Wednesday, February 17, 2010

ADDITIONAL PERFORMANCE ADDED, The Great Divorce MUST CLOSE ON fEBRUARY 27

SEATTLE – February 17, 2010 – Patrons now have an additional chance to see the breathtaking regional premiere of The Great Divorce before it closes at the end of the month. Taproot Theatre has responded to demand by adding a second additional performance on Monday, February 22, at 7:30 p.m. The added performance on February 16 sold out within days, and the cast is still playing to sold-out houses.

The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis and adapted by George Drance and New York’s Magis Theatre opened at Taproot Theatre on January 29 and must close on February 27. In this adaptation of Lewis’ 1940s novel, the author—played by David Dorrian—embarks on a supernatural voyage with a cast of eccentric, humorous characters that bear a remarkable resemblance to us. Theatrical, imaginative and thought provoking, it’s a bus ride from hell to heaven that, in the grand C.S. Lewis tradition, leaves you breathless and wanting more.

Tickets are available through Taproot Theatre’s box office at 206-781-9707.

New plays by Alan Alda, Adam Rapp and Denis O'Hare wrap up Seattle Repertory Theatre's New Play Program season

Seattle, WA – Capping off a season of new play development—which included performances of The Laramie Project: 10 Years Later and Equivocation with Oregon Shakespeare Festival—Seattle Repertory Theatre presents three high-profile new plays under the umbrella of their New Play Program.

The world premiere of An Iliad opens in the Leo K. Theatre for a run April 9-May 16, 2010. Created by Broadway actor Denis O'Hare and director Lisa Peterson, the play is an intimate, modern re-telling of Homer's famous tale of gods, heroes, and the Trojan War. O'Hare was originally slated to perform the piece, but has since stepped down due to scheduling conflicts. Seattle actor Hans Altwies will take on the one and only part in this imaginative celebration of the art of storytelling.

Bookending An Iliad are two workshop performances held in the Rep's black box space, the PONCHO. Actor/playwright Alan Alda ("M*A*S*H," "The West Wing") will be in Seattle working on his new play Radiance, a surprising peek at the outrageous life of scientist Marie Curie, directed by Daniel Sullivan. There will be three public workshops March 26-28, 2010. Pulitzer-nominated Adam Rapp's play Welcome Home Dean Charbonneau, about a Wisconsin family's attempt to celebrate the return of their son from Iraq (to both comic and heart wrenching effect), performs May 21-23, 2010. Rapp directs.

"This is such a fitting way to end a really successful year of collaborations with playwrights," said Producing Artistic Director Jerry Manning. "With these three plays, Seattle audiences have the opportunity to be partners in the development of some of the most exciting new American theatre, to say, 'I was there at the beginning...'"

Originally formalized under former Artistic Director Daniel Sullivan, Seattle Rep's New Play Program helped launch many plays that went on to national success, including Wendy Wasserstein's The Heidi Chronicles and Peter Parnell's The Cider House Rules. During this 2009-10 season, the re-instated program has included one of the premiere readings of The Laramie Project: 10 Years Later, readings by Cheryl West and Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, and, with Oregon Shakespeare Festival, the presentation of the world premiere production of Bill Cain's Equivocation, which began its off-Broadway run Feb. 10.

Tickets for An Iliad are currently on sale through the Seattle Rep Box Office at (206) 443-2222 as well as online at www.seattlerep.org. A very limited number of tickets are available to the general public for both Radiance and Welcome Home Dean Charbonneau, and they can be purchased starting Feb. 23 by calling the Box Office.

On-stage Soldier is Real-life Hero!

Seattle police honor South Pacific cast member Peter Rini for helping to catch hit-and-run suspect

SEATTLE, WA –The Seattle Police Department has announced that they will be rewarding New York actor Peter Rini for his actions on Monday February 8 when he helped to apprehend a driver who’d hit two parked cars, both occupied, while driving a stolen van.

According to the statement from the Seattle Police, Mr. Rini, who is appearing in the Lincoln Center production of South Pacific currently playing at The 5th Avenue, was walking on East Republican Monday morning at approximately 11:46 when he noticed a white van colliding with a pair of cars, and heard the female driver of one vehicle scream after being struck. The driver then hit a telephone pole and left the vehicle. “Although the collision and the subsequent actions of the suspect were happening instantaneously, Mr. Rini was immediately able to put together what was unfolding and had the presence of mind to recognize that the driver of the white van was trying to make his getaway,” says the statement. “As the suspect tried to flee on foot, Mr. Rini tackled the suspect to the ground and subdued him until the officers arrived.”

Rini, who plays the role of Commander William Harbison in South Pacific, is a veteran New York actor whose Broadway roles have included Neil Simon’s Proposals; A View From The Bridge, and Tartuffe, and whose film and TV appearances have included roles in Boiler Room, Sleepers, and ironically enough numerous appearances on Law and Order, where he has played police officers and detectives.

