My Name is Rachel Corrie: Play Reading

A Play Reading And Panel Conversation
Wednesday, March 20, 7:30pm
Erickson Theatre, 1524 Harvard Ave.

A play reading of My Name is Rachel Corrie, followed by a panel conversation. 

My Name is Rachel Corrie
Taken from the writings of Rachel Corrie, edited by Alan Rickman and Katharine Viner
Directed by Kaytlin McIntyre
Performed by Cheyenne Barton

On March 16, 2003, Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by an Israeli Army bulldozer in Gaza as she was trying to prevent the demolition of a Palestinian home. The play, composed from Rachel’s own writings, shows an activist in the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Join us for a staged reading of My Name is Rachel Corrie followed by a panel conversation discussing the role of art in times of war and our local response to global issues. 

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

Runtime: 75mins

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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 and Creative Team

Cheyenne Barton

Cheyenne Barton (she/they)  is honored to be a part of this reading of My Name is Rachel Corrie. Previous credits include: Little Women (Seattle REP), Sense & Sensibility (Village Theatre), Teenage Dick (Seattle REP), The Wolves (ACT). When not acting, she can be found making art on the internet full time. She sends all her love to her family back in Houston, who always support her creative endeavors, whatever shape they may take. Thank you to Ares, Soph, and Pep for being the lights in her little life. Free Palestine.

Kaytlin McIntyre

With over a decade of experience at Seattle Rep, Kaytlin McIntyre (she/her) recently joined the Artistic Leadership Team at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival as their Director of New Works. Originally from Kansas City, McIntyre began her journey at Seattle Rep as an intern, eventually joining the senior leadership team and leading the new works program, The Other Season. Kaytlin is also a director and theatre artist, most recently writing and performing in the autobiographical “House Fire Project”. She has directed and developed work by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, Keiko Green, Courtney Meaker, Benjamin Benne, Jaclyn Backhaus and more. She is an alumni of the Lincoln Center Director’s Lab and an Associate Member of SDC.

Jennifer Zeyl

Jennifer Zeyl (she/they) is Artistic Director of Intiman Theatre and a Community Instigator.  In 2006, Jennifer  walked into Seattle Repertory Theatre with, in one hand – a dog-eared script for My Name is Rachel Corrie (which a colleague had smuggled out of the Royal Court in London) and, in the other hand, the hand of Marya Sea Kaminski.  Jen and Marya were Founding Co-Artistic Directors of Washington Ensemble Theatre, hungry to tell this story and so happy that The Rep agreed. This was Braden Abraham’s Rep directing debut.  Braden would go on to become The Rep’s Artistic Director. Jen would become Intiman’s AD and Marya would become AD at Pittsburgh Public Theatre. Great futures were started by this project and, by saying YES to using our stages to confront and personalize global injustice.

Farheen Siddiqui Ahmed

Farheen Siddiqui Ahmed (she/her) is an Intiman board member of nearly 4 years and Seattle native. She is passionate about dialogue during times of global conflict and the human right to exist with dignity. Farheen has co-led Seattle’s Day of Dignity, a day of serving our homeless patrons in Seattle, and is part of local Muslim organizations such as Wasat. During the day she consults in tech as well as helps Seattlelites reach their real estate goals through O+F Group with her husband.

Jesse Roth

Jesse Roth (she/her) is a writer, theatre artist, educator, and organizer. Her writing has been published in The Stranger and Bitter Pill Press’ An Apple a Day. She is the communications manager at The Feast (Formerly The Williams Project) and writes the newsletter Art Gardening. She is a white cis queer woman of German Jewish and Western European descent who experiences chronic pain. She lives in Capitol Hill.

Hala Saleh

Hala Saleh (she/her) is a Tatreez (traditional Palestinian cross-stitch embroidery) artist who lives in the Seattle area. Hala practices the art of Tatreez both as a way to connect to her heritage and culture, but also as a way to resist the erasure of Palestinian identity. Hala recently started a local Tatreez circle for Palestinians (Seattle Resistance Tatreez). We believe that our existence is resistance, and practicing our ancestral craft reaffirms our humanity, our ties to our indigenous land of Palestine, and our pride in our heritage. Hala is a software technology executive by day and a Palestinian all day every day.

Gabriel Teodros

Gabriel Teodros is a musician, writer and educator from South Seattle who first made a mark with the group Abyssinian Creole, and reached an international audience with his critically-acclaimed solo debut Lovework. He has released over 10 projects since and set stages on fire all over the map from the US to Canada, Mexico, Cuba, Ethiopia and South Africa; often in combination with workshops on creative writing, music, history, science fiction and media literacy. His latest album From The Ashes of Our Homes just released this past fall. For more information check www.gabrielteodros.com

Anahita Sepehri (Stage Manager)

Anahita (she/her) is a versatile artist with a profound love for theatre’s transformative magic. Her journey has been marked by memorable productions, including “The Tempest,” “Little Women” at Seattle Rep, “The Comedy of Errors”, “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” with Seattle Shakespeare Company, and Village Theatre’s “Hello, Dolly!” and “Sense and Sensibility.” Anahita’s passion for diverse narratives shines through in works like “The Forgotten History of Mastaneh” at Seda Iraianin Ensemble Theatre, and “Not Our Town” at Pony World Theatre. Her artistic path has embraced both profound and whimsical tales, as seen in “None Sense and Beauty” and “OR” at Theatre 22. She firmly believes Theatre is the mirror where we can examine our reflections, question our beliefs, and discover the profound truths that bind us all. Next up: English at ArtsWest