Celebrating Langston Hughes

A Panel Conversation
Wednesday, March 27, 7:30pm
Erickson Theatre, 1524 Harvard Ave.

A panel conversation discussing the life, legacy, and cultural and artistic impact of Langston Hughes, playwright of Black Nativity. Langston Hughes was an American poet, social activist, novelist, playwright, and columnist from Joplin, Missouri. One of the earliest innovators of the literary art form called jazz poetry, Hughes is best known as a leader of the Harlem Renaissance. Hosted by Vivian Phillips,  a communications professional, arts leader, and founder of ARTE NOIR.

 Lobby opens at 6:30pm, and the panel will begin at 7:30pm. The lobby bar will be open, including snacks and alcoholic beverages.. 

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Intiman Members receive $5 tickets to this event (regular price: $35)! Membership starts at just $8/month. Members also receive 15% off at the lobby bar, first access to tickets for our mainstage season, and 30% off tickets to all Intiman productions. Members can purchase the ticket tier marked “Intiman Member” for $5 tickets to this event.

Meet the Panelists

Vivian Phillips

Vivian (she/her) is a communications professional and arts leader.  She is the founder of ARTE NOIR, which launched in May 2021 as an online publication celebrating Black art and culture from the African diaspora.  In September 2022, ARTE NOIR opened as a physical space in the historic Central District featuring a state-of-the-art exhibit gallery and retail store featuring products and the work of Black artists and makers.  In 2020, Vivian teamed with veteran arts journalist Marcie Sillman to create and produce the doubleXposure podcast, giving voice to the ways in which arts, creativity, and culture shape our lives and community. 

Valerie Curtis-Newton

Valerie (she/her) is currently the Head of Directing and Playwriting at the University of Washington School of Drama, and she serves as the Founding Artistic Director for The Hansberry Project, a professional African American theatre lab. Intiman credits include directing Bulrusher, Trouble in Mind, and The Wedding Band. She has worked with professional theatre’s across the country including: The Guthrie Theatre, Steppenwolf Theatre, Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Seattle Rep, Playmakers Repertory Company, Actors’ Theatre of Louisville, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Seattle Children’s Theatre, The Mark Taper Forum, New York Theatre Workshop, and Southern Repertory Theatre among others. Awards: 2020: Seattle Times Most Influential People of the Last Decade; 2019: Theatre Puget Sound – Gregory Falls Award for Sustained Achievement; 2016: Seattle Times Footlight Award (Best in Show) 2014: Stranger Genius Awards in Performance and the Crosscut Courage Award for Culture; 2012: Gypsy Rose Lee Award for Excellence in Direction; 2001: Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation’s (SDCF) Gielgud Directing Fellowship 1997-1999: NEA/TCG Career Development Fellowship for Directors.

Lanesha Debardelaben

For over twenty years, LaNesha (she/her) has helped lead the growth of Black museums. She has served as the award-winning President & CEO of the Northwest African American Museum in Seattle where she led innovative, transformational growth.  While President & CEO from 2017 to 2023, she founded the African American Cultural Ensemble (ACE), the nation’s first permanent, ongoing museum choir. She established the museum’s annual Malcolm X Day, Juneteenth Week, Freedom Weekend, NAAM-Smithsonian partnership, and revitalized its annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. She also founded the Elders Circle, the James Baldwin Circle, the Descendants Series, and Knowledge is Power, a cultural literacy program that freely distributed 25,000 new, beautifully illustrated African American children’s books to children.  She did all of this while leading the museum through the pandemic into a new strategic plan with a relevant new mission statement and elevating its fundraising to record-setting levels. She is currently on a multi-year sabbatical from museum work in order to finish her PhD. Laneshadebardelaben.com

Jordan Charlton

Jordan Charlton (he/him) was born in Florida. His writing has been published in The Adroit Journal, Quarter After Eight, Ruminate, West Branch and elsewhere. He is a Pushcart Prize and Best New Poets nominee and former Associate Editor in Nonfiction for Prairie Schooner currently editing his debut poetry collection Slow Kill, which has been accepted for publication with Finishing Line Press in the Fall of 2024