“Mr. Rini clearly acted out of instinct and goodwill,” the statement continues. “Had it not been for Mr. Rini’s actions, the arriving officers would have had to eventually set up delayed containment in the neighborhood and actively searched for the suspect on foot, making it difficult at best to find the suspect in this densely populated area of Capitol Hill.”

Rini will be honored on Wednesday February 17 at 1:30 at a special ceremony in the front lobby of the downtown Seattle Police Headquarters, 610 5th Ave, where he will be presented with a Citizen’s Recognition Award for his voluntary actions in apprehending the suspect.

We at The 5th Avenue are proud to call attention to Mr. Rini’s selfless act of heroism, and applaud his civic mindedness and courage.

South Pacific, directed by Seattle’s own Bartlett Sher (outgoing artistic director of Intiman Theatre), continues to play at The 5th Avenue Theatre through February 22.
Based on James Michener's Pulitzer Prize-winning collection of short stories "Tales of the South Pacific," the musical offers a lushly romantic score while challenging audiences with themes of racial intolerance and bigotry.

Tickets for South Pacific, as well as season subscriptions to the 2009-2010 Season, are available over the phone by calling 206-625-1900/toll-free 888-5TH-4TIX (584-4849), in person at the box office at 1308 5th Avenue, Seattle, WA 98101, or online at www.5thavenue.org.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Due to demand, Taproot Theatre Company adds performance of The Great Divorce

SEATTLE – February 10, 2010 – Playing to sold-out houses, Taproot Theatre Company has added a performance of C.S. LewisThe Great Divorce on Tuesday, February 16, at 7:30 p.m. Receiving its regional premiere at Taproot Theatre under the direction of Scott Nolte, The Great Divorce has captivated audiences with its fantastical and imaginative story, colorful characters and philosophical ideas.

First produced Off-Broadway in 2007 in an adaptation by George Drance and The Magis Theatre, The Great Divorce brings to life C.S. Lewis’ 1940s allegorical novel. One drizzly afternoon our author embarks on a supernatural voyage with a cast of eccentric, humorous characters that bear a remarkable resemblance to us. Theatrical, imaginative and thought provoking. It’s a bus ride from hell to heaven that, in the grand C.S. Lewis tradition, leaves you breathless and wanting more.

The Great Divorce runs Wednesdays through Saturdays through February 27, plus the added performance on Tuesday, February 16. Tickets are available through Taproot Theatre’s box office at 206-781-9707.

ACT’s Central Heating Lab Serves up Film, Theatre, Varietè and More in the Month of March

RAWSTOCK

March 5

Tickets: Single tickets start at $10 or included for ACT Basic and Charter Members

ACT Young Playwrights Festival

March 11-13

Tickets: Single tickets start at $10 adults; $5 students/people 25 & under or included for ACT Basic and Charter Members

The Moisture Festival

March 11-14, April 1-3

Tickets: Varietè, $20 adults, $10 kids 12 and under; Burlesque, $25. Advance pre-sale tickets available to Basic Monthly and Charter Members

Short Stories Live at Town Hall: Folk and Literary Fairy Tales

March 28

Tickets: Advance tickets, $13/$10 Town Hall Members, seniors & students; $15/$13 at the door or included for ACT Basic and Charter Members

ACT Theatre

Ticket Office: (206) 292-7676

Group Sales (12 or more): (253) 839-4204

700 Union Street, Seattle WA 98101

Seattle, WA – February 11, 2010 - ACT – A Contemporary Theatre makes fills its spaces with a variety of entertainment in March. Audiences will catch the debut of new independent films from RAWSTOCK; see new plays from students age12 to 18 featured in the ACT Young Playwrights Festival; enjoy the best in Vaudevillian varietè and burlesque from The Moisture Festival; and listen to fascinating short stories recounted on stage by talented actors in Short Stories Live at Town Hall.

RAWSTOCK

March 5

Tickets: Single tickets start at $10 or included for ACT Basic and Charter Members

Now in its third year of partnership with ACT’s Central Heating Lab, RAWSTOCK short film festival continues to be Seattle’s destination for cutting-edge animation, politically incorrect comedy, and relentless grindhouse cinema. This year’s lineup includes: Light and Dark 2010 – half pitch-black comedy and action, half evocative, animated drama – with a surprise live musical guest in between; RAWSTOCK: Persistence of Vision, an all animation showcase with new films from Argentina, Canada, the U.K. and the U.S.; and RAWSTOCK: Epic, a collection of new films from WT Russell, Justin Freet, Jason Reid, and Dylan Noebels. All in all, it’s more entertainment per minute than previously thought possible. Additional dates: May 19, July 14, August 18, and November 17.

ACT Young Playwrights Festival

March 11-13

Tickets: Single tickets start at $10 for adults; $5 students/people 25 & under or included for ACT Basic and Charter Members

ACT’s eighth annual festival showcases eight outstanding plays written by local high school students and brought to life through staged readings with professional actors and directors. The festival is the culmination of ACT’s annual Young Playwrights Program, in which ACT sends playwrights into local schools to teach students age 12 to 18 the basics of the craft. Each student playwright completes a 10 to 40-minute play; the best are chosen for the festival.

