (Reasons to be Pretty), Zlata (Necessary Targets), Colette (Defrost), and Fabian (Twelfth Night). Her directing credits include, California SuitePink RibbonsSongs for a New WorldThe Zoo Story, and The Trial of the Big Bad Wolf.  Jay has received training from Geva Theatre and  Hochstein School of Music. She holds her B.A. in Theatre Performance from SUNY Brockport and has spent time studying film in Thailand at Mahidol University. Jay would also like you to know that she loves vanilla cupcakes and her favorite instrument is the Tenor Sax.

    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: Klara Cerris

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Klara Cerris

    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.

    Klara Cerris | Actor

    Q: How did you first get involved with theatre? or When did you know you wanted to dedicate your career to the arts?
    A: During college, I took a beginning acting class when I debated about studying law. I met an important mentor who taught that class and encouraged me to pursue acting. I never turned back.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: I am able to make mistakes and share stories with strangers. It is personal and intimate. The process is different from anything else in this world.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: It brings a diverse ensemble together who share different experiences that helps me grow as an actor. Furthermore, we have incredibly difficult and beautiful shows that provoke thought. It is far from boring and incredibly hard. This meets my goal as an actor to continuously stretch myself.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: Enabling a “third room” conversation among mixed race folks where I discovered I am a woman who is a person of color that happens to be more privileged. I now embrace both groups.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: My father

    Klara Cerris is originally from the borderland El Paso, TX and recently located to Seattle in late 2015. She completed her BFA in Performance at the University of Texas at El Paso. Favorite roles include Pace Creagan in The Trestle at Pope Lick Creek, Solange in The Maids, and Kona in Here We Almost Are. She is thrilled to begin her journey in Seattle through IEAP!

    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: Mandy Rose Nichols

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Mandy Rose Nichols

    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.

    Mandy Rose Nichols | Actor

    Q: How did you first get involved with theatre?
    A:  I played a sheep in a school play. I bleated my little heart out.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A:  Theatre, for me, is an immersive dive into the Human Experience – the Human Psyche. I have always been drawn to behavior and the way the mind works. I feel that theatre is a place where people feel safe enough to look into a true mirror and discover things about themselves or society, psychologically, without having anyone “preach” to them. In the theatre environment, the messages and truths being shown are indirect – happening to someone else, somewhere else; people aren’t as threatened and can more readily take those truths home from the theatre. People learn something about themselves. About their neighbor. About their world. The seeds for change are planted. While it may not be immediate, theatre effects this positive change and I NEED to be a part of that.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: We get so stuck in our own mental ruts, even as “artists”. We find things that work for us, tools that fit, abilities we have. I ADORE being around other crazy creative people who think in different ways, in different patterns, make different connections.  I feel like us all rubbing mental shoulders with each other, we’re sharpening each others internal metal. It awakens newness in us. We can sometimes question our validity as an artist, as a person, as a creator – but being around other people who create in different ways, I think, makes you realize YOUR gift is special too – even if it doesn’t look like someone else’s! It creates respect for fellow artists, and ALSO respect for yourself.  I LOVE this!

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: The inherent compassion and vulnerability in my fellow artists. People can be talented, people can be creative, and that’s GREAT and necessary –  but the way everyone really listens to each other has touched me. Also, the Scavenger Hunt from the first day. Getting lost. Siri SUCKS THE MOSTEST.

    Q: What is your biggest inspiration?
    A: The Quest for Understanding I think is what drives me more than anything. The (maybe selfish) need to have a better understanding of peoples stories and how I can grow. I think Empathy for our fellow being is my biggest inspiration. I’ve seen it exemplified in certain people throughout my life, and it has always drawn me. How it effects the atmosphere around that person. And how that ability can foster love. It’s made me think “I wanna to be like THAT.”

    Mandy Rose is overwhelmingly grateful and excited to be a part of Intiman’s EAP! An actor, voice over artist, puppeteer and storyteller, she is a native of Arizona and graduate of ASU. Some favorite roles include Eponine (Les Mis), Bella Manningham (Angel Street), Joanne (Rent), Catherine (Proof). Seattle favs: Ulysses (Flora & Ulysses – Book-It), 1776 (Dickinson – Reboot). Mandy’s passion is in conveying stories thru the expressive medium of theatre. Let’s make a beautiful story. An ugly story. A sad story. A painful story. A love story.  Mandyrose.com

    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: Nick Pineda

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Nick Pineda

    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.

