Gorky & Chekov: Theater as Revolution

A Panel Conversation
Wednesday, March 13, 7:30pm
Erickson Theatre, 1524 Harvard Ave.

A panel conversation discussing discussing the life, friendship, political landscape, and cultural and artistic impact of Gorky and Chekov. Maxim Gorky wrote The Lower Depths, recently seen at Intiman in a co-production with The Seagull Project. Learn more about the times and politics of Russia in the early 1900’s when the controversial play premiered.

Hosted by Misha Berson, with Gavin Reub, Mark Jenkins, and Dr. Barbara Henry.

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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Meet the Panelists

Misha Berson

Misha Berson (she/her)  was the theater critic for the Seattle Times from 1991-2016.  She is the author of several books, most recently Something’s Coming, Something Good: West Side Story and the American Imagination (Applause), and has taught courses at University of Washington, Seattle University and SF State University.  She has been a Pulitizer jurist several times, and is co-chair of the New Plays contest committee for the American Theatre Critics Association.

Gavin Reub

Gavin Reub (he/him) is a director, producer, and dramaturg. He is the Artistic Director of The Seagull Project, for which he has directed at ACT Theatre, Hugo House, Lewis and Clark College, and the Ilkhom Theatre in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. He was the recipient of the Gregory Award for Outstanding Production for The Seagull Project’s 2015 The Three Sisters. Gavin was a founding member of the interdisciplinary group Cheat Day, which premiered their full-length concert/immersive event at Nii Modo in 2018, and performed in Seattle, NYC, and Lima-Peru. He was the Co-Founder and Director of Creative Development for Umbrella Project. He currently teaches at Path With Art, Coyote Central, and Seattle University. He graduated from the University of Washington, is a member of artsEquity, a 2021 resident artist at Jack Straw Cultural Center, and a member of the 2014 Lincoln Center Directors Lab. For more: IG @gzreebz

Mark Jenkins

Mark Jenkins (he/him) is Professor Emeritus at the University of Washington School of Drama and was head of the UW Professional Actor Training Program from 2003 to 2011. Mark is also a Co-Founder of Seattle’s Freehold Theatre Lab, and is an ensemble member of The Seagull Project. He has been an actor for over thirty years, working in New York, Hollywood, and Seattle. He has appeared on and Off-Broadway, in dozens of television series including his own and several feature films, among them Apocalypse Now. He has played major roles at Seattle Repertory Theatre, Intiman, Empty Space, and ACT. He is lifetime member of the famed Actor’s Studio. He has collaborated with Russian Stanislavski master, Leonid Anisimov in Russia, Japan and the U.S. and with the Ilkhom Theatre in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. He was instrumental in bringing the Ilkhom Theatre Company to Seattle’s ACT Theatre and to the UW in the spring of 2008 and returned to Ilkhom to work and teach in the summer of 2009. His McCarthy-era play All Powers Necessary and Convenient has been produced by the School of Drama and was published by the University of Washington Press. Intiman Acting Credits: Jungle of Cities, The Wild Duck, Dram Play, A Doll’s House, The Seahorse. Directing Credits: Golden Boy, Long Days Journey into Night, Othello Playwright Credits: All Powers Necessary and Convenient, Red Earth Gold Gate Shadow Sky.

Dr. Barbara Henry

Dr. Barbara Henry (she/her) is associate professor in the Department of Slavic Languages & Literatures and affiliate faculty at the Stroum Jewish Studies Center at the University of Washington. She teaches classes on 19th and 20th century Russian and Yiddish literature and drama. She is the author of Rewriting Russia: Jacob Gordin’s Yiddish Drama (UW Press) and the forthcoming Tales from the Russian Underworld (Cornell U Press).