The Moisture Festival

March 11-14, April 1-3

Tickets: Varietè, $20 adults, $10 kids 12 and under; Burlesque, $25. Advance pre-sale tickets available to Basic Monthly and Charter Members.

ACT is proud to once again be among the venues hosting The Moisture Festival, Seattle’s springtime celebration of comedy and varietè. This year, two spectacular shows will light up the stages. ACT Grand Varietè (March 11 & 14) is a veritable buffet of family-friendly entertainment rich with humor and captivating acts of skill and daring – clowns, jugglers, acrobats, dancers, magicians, and more. For a show with an adult twist (not to mention some shimmy), behold ACT Libertease Burlesque (March 12, 13 & April 1 – 3. 18 years and over), a tantalizing mix of renowned local burlesque stars and ribald comedy/varietè acts. Boom-pow!

Short Stories Live at Town Hall: Folk and Literary Fairy Tales

March 28

Tickets: Advance tickets, $13/$10 Town Hall Members, seniors & students; $15/$13 at the door or included for ACT Basic and Charter Members

Think of it as NPR’s Selected Shorts, Seattle style: ACT Artistic Director Kurt Beattie selects compelling short stories based on a common theme; then local actors bring the stories to life during readings at Town Hall. In March, Town Hall and ACT bring together a collection of folk and fairy tales. Additional dates: May 23.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

The Hansberry Project Highlights New Work in 2010

A new commission on the way, plus many new collaborations

Seattle, WA – February 10, 2010 – The Hansberry Project, with support from ACT - A Contemporary Theatre, announces its first new play commission. Keith Josef Adkins, a New York-based playwright, has been selected. Described as “part Yellowman, part Our Town, and part Mad Men” the play explores the pressures that the current economic recession has put on a newly emerging Black middle class. The commission by Gian-Carlo and Eulalie Scandiuzzi is part of ACT’s New Works for the American Stage program and will be developed in 2010 with an eye toward a 2011 production. There are three additional commissions in development as part of ACT’s New Works for the American Stage program (where Becky’s New Car by Steven Dietz originated).
“It began last year, with a conversation in our office about a New York Times magazine article regarding the impact of the collapse of the automobile industry on Detroit's Black middle class. We wondered what would become of those families, who for the first time in generations, have to take a socio-economic step down. The idea stuck with us over the next several months. When ACT approached us about a commission, it seemed the perfect time to move the idea forward,” said The Hansberry Project Artistic Director Valerie Curtis-Newton. “We decided to look for an artist interested in telling that kind of story and found that Keith Josef Adkins - someone we'd been hoping to work with since our inception - had an idea kicking around in his head that we found wonderful and funny and fresh and a little dangerous.”
With a new commission underway, The Hansberry Project has also been active in developing new collaborations with local organizations. Though The Hansberry Project is on hiatus from ACT’s Mainstage, it continues to work with ACT and other organizations in bringing a full slate of activities planned for 2010*:

You Really Got A Hold On Me: A Celebration of Love
ACT Theatre
February 14, 4:00 p.m.
Tickets: $20, includes a champagne toast
An evening of love poems and letters, from famous and not so famous African Americans throughout history, read by local couples and actors. Featured readers include Seattle Councilman Bruce Harrell and his wife JoAnne, along with Steve and Vida Sneed. The piece is edited by Valerie Curtis-Newton and Vivian Phillips. The event will also feature the best of soul music love songs, followed by a champagne toast and chocolates. Tickets at
www.acttheatre.org .

“US” Part One
On the Boards
April 17, 6:30 p.m.
Tickets: FREE!
Developed in collaboration with On the Boards, “US” Part One is an exploration of Black Identity featuring a screening of Marlon Riggs film Color Adjustment followed by a community discussion.

“US” Part Two
On the Boards
May 17, 6:30 PM
Tickets: FREE!
Continuing its collaboration with On the Boards, The Hansberry Project presents “US” Part Two, a screening and discussion of Marlon Riggs final film Black Is Black Ain’t.

Juneteenth Gala
ACT Theatre
June 12, 6:00 p.m.
Tickets: On sale date to be announced
The Hansberry Project’s annual gala fundraiser. This year’s gala will celebrate and spotlight the work of Black Women Playwrights. Tickets at www.acttheatre.org

Wanted
Theatre–Off Jackson
July 22-25, time to be announced
Tickets: On sale date to be announced

Co-presented with Theatre–Off Jackson, Wanted is a new solo show about forgery, fear, juvenile justice, and an unlikely self-discovery, with music by Shontina Vernon. Tickets at
www.theatreoffjackson.org.

New Play Commission Workshop
ACT Theatre
October 2010, date and time to be announced
Tickets: FREE!

Be among the first to hear the words of a new work in progress! A workshop reading of a new play by Keith Josef Adkins.