    Nick Pineda | Actor

    Q: When did you know you wanted to dedicate your career to the arts?
    A: My mom was a trustee on the Seattle Children’s Theatre board when I was growing up, so I saw theatre at a very young age. I still remember my first play at SCT; it was the first production of Frog and Toad with Todd Jefferson Moore. That performance by Todd as Frog made such an impact on me that I started to take acting classes at Seattle Children’s Theatre on and off. In Middle School I auditioned for Seattle Children’s Theatre Summer Season and I then decided that I really wanted to start doing theatre more seriously.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: Theatre is very important to me because it is a medium that can use a number of different art forms in in extremely collaborative ways. I love how powerful theatre can be to bring ideas and messages pertaining to the past and present to a wide audience in such an intimate way.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: The Intiman Emerging Artist program stands out to me as one of the best programs that I have been in. I have felt fully at home with an outstanding ensemble of artists that I’m happy to call my family. I have been learning and growing at an exponential rate with truly gifted artists of all different perspectives and identities. We talk about diversity, race, equality, equity and politics in the U.S. and how theatre can be a vehicle for expressing these issues.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: I loved all the discussions and guest workshops that we had in the first week of the program. I’m very grateful to be in this program. What stood out to me the most was being able to have a table reading of Inda’s play; it was great being able to discuss the play’s power, importance and creativity.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: Right now my biggest Inspirations are three male artists:  Donald Glover (Childish Gambino) because he’s a multi talented artist creating what’s meaningful to him, Lin – Manuel Miranda for being able to incorporate Hip Hop and important American History into one of the most successful Broadway plays of all time (Hamilton) and lastly, Sherman Alexie because of his wonderfully constructed prose as a writer and his dedication to important material, humor, creativity and poetic style. My hope is that one day Sherman Alexie will write a play!

    Nick Pineda is a senior theatre major and film minor. He attended London Dramatic Academy (LDA) conservatory program last year. Some of Nick’s performances in Seattle University productions include:  playing Victor in Jane Nichols’ production of Our Lady of 121st St., Wally Web/Joe Stoddard in John Lang’s production of Our Town and War in Scott Kaiser’s original production of Love Labor’s Won. One of Nick’s most memorable shows is when he played two zombies in the main stage production of Night of The Living Dead directed by Linda Hartzell at Seattle Children’s Theatre. Nick would like to thank the SU Theatre department, especially Rosa Joshi.

    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: Maile Wong

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Maile Wong

    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.

    Maile Wong | Actor

    Q: How did you first get involved with theatre?
    A: I first got involved with theatre in elementary school taking classes and performing in school plays.  I always loved it, but also always thought theatre was temporary. Ill stop doing theatre in high schoolIll stop doing theatre in college Ill stop doing theatre after college.  I did not even declare a theatre major in college until the last possible day my senior year! What is inescapably and almost comically clear now, is that theatre is not only a lifelong passion but also the central focus of my professional life!

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: As an individual, theatre draws on all the elements of my background — the student, the athlete, the artist — and pushes the boundaries of my intellect, my body, my compassion, and my spirit.  As a community, theatre brings people together, inspires dialogue about the nature of the human experience, and provides an opportunity to practice compassion for others.  What could be better?!

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: Yesterday, I wrote in my journal, “it is inescapably, stupidly, and obviously clear to me that I couldn’t possibly be doing more important work at IEAP this summer.  Black Super Hero Magic Mama is a vitally important piece of art.  It is an honor and a humbling experience to work on it.  I am so grateful to be able to help tell this story.  Art, and theatre at it’s best serves to bring communities together, to start and facilitate difficult discussions, and even to prompt and foster social change.  It’s time for me to get to work.”

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: At the end of the first week, we all presented a piece of research about one of Adrienne Kennedy’s inspirations from her book,People Who Led To My Plays.  We set aside several hours for the presentations, and honestly I thought it was going to be a long three hours.  I couldn’t have been more wrong.  The range, creativity, and insight of everyone’s presentations was inspiring and thrilling! The landscape of the minds of the 2016 “Emergers” is vast, wild, varied, strange and breathtakingly beautiful. I can’t believe I get to share a room with everyone this summer!  

