I just get where this woman is, and it feels deeply personal to me.
-Sheila Daniels

Fresh off the heels of The WOLVES at ACT Theatre, Sheila Daniels — who has been making theatre as a director, choreographer and educator in Seattle since 1994, including as the former Associate Artistic Director of Intiman Theatre from 2007-2009 — returns to Intiman to direct WILD HORSES, a one woman play by Allison Gregory, starring Dedra D Woods.

Here, Intiman’s Marketing Contractor Joann Natalia Aquino talks to Sheila about directing the play, her process and reflections on this journey.

JNA: Do you typically direct shows back-to-back?
SD: No, I try not to, but when Jen (Zeyl) contacted me about WILD HORSES, I just felt like I had to do it. And so I looked at the schedule and thought, okay, I think I can make this work — and I did a lot of work on the show actually before I started the rehearsals for THE WOLVES because I knew that it was going to be a busy schedule. Normally I won’t do stuff back-to-back, but I just couldn’t say no to this wonderful story and Allison Gregory (playwright) is a very dear friend.

JNA: What is it about WILD HORSES that made you want to be a part it?
SD: First of all, I love Allison’s writing. I find her to be a magical writer. I feel like I often see myself in her work somewhere and so it always feels really deeply personal for me. I also think that I’m actually the age of “The Woman” (anchor character of the show) and my experiences with memory, and particularly memory of my childhood and preadolescence, has been really profound in the last five years. I think you enter a really different relationship with memory in your forties than you have when you’re younger, even in your thirties — but there’s something about getting into your forties. I think because you just stop giving a shit about so much stuff that you just have more space to reflect on what has my life been about and what’s not done yet.

JNA: What was your process like preparing for WILD HORSES?
SD: When it was in its very early stages (in 2014), I heard it read in the playwright’s living room by the actress Amy Thone, so I knew it. And my process since then has been to really break the script down into what the events are of the play, then list what I feel is the underbelly of the story, then work through the script beat by beat. When I was a younger director, I used to pre-stage everything and I just don’t do that anymore. I come in with ideas, but I’ve loosened into the value of actors as collaborators.

JNA: Dedra D Woods is the star of the play. How do you work together?
SD: I’ve wanted to work with Dedra since the first time I saw her work, since WEDDING BAND especially. Dedra has a switch that clicks and I’ve seen it when she performs and I’ve seen it when she auditioned. She has that ability to transcend the moment and really go to a different place and really take me to the fiction of the play.

JNA: How is WILD HORSES different from all the shows you’ve directed?
SD: I just get where this woman is, and it feels deeply personal to me. And I think also with all the music that’s in it — I think about theatre very musically. I think about directing plays like conducting an orchestra and WILD HORSES is like an orchestra of poetry and orchestra of song together.

JNA: How would you describe your style as a director?
SD: I feel like it really changes depending on the play that I’m directing. I would say that I’m a collaborative director, I believe in the value of the actor and the actor’s point of view. I also ultimately believe that there are things the director can only see from the outside. I feel like as a director, I look into every emotional possibility for the character at any given moment and how we can create the world visually, aurally, sensually. I think of myself as a sensual director, not in a sexual way, but what is the entire world of this play — not just the world of the words themselves but the entire world that the world evokes. And I like messy theatre. I feel like life is messy and I want theatre to be messy and to reflect life.

JNA: You’ve been making theatre in Seattle since 1994, how do you think the Seattle theatre scene has changed since then?
SD: When I moved here in ‘94, there was a lot of great theatre going on, but outside of the Group Theatre, Alice B., and NWAAT (Northwest Asian American Theatre), it was all theatre that I feel was written and made by and for definitely white people, and being made almost exclusively by white men… Now, I think a change is beginning to happen. I think people like to think it’s happened, but no, it’s just starting to happen.

JNA: What other work still needs to be done for a more inclusive theatre community?
SD: I feel like for many years, it’s been, “we should hire more women and people of color because it’s the right thing to do.” And I feel like what is starting to happen and what we realize is, “oh, we should hire more women and people of color and tell more of their stories because it actually makes theatre better.” It’s actually better theatre when theatre represents everybody. When there’s true equity to what stories are being told.

JNA: Why should people see WILD HORSES?
SD: It’s the root of theatre. It celebrates and opens the wonderful, crazy things we do when we’re reckless kids. It takes you back to that wonderful time when you were like, “fuck the rules,” because you just didn’t know any better. I think it’s such a beautiful story about the ways in which we stay connected to who we were and that we honor who we were. It’s a wild ride.

Intiman Theatre presents WILD HORSES
12th Avenue Arts, 1620 12th Avenue, Seattle WA 98122
May 31-June 24, 2018; Wednesdays-Saturdays at 7:30pm | Sundays at 2:00pm
Tickets: $28-$38
Tickets are now on sale via intiman.org/wildhorses