“Now, that we’ve completed our first five years, we’re ready to look ahead and plan the next five years,” said Managing Director Vivian Phillips. “So, in addition to the major work of commissioning and developing a new play, we will spend 2010 working to strengthen our sustainable strategic partnerships throughout the community. Collaborations are already planned with On the Boards and Theatre-Off Jackson, and others are in the works. We will continue to deepen appreciation and increase patronage by continuing to support a number of performing arts events that highlight African and African American artists.”
For more information, visit
www.acttheatre.org/hansberry or www.hansberryproject.org.

*Events, dates, and venues subject to change.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

ACT Announces 2010 New Play Award: Extraordinary Chambers by David Wiener

Two Staged Readings, Feb 27-28

2010 ACT New Play Award Workshop
Extraordinary Chambers by David Wiener
Directed by Kurt Beattie
ACT’s Bullitt Cabaret

February 27, 2010 at 7:30 p.m.
February 28, 2010 at 3:00 p.m.

Post-play discussions follow both readings

Tickets
FREE! Reservations encouraged (but not required)
Seating is first come, first served

ACT Theatre
Ticket Office: (206) 292-7676
700 Union Street, Seattle WA 98101
www.acttheatre.org

Seattle, WA – February 9, 2010 – Playwright David Wiener has been named ACT’s 2010 New Play Award winner for his play Extraordinary Chambers. Two FREE staged readings will be presented in ACT’s Bullitt Cabaret on February 27 at 7:30 p.m. and February 28 at 3:00 p.m. Each reading will be followed immediately by post-play discussions with the playwright and the director, Kurt Beattie.
Set in Cambodia following one of the worst cases of genocide in the history of the world, Extraordinary Chambers brings Carter Dean, an American businessman, to Phnom Penh with his wife Mara reluctantly in tow. Primed to participate in the rehabilitation of a ravaged country’s economic infrastructure and woefully ignorant of the political and emotional terrain they are entering, the Dean’s stumble into a minefield of deception, intrigue, and betrayal connected to the Killing Fields of the Khmer Rouge. A thrilling, haunting play about ethics of survival and the indomitability of the human spirit, Extraordinary Chambers marks the debut of a new and innovative theatrical voice.
Now in its fifth year, the ACT New Play Award is sponsored by Gian-Carlo and Eulalie Scandiuzzi. Their generous support provides for a national call for submissions and a highly-competitive review process. The winner receives $2,500 and the opportunity to workshop their play at ACT.
“Extraordinary Chambers was selected by unanimous decision of the 2010 New Play Award selection committee,” said Literary Manager Anita Montgomery. “Beautifully written and compelling on a human and a global scale, the play takes us on a thrilling, haunting ride into the unfamiliar terrain of a war-ravaged Cambodia and asks us to look at the emotional and scarily-intimate terrain of human survival.”
Past ACT New Play Award recipients include Zakiyyah Alexander’s Sweet Maladies in 2009, presented by The Hansberry Project; Yussef El Guindi’s Language Rooms in 2008, which has plans for an East Coast world premiere this year at the Wilma Theater and has been also been featured in the Ojai Playwrights Conference, and selected for inclusion in the Playwright Foundation’s In The Rough new play development series; The K of D in 2006 by Laura Schellhardt which moved on to the Woolly Mammoth, Balagan, and Magic Theatres; and Mitzi’s Abortion in 2005 by Elizabeth Heffron which was later produced as part of ACT’s own 2006 Mainstage season.
The Extraordinary Chambers workshop will be directed by Kurt Beattie and will feature Jose Abaoag, Francois Chau, Khanh Doan, Tracy Hyland, and Darragh Kennan.

Seattle Shakespeare Company adds performances of A Midsummer Night's Dream


March 21 and 27 at the Center House Theatre

SEATTLE - Seattle Shakespeare Company has added two performances of its new touring production of A Midsummer Night's Dream to the company's season schedule of plays. Directed by George Mount, Director of Outdoor and Touring Productions, A Midsummer Night's Dream will play Sunday, March 21 at 7:30 PM and Saturday, March 27 at 10:30 AM at the Center House Theatre.

"We really wanted our regular Seattle-based audience to have a chance at seeing what we're presenting in schools and venues across the state," said Mount. "And since this is one of Shakespeare's most popular plays, we were able to squeeze a couple of performances into our busy spring schedule to remedy that." Tickets to the Sunday, March 21 performance of A Midsummer Night's Dream are $20. Tickets to the special priced Family Matinee on Saturday, March 27 are $15 per ticket (ages 11 and up) and $2.00 for kids ages 5-10 (with the purchase of 2 regular priced tickets, two kids can get in for free).

In A Midsummer Night's Dream, two pairs of mixed up lovers find their way through the forest while the fairy queen's heart is captured by an unlikely suitor who has been transformed into a donkey. Mount's production will utilize seven actors and puppets to create a romantic adventure that muddles love and magic into a delightful 90 minute confection for all.