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: My biggest inspiration is any person, who, when faced with another person, group, or society, who says, “You can’t. Youre not good enough,” responds with, “Watch me.”

    Maile Wong is a Seattle native, and is thrilled to be one of Intiman’s 2016 Emerging Artists.  She is a graduate of Lakeside School and Wellesley College, where she studied Developmental Psychology and Theatre Studies.  Favorite past roles include: Poppy in Noises Off, New Mother inMotherhood OutLoud, Matt in Matt and Ben, and Alais in The Lion in Winter.  Maile would like to thank the Intiman family for this extraordinary opportunity, and her fellow 2016 Emergers for the inspiration, joy, and energy they have so generously given this summer.  

    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: Lindsay Zae Summers

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Lindsay Zae Summers

    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.

    Lindsay Zae Summers | Actor

    Q: When did you know you wanted to dedicate your career to the arts?
    A: I’d known that I wanted to be a theater artist as early as my memory can go back to. I spent a lot of time mimicking films, and cartoons, and TV shows that I’d watched as a child, thenI’d go run around outside by myself with all these made up story lines and perform an entire play. Just me, myself, and I. At some point I’d identified that I was “acting”, and what an “actor” was, and I knew that’s what i was doing, and that’s what I needed to spend the rest of my life doing. I just needed the words to communicate it.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: Because theater’s origins are in communal ritual. it derives from storytelling that reflected the society in which the story was being told, in order to address cultural institutions and values. It is consistent in its purpose. as long as there is community, there will be theater; and as long as there is theater, there will be community.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: I’m excited about the effort that everyone involved puts forth in order to make our workshops, our rehearsals, our program the absolute best that it can be. We’re having conversations about our six weeks with Intiman, but we’re also having conversations about next summer’s program. I’m excited about this program only being in its second year, and i’m so excited to see where it goes.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: On our first day, for about 3 hours, we all shared poems, monologues, whatever we wanted. between that first introduction to my cohort and now, it feels like two months time as opposed to just two weeks. That reference point for where we were as a collective whole and where we are now is so poignant in my memory because of all thats shaped and molded us since then. It’s only been two weeks!

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: August Wilson’s The Ground on Which I Stand.

    Lindsay Zae Summers made her acting debut as Toto in a 2004 production of The Wizard of Oz with Missoula’s Childrens Theater. This was in Maryland, at the age of 10. Since then, she has left her hometown to study theatre at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, Washington, where she is expected to complete their BFA program in 2017. Recent credits: Force Continuum (UW School of Drama), Jungalbook (Cornish College of the Arts), and And Jesus Moonwalks the Mississippi (Sound Theater Company).

    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: Shermona Mitchell

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Shermona Mitchell

    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.

    Shermona Mitchell | Actor

    Q: When did you know you wanted to dedicate your career to the arts?
    A: I had a teacher in high school who was trying to get new members for the drama department and saw me walk by.  She asked me to read a monologue and make her laugh, then she had me to read the same monologue and make her cry, to which I did both, it was then I realized I might be on to something.  After earning my BFA in Theater from Cornish College of the Arts and working professionally for eight years, I took a year long break from theater.  During that break I realized how important theater was to the world, to the community of Seattle and to me.  I realized I had a gift and like all great gifts they are best when shared.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: I LOVE stories! To me, telling stories is how we reconnect to and sometimes find our humanity.  To me, theater is about telling your part of the story -no more, no less.  Not to mention , I get to pretend, get to dress up in amazing costumes and play for a living, it is called a play  for a reason!

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: What doesn’t excite me about the Emerging Artist Program?!  I’m surrounded by artists who see a challenge and lean in, people who are brilliant and are willing to jump in at anytime.  I have been given prespective on so many issues, I have learned from these artist and these issues and have had the opportunity to share this with other artist outside of the program as well.  I have reconnected with my mission as an artist, I have had the chance to revist tools /techniques I had been exposed to before and have been blessed to learn for them once again, for which I am truly grateful.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A:  I will have a lifetime memory of reading fellow Emerging Artist, Inda Craig-Galvan’s play,  Black Super Hero Magic Mama.  The timing of this play could not come at a better time, she nails it, and I can’t wait for people to see it!

