Past

LOSSY

“You can’t leave, not until you remember what you lost”

When you think of independent theater, you think of a departure from the expected and Lossy delivers. Lossy an original play by the local ensemble group, WanderLost Laboratory Theatre opened last night at the Slate Theater. The theater space is a simple square surrounded on all sides by audience chairs. An intimate space that puts the audience on the same level as the actors. As an audience we feel grounded in the action and well-placed to observe the movement of character and evolution of their story.

Past

PREVIEW Les Seagulls

Seattle’s newest Improv group Les Seagulls will have their Inaugural performance in Seattle at 3:15 at Seattle’s French Fest on Sunday March 19. Headed by Artistic Director, comedian Sébatien Plisson, formerly of San Francisco’s “La D-Boussole.”
The demonstration of improv techniques will be in French. Taking place annually every spring at the Seattle Center, the French Fest, hosted by the Northwest French American Chamber of Commerce, celebrates Francophone cultures. B360C39F-3B98-4478-ADBC-8689E6B9352C

Les Seagulls. The Armory (Center House) Seattle Center, 305 Harrison, Seattle, WA
Sunday March 19, 201. 3:15 to 4. Free.

Past

Milk Like Sugar at ArtsWest review

Kirsten Greenidge’s award-winning coming-of-age story, Milk Like Sugar, is a moving examination of class, race, and gender through the life of a teenage girl. With a stellar cast and beautiful design, Malika Oyetimein’s directorial debut for ArtsWest is a production you won’t want to miss.
Milk Like Sugar is the story of three young women of color living in the inner city. On Annie’s sixteenth birthday, she and her friends make a pact to get pregnant and have babies together as soon as possible. They see this as an easy path to unconditional love and baby shower swag, but things quickly get more complicated…
Malika Oyetimein brings her strength as a director and her passion for telling the historically untold stories of people of color to ArtsWest for the first time with Milk Like Sugar…

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An Oak Tree

We start off with a simple, yet incomprehensibly complex anecdote – that a man turns a tree into his daughter,

Past

Waning at Annex Theatre

On a rain sodden, midweek night on Capitol Hill, Annex Theatre presented a unique and thought provoking production, Waning. Playwright Kamaria Hallum-Harris filled her fifty-minute play with startling juxtapositions pitting the horrific history of the treatment of African Americans in the early part of the 20th century with a young black woman, Luna (Danela Butler), searching for her sexual identity today.

Past

“Questionable Content” Returned for One Night Only to Pocket Theater

After a rousing warm-up and welcome to Pocket Theater by Clayton Weller, David Rollison ably stepped up to Host the evening. Very quickly he got the two teams on stage. The team seated to the audience’s right: And Yet They Persisted—Sarah Skilling, Bridget Quigg and Mike Masilotti. On the left side of the stage sat Endangered Reese’s Pieces: Phill Arensberg, Tyler Schnupp, and Greg Stackhouse. All of the panelists were sketch comedy, improv theater, or stand-up comedy veterans. In the center of the stage is a screen for video projection. The “sidekick” and Scorekeeper for the show was Martin Stillion.

If you’ve accidentally landed on NPR’s Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me imagine that cranked up to top speed.

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