This Seattle Shakespeare Company production is part of Shakespeare for a New Generation, a national initiative sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts in cooperation with Arts Midwest. Additional sponsors include: Lucky Seven Foundation, Washington State Arts Commission, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and the National Endowment for Arts, Macy's Foundation, Horizons Foundation, and PONCHO.
For ticket reservations, call the Seattle Shakespeare Company box office (206) 733-8222 or go online at www.seattleshakespeare.org. Regular box office hours are Tuesday through Friday 1:00-6:00 PM. During performance weeks, in addition to regular hours, the box office opens Saturdays 1:00-6:00 PM and Sundays 12noon to 4:00 PM. Seattle Shakespeare Company performs at the Center House Theatre at Seattle Center.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Arts Advocate and Local Actor Zaki Abdelhamid Promoted to Intiman Theatre’s Director of Education & Community Programs


SEATTLEIntiman Theatre announces that Zaki Abdelhamid, who has worked with the theatre in many capacities since 2004, including as an actor and advocate for community engagement, has been promoted to Director of Education & Community Programs. He joined Intiman’s staff earlier this season as Annual Fund Manager, a position now held by Amanda P. Gomez.

Born in Jordan , Abdelhamid studied Political Science at the American University of Beirut before moving to the United States , where he earned his undergraduate degree in Theatre from SUNY Albany and M.F.A. from the Professional Theatre Training Program at the University of Delaware . In 2003, he moved to Seattle , and within one week of his arrival was cast in his first job as a local actor, in Intiman’s production of Tony Kushner’s Homebody/Kabul.

Abdelhamid has also appeared at Intiman in the American Cycle production of All the King’s Men, and locally in Sonya Schneider’s Wake and productions for Seattle Public Theater and GreenStage. He is currently appearing in Jihad Jones and the Kalashnikov Babes by Yussef El Guindi at Theater Schmeater. In addition to his work as an actor, he was a grants administrator at the Marguerite Casey Foundation for three years.

Since 2006, Abdelhamid has been involved with all the major programs of the American Cycle series of great stories and free public programs. Each Cycle play is the centerpiece of numerous city-wide events that encourage conversation and debate about issues relevant to the Seattle community, and that reach out to people for whom there is little or no access to the arts. He has been a member of the Cycle’s Core Audience, participated in the Front Porch Theater series of readings and discussions, and worked with Rough Eagles students from Cleveland and Roosevelt High Schools who come together each year to develop and perform an original creative response to each Cycle play.

In his new position, Abdelhamid will supervise all of these programs as well as community collaborations developed around Intiman’s new five-year International Cycle, which will launch this year with a production of Lynn Nottage’s play Ruined that will run at Intiman and travel to South Africa’s Market Theatre. He will also oversee Living History, which brings teaching artists to schools from Seattle to Eastern Washington for intensive week-long residencies.

In a new initiative this season, Abdelhamid will curate a special community program for each production, designed to promote civic engagement, increased diversification of Intiman’s audience and new opportunities for collaborations and cross-disciplinary partnerships. Information about the first of these programs, “Parallel Voices” (which will highlight similarities between the Great Depression of the 1930s and today) will be announced in connection with the opening production of the 2010 Season, Paradise Lost by Clifford Odets.

Intiman’s Director of Education & Community Programs position is supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

Intiman’s Education and Community Programs are supported by Fales Foundation, Humanities Washington, JPMorgan Chase Foundation, Starbucks Coffee Company, U.S. Bancorp Foundation and Wells Fargo.

Seasonal support for Intiman Theatre is provided by ArtsFund; Intiman Theatre Foundation; Kreielsheimer Remainder Foundation; The Leading National Theatres Program, a joint initiative of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; The Shubert Foundation; and Washington State Arts Commission.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

SOLO PERFORMANCE FESTIVAL FULL SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED!

Lisa Koch, David Schmader, Gin Hammond, Ben DeLaCreme, Tamara Ober, Billie Wildrick and more

join the lineup at

Solo Performance Festival #4 at Theatre Off Jackson


Solo performers from the dance, writing, musical theatre and burlesque worlds join together
March 3 - April 3, 2010
SEATTLE, WA - Solo Performance Festival (SPF #4: Can You Get My Back) presented by Theatre Off Jackson is the fourth installment of Seattle's annual solo performance festival, and is dedicated to presenting fearless, cutting-edge, diverse performances by solo theatre artists. SPF #4 invites you to celebrate solo artists through storytelling, music, dance, fiction, memoirs and whatever else their lone voice can dream up.