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: I’m a big fan of the “lady pioneers” as I like to call them. Frida Kahlo, Josephine Baker and Evelenia Mitchell (my mother).  I love women who boldly say, “I’m here, and I’m not going away anytime soon!”  They don’t hide their light, they dare to be unique and they respect their craft enough to give all of themselves to it.  They are Powerhouses, and they are my people!

    Shermona is a local actor, director and teaching artist. She is electrified to be apart of Intiman’s Emerging Artist Program and the Intiman family!  Originally from Kentucky, Shermona moved to Seattle to attend Cornish College of the Arts where she earned her BFA in Theater. She has been seen locally working with Book-It Repertory Theatre, Live Girls! Theatre, Seattle Children’s Theatre, Anything Is Possible Theatre, Seattle Musical Theatre, 14/48: The World’s Quickest Theater Festival, Theater Schmeater, The Collision Project, Copious Love, Seattle Public Theatre and most recently with STAGEright!  She is a staff member for both Copious Love and Sound Theatre company and a haus member The Haus of Glitterbeast. Look for her next in Civic Repatory Theatre’s production of Trojan Women.

    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: Will Lippman

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Will Lippman

    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.

    Will Lippman | Actor

    Q: When did you know you wanted to dedicate your career to the arts?
    A: In high school I naturally gravitated towards the theatre kids, so it was really just a matter of time. Once I was there it just felt like home.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: Someone said once that the theatre is the only place you can go to see people be honest with each other, and that really resonates with me. It’s somehow easier to tell the truth through imaginary situations, and that helps provoke the bigger conversations about what kind of society we want to be.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: Already it’s exposed me to fascinating perspectives I otherwise might not have heard. Being surrounded by brilliant artists makes every day an opportunity to learn and grow as both an actor and as a person.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: We were assigned a project to create short pieces based on Adrienne Kennedy’s life, and it was a great opportunity both to get to know her better and to get a sense of the range of perspectives in our group.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: I don’t know if I could name a biggest, but it was watching Dustin Hoffman’s performances that inspired me to be an actor, so he’s a major figure for me.

    Will Lippman is an actor and Seattle native. He recently graduated from Central Washington University’s acting program with a BFA in Performance. Most recently, he had the pleasure of being a part of Psycho Beach Party at Fantastic Z as Yo Yo, and has also worked with Arouet in its production of The Paddle: Justice Vs. Forgiveness. Will is delighted and grateful to be a part of IEAP.

    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: Aaron Jin

    Meet Our Emerging Artists: Aaron Jin

    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.

    Aaron Jin | Actor

    Q: How did you first get involved with theatre?
    A: My first exposure in theatre was a lovely middle school production of Peter Pan, where I was cast as Mr. Darling. It was a lovely role and lots of girls screamed for me, which, even though I was gay, was still lovely.

    Q: Why is theatre important to you?
    A: The shared experience of discovery and creation with a group of intelligent, hard-working, and talented human beings that cycles through over and over is something that I’ve been hard-pressed to find replicated elsewhere in the world. Besides, everyone could use a little reminder of what it means to be human.

    Q: What excites you about the Emerging Artist Program?
    A: Just being in a room of other artists full of talent and intention. I remember watching everybody share part of their work on the first day and thinking to myself “I’m supposed to have as much potential as the rest of them?” Every day is a new blessing.

    Q: What is one experience that stands out in the program so far?
    A: One day we were cooling down after a weighted discussion on how we want the discussion of racial equity to continue in our work with a collective breath in and a collective breath out and then a singular burp from me. It was one for the history books.

    Q: What or who is your biggest inspiration?
    A: My biggest inspirations are people who unashamedly tell their truth, people who are kind without reason, and people who remind their friends that they love them.

    Aaron Jin is an actor, dancer, and avid writer of Facebook statuses. He is studying drama at the University of Washington and working with Big Fish NW. Recent work includes a staged reading of The Tale of the Heike (UW/ACT Theatre), choreographing Hello My Baby! (TeenSelect), and acting in Catch Me if You Can (KIDSTAGE Issaquah); up next is directing with UW’s Undergraduate Theater Society. He is grateful to be working with this electric group of people and loves Celine Dion.

    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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