Past

The Shattered Glass Project 2024- New Works Festival: New Voices, New Narrative

Three original plays elevating new and diverse voices:
8 nights by 9 directors and playwrights, 16 actors and 5 designers,
15 actors, and 5 designers.

Laugh. Weep. Celebrate.

The Shattered Glass Project 2024 New Works Festival: New Voices, New Narratives is the culminating presentation by the participants in the Director and Playwright Incubator/Mentor Program. The Shattered Glass Project is unique in Seattle’s rich theatrical ecosystem, presenting a festival created by a cohort of women and non-binary directors and playwrights supporting one another through a year of skill building and play development workshops.

Ranging in style from lyrical to camp to realism, the three plays elevate new and diverse voices re-examining traditional narratives and socially relevant topics through the powerful medium of theater.

Past

The Triangle Fire Project-5 Alarm Intense Historical Play

Solidarity Forever-Our Unions will make us Strong

Suspenseful Historical Play with a Message.

As a reviewer, I seem to have hit the jackpot this weekend. Not only was I invited to Blue Hour’s The Plague Master General, but also to Rainy Day Artistic Collective’s The Triangle Factory Fire Project, two brilliant, enjoyable shows about corruption produced by two small promising companies. The latter, written by Christopher Piehler with Scott Alan Evan was staged at TPS’s Theatre 4. This first-rate script was directed with balletic precision by Jack Seamus Conley.

Past

The Plague Master General-A Bubonic Comedy, Profound and Tragically Amusing

Yes, Minister and Monty Python humor, Serious subject

Friday night, I had the great honor to review the first performance of the world premiere of The Plague Master General-a Bubonic Comedy, which promises to be an award-winning script and production. This thoroughly entertaining, enlightening production was written and directed by Greg LoProto, produced by Blue Hour Theatre, with an ensemble of astoundingly talented actors at West of Lenin. It was one of the highlights of my 14 years of reviewing.

Past

English- A play about Emigration, Ethnic Identity in a TOEFL classroom

Loosing your cultural identity in a Classroom in Iran

The Pulitzer prize winning play English, a co-production of Artswest and Seda-Iranian Theatre Ensemble, opened this weekend. The action takes place in 2008 in an English classroom in Iran where four very different students are preparing for the all-important TOEFL prior to emigrating to English speaking countries. Author Sanaz Toossi, uses the students attitudes towards learning English as a vehicle to explore issues of ethnic identity and loss.

Past

Agnes of God at Heart Repertory Theatre

Dramatic Three-person play examines faith.

Summoned to a convent, Dr. Martha Livingstone, a court-appointed psychiatrist, is charged with assessing the sanity of a novice accused of murdering her newborn. Miriam Ruth, the Mother Superior, determinedly keeps young Agnes from the doctor, further arousing Livingstone’s suspicions. Who killed the infant, and who fathered the tiny victim? Livingstone’s questions force all three women to re-examine the meaning of faith and the power of love, leading to a dramatic, compelling climax.

Past

Spring Shot Homegrown-Festival of Plays Three Weekends

Spring Play Festival at 18th and Union

Celebrating a “diverse garden” of performance artists, Spring Shot serves as a
launch pad for brand-new dance, theater, burlesque, and comedy shorts over
three weekends. This year, 30+ artists have come to lay roots at 18th & Union,
curated around the theme HOMEGROWN.

Past

How to Write a New Book for the Bible-Taproot Theatre

“Let’s get it right, down to the details.”

I fear I may be the wrong demographic for How to Write a New Book For the Bible.

Full-time priest and part-time playwright Bill Cain’s heartfelt 2011 play sketches a poignant portrait of a family reckoning with the impending loss of its matriarch. It’s a moving work – Cain based the play off the experience of losing his own mother, and it really shows in the minutiae of family life so lovingly captured by his script. In spite of all the good things about Taproot’s production of the play, though, I couldn’t avoid a niggling feeling that something was… off.

Past

The Bed Trick-World Premier at Seattle Shakes

World Premier of Comedy

Plays inspired from Shakespeare’s comedies and tragedies have opened in two Puget Sound Theatres this weekend. One of the Bard’s great tragedies’ King Lear inspired Taking Leave at Dukesbay Productions in Tacoma and the lesser known All’s Well that End’s Well, inspired the world premiere of The Bed Trick at Seattle Shakes.

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