Lisa Koch (Dos Fallopia, Ham for the Holidays) brings us Demonstrate the Place of My Abode with a look at the life and music inspired by a funny father. Weekly pop culture-and-politics columnist of The Stranger's "Last Days," David Schmader takes the stage exposing his relationships with women in Blue's Not Black. Helen Hayes Award winner, Gin Hammond, shares the true story of civil rights African American doctor, Caroline Beatrice Montier in Returning The Bones

Drag queen extrordinaire Ben DeLaCreme (Can Can Cabaret, Atomic Bombshells, Academy of Burlesque) shows us what's behind the makeup in Ben DeLaCreme's Piece de Resistance (the piece she should have resisted) now in IMAX 3-D! Minnesota's Sage Award Outstanding Performer, Tamara Ober brings dance performance Pipa to Seattle, which has captivated audiences with it's dynamic mix of spoken word, dance, video and beautiful musical score. Billie Wildrick (ACT Theatre, 5th Avenue Theatre, Seattle Children's Theatre, Footlight Award Winner, Gregory Award Nominee) brings her commanding and luminescent vocal talent to Theatre Off Jackson to the story of Samson.

Performances range in date from March 3 - April 3 and are at 7:30pm. Tickets for Solo Performance Festival at Theatre Off Jackson are $15 ($10 for Late Night Monologue Slams at 10pm) or $99 for a all-access festival pass. Tickets at Brown Paper Tickets athttp://bit.ly/spf4tix. Using code SUNSCREEN, early purchasers can recieve a discount on all performances and the festival pass, while supplies last. Stay with Solo Performance Festival through our blog at spfseattle.blogspot.com and our Facebook Fan Page
athttp://bit.ly/spf_4


The following is full detail of performances at Solo Performance Festival #4 in alphabetical order by show name, followed by a calendar of events.



Above Normal Range by Becca Davis - Best in Shorts

March 3

A woman with an unusual vocal attribute interviews for a specialized dating service.


Ben DeLaCreme's Piece de Resistance! (the piece she should have resisted) now in IMAX 3D!
April 1, 2, 3
At last Seattle's terminally delightful star of stage and street shares the secrets that have tricked dozens of audience members into enjoying her company. Join DeLaCreme as she peels back the outer layers of makeup and artifice to reveal the makeup and artifice within.

Ben DeLaCreme has appeared in theaters and nightclubs from coast to coast ever since the fateful day in 2002 when she realized that normally unsavory behavior is better received the more makeup one wears. Hailed by The Stranger as "the reason live performance was invented," DeLaCreme combines her background in the performing & visual arts with a love of spectacle, glamour, and Saturday morning cartoons to create a thick sludge of sparkly entertainment certain to stick to your ribs. Favorite local venues include The Triple Door, ACT Theater, Theater Off Jackson and West Hall where DeLaCreme produces and directs the annual seasonal spectacle HOMO for the Holidays. You may recognize DeLaCreme from her engagement as the in-house MC at the award winning Can Can Cabaret, as an instructor at the Academy of Burlesque, or as the drunk you've avoided any number of places. Ben DeLaCreme doesn't miss a moment of Seattle's rainy season, but escapes that nasty two months of sunshine by summering in Provincetown, MA with The Atomic Bombshells.

Blue’s Not Black by David Schmader - Best in Shorts
March 16, 23
Blue's Not Black, David Schmader's solo play about his deep and complicated relationships with women. The second half of this work will be a solo play with another performer in it. This is from the first half.

David Schmader is a writer and performer who’s been living and working in Seattle since 1991. His solo plays include Letter to Axl and Straight, which he’s performed in Seattle and across the U.S. Since 1999, Schmader’s been an editor and staff writer for the Seattle newsweekly The Stranger, for which he writes the weekly pop culture-and-politics column “Last Days.”

Daddy is Plastic by Elspeth Walker - Best in Shorts
3/3
A short performance piece about a girl who goes to London to meet a dad she hasn't seen in eleven years and finds that her knight-on-white-horse vision is actually self-centered, fat, self-destructive and ugly. Daddy is Plastic is a valley-girl's wrestling match with the duplicities of images we create for a single person; a deconstruction of our nasty human tendency to fabricate idyllic, porcelain people out of their primal, repulsive counterparts.

Elspeth Walker is a senior Theater & English major (French minor) at Seattle University. She was last seen as Cleanthis in SU's winter 2010 production of Marivaux's The Island of Slaves. Elspeth is planning to perform the full version of her piece Daddy is Plastic for her departmental honors project in SU Theater this spring. She was recently awarded a scholarship for Artistic Achievement in Theater from the department. She is also the Literary Intern at ACT this year.

De: Colores: Flying with Color by Ben Gonio - Best in Shorts
March 16, 23
A boy, his father and a family's arrival to a new land. A timeless and familiar story that re-plays countless times in a young Filipino immigrant's journey. Mack Ati recounts the wondrous expectations of his childhood as he recounts his embarkment to the United States in the late 1970s. A story brimming with universal themes.

Ben Gonio is a local actor and producer in the Seattle area. A recipient of the 2007 Artist Trust Grant for his solo show As Boundless As The Green Earth, Ben also received a 2009 City of Seattle, Mayor's Office of Cultural Affairs Grant, for his solo-show project about Carlos Bulosan. Regional credits include Seattle Repertory Theatre, The 5th Avenue Theatre, ACT Theatre, Seattle Children's Theatre, Empty Space Theatre, Village Theatre, Seattle Shakespeare Company and Alice B. Theatre. He has performed nationally at Tony Award winning Minneapolis Children's Theatre, The Guthrie Theatre, Houston's Arena Theatre, and Sierra Repertory Theatre. bengonio.com

Demonstrate the Place of My Abode by Lisa Koch
March 9, 12, 17, 30
Stories of a funny father, the music he inspired, and a quirky look at life and death.

An irreverent Seattle singer/actor/comedian, Lisa Koch has released four solo recordings, is one-half of loony sketch-comedy duo, Dos Fallopia (Ham for the Holidays, My Breasts Are Out of Control), and is an alumnus of cult quartet Venus Envy (I'll Be A Homo for Xmas). She performs at folk and comedy festivals all over the world, and has shared the stage with Steve Martin, Dave Brubeck, Suzanne Westenhoefer, Kate Clinton, and Janis Ian. Lisa has co-written such warped cabaret shows as The Carpeters: Uncomfortably Close To You, Déjà Poo, and Ham for the Holidays: Lard Potion No 9. She has toured two one-woman shows (Two’s Company, I’m a Crowd, Return to Planet Lisa) and regional theater credits include The Vagina Monologues (Phoenix Theatre) Dirty Blonde (AZ Theatre Co.) and as the Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz (5th Ave Theatre). She is the composer of a recent Off-Broadway musical about Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas (27, Rue de Fleurus), published by Samuel French. She performs regularly on Olivia Cruises, has been seen on LOGO, and her latest CD, Tall Cool Drink contains the internet hit, “I’m a Middle-Aged Woman.”http://www.heylisa.com/

The Dwellers by Jonah Von Spreecken
March 4, 8, 17, 19, 29
There is a building where the floors are thinner than the walls. The residents' shoes populate the lobby as there is a no-shoes ordinance past level one. A young man lives amongst the piles of shoes, and takes charge of making them not so empty all the time.

Frontier: Valley of the Shadow by Ki Gottberg
March 5, 13
In a whirl of immigrant family history past and future, Ki Gottberg swirls transformatively though all the characters in her own humorously intimate story about spiritual hunger, physical appetite and the quest for faith. One hour long.

Ki Gottberg is a Seattle native. New City Theater, where Frontier: Valley of the Shadow (Seattle Times Footlight award) ran September-November 2009, has been her recurrent artistic home since 1983; her plays Hunger, Stript and Big Boss or the Inner Life of Everything all began life there, and she has appeared in numerous New City productions. Work staged in Seattle other places include The Compendium of Nastiness at The Womb Theater, her commissioned adaptation and direction of Ubu Roi at the Empty Space Theater and an operetta, Mirabelle, a Breeze, commissioned by the Seattle International Children’s Festival (Giant Magnet). She is a recipient of numerous awards and grants for playwriting including a $25,000. NEA/TCG Playwriting Fellowship with New City Theater. After a career in Seattle theater, Ki is now a professor at Seattle University in Fine Arts, where she teaches acting, playwriting, and directs student productions. She is a graduate of the U of W Professional Actor Training Program.

Growing up and Liking It by Jennifer Jasper
April 1, 2, 3
Have you ever wondered what it would be like to grow up in a house with five girls with a mother with a propensity for falling down, a father who doesn’t really like children, and a grandfather whose hobby is making dildos? Well, this is Jennifer Jasper’s life. She has a unique and hilarious way of telling these stories. And the most disturbing part…they’re all true. Performed improvisationally, she takes you on a journey from growing up the middle child in a middle class family to the middle of her own mid-life.

Jennifer Jasper has been performing and directing in Seattle for almost 20 years and has performed nationally. She was a co-founder of Kings’ Elephant Theatre (10 years) and co-founder of Pulp Vixens (10 years). Most recently she can be seen hosting burlesque and performing it as well as the scotch-swilling “Maggie”. In 2009 she directed Keefee’s House of Cards and Teensploitation for Printer’s Devil Theatre of which she is a member. Through improvisation she is continuing to develop her stories into a longer form and looks forward to performing them wherever she can.

Gunpowder by Jayson McDonald
March 25, 26, 27

Jake’s Gift by Julia Mackey
March 25, 26, 27
Jake’s Gift is a surprisingly funny drama about a WWII veteran's reluctant return to Normandy, France, for the 60th Anniversary of D-Day. While there he meets Isabelle, a precocious 10-year-old from the local village, whose inquisitive nature and charm challenge the old soldier to confront some long ignored ghosts, most notably, the wartime death of his eldest brother, Chester, a once promising young musician.

Julia Mackey was born into a very active theatre family in Birmingham, England and moved to Canada when she was three years old. She grew up in Montreal, and received an education degree from McGill University before heading out west in 1993 to pursue acting and writing. In 1995 she started doing just that with Victoria’s Theatre SKAM, and has since worked with many other theatre companies across Canada. Since 2007, Julia has toured Jake's Giftto rave reviews at theatres and festivals across Canada. http://www.juliamackey.com/

Kitty in The City by Jeff Frieders
March 12, 20, 22, 31
A story about Ronney Bridestar, owner and operator of "Kitty in the City Beauty Bar and Day Spa for Feline Friends by Ronney Bridestar." This full length piece chronicles Ronney's journey toward success as he struggles to distinguish between fantasy and reality.

Jeff Frieders is thrilled to be making his SPF debut. Kitty in the City was originally produced as a senior thesis at Cornish College of the Arts. It was most recently work-shopped in Wisconsin during an internship with Milwaukee Repertory Theater and is preparing to tour the Canadian fringe circuit. Recent credits include Gus in The River Why (Book-It Repertory) and Ferdinand in The Tempest (Seattle Shakespeare). Jeff is excited to be working with the hilarious and talented Chelsea Anderson and sends his love to his family and his beautiful partner, Erika.

Late Night Monologue Slam: Hosted by Kevin Kent
at Canoe Social Club - above Theatre Off Jackson
3/13 & 27 - 10pm
Selected performers compete in a winner-takes-all showdown where the audience and local celebrity judges pick the fiercest most daring solo performer. Hosted by Teatro Zinzanni's Kevin Kent.

Little Boy In Flames by Guiseppe Ribaudo - Best In Shorts
March 16
Growing up gay in a straight world. Guiseppe tackles Nature vs. Nurture with songs and stories.


My Little Loves by Becca Davis - Best in Shorts

March 16

Internationally known opera star Bitsy Malouf shares stories and songs of her multi-decade career, life and loves.


No Game by Noah Benezra - Best in Shorts
March 16, 23
"Dudely" comedy about hip hop, getting arrested and losing virginity in the Bush Era.

Not. Stable. At all. By Paul Budraitis
March 6, 10
Uncertainty and instability at a personal and societal level. The spontaneous following of questionable impulses, the impossibility of connection, the mistrust of authority and the presence of chaos and random violence in our lives. Paul Budraitis dives into these themes and takes his audience on a ride that is part punk-rebellion and part narrative rollercoaster.

Paul Budraitis is a director, actor, writer and teacher of acting and stage movement. In Seattle, he has worked with Annex Theatre, New City Theatre, On the Boards, and the Degenerate Art Ensemble. Paul recieved his master's degree in theatre from the Lithuanian Music and Theatre Academy. Paul worked with innovative Finnish director Kristian Smeds on a contemporary re-imagining of Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard. Paul's recent director credits include David Mamet's Edmond at Balagan Theatre. As a teacher, Paul has worked as a lecturer in the acting and directing faculty of the LMTA, teaching acting and stage movement.He has also taught the “biomechanics” technique of Russian theatre director Vsevelod Meyerhold at the LMTA, as well as to students at the Iceland Academy of the Arts in Reykjavik, Iceland.

A One Man Miss Saigon by Manuel R. Cawaling - Best in Shorts
March 3, 16
In these difficult economic times, why produce a major Broadway musical with a cast of 30 or more when it can be performed with just one person? And with our shrinking attention spans, why produce a three hour musical when a story can be told in under 10 minutes? Manuel Cawaling returns to the Theatre Off Jackson stage with his hilarious parody of Miss Saigon. Through “movement”, karaoke, lip-synch, a helicopter and the use of a very large fan, Cawaling tells the tragic story of war torn lovers like it’s never been told before.


100 Years Of Solitude by Conner Marx - Best in Shorts

March 23

Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendia was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.

Manuel R. Cawaling has worked professionally in the Puget Sound as an artist and administrator since 1989. Over the last 20 years, Cawaling has explored a variety of professional interests—arts administration, stage directing, performing, arts education, exhibit development and community organizing. Cawaling is the Executive Director for Youth Theatre Northwest and the President for the Washington State Arts Alliance Foundation. Cawaling is a well-known local director and his work has been seen in various venues across the city. Cawaling recently directed The Fantasticks for Civic Light Opera,Theory of Everything for SIS Productions and Orbis, a unique performing arts installation celebrating the Winter Solstice at Seattle Center.

Pipa by Tamara Ober
March 4, 5, 6
Pipa, a richly layered dance work integrating dynamic movement, a beautiful musical sound score, video and spoken text, tells the story of an accident-prone girl who is unable to take the direct route to anywhere. She wanders the broken lines of a map between worlds of the appearing and disappearing, never ceasing to risk it all.

Tamara Ober has been a member of Zenon Dance Company since 2002 where she has worked with over 30 national and international, emerging and world-renowned choreographers, touring to New York, St. Petersburg and Budapest. She graduated from the University of MN in 2001 with a BFA in Dance, BA in Sociology and travelled the US and Canada to study the techniques of Ailey, Graham, Limon, Varone, and Contact Improvisation. Tamara has performed and taught with Sean Curran’s Dance Company at NYU Tisch School of the Arts in 2007, consulted for the Northrop Auditorium in the renovation and development of new visions and programs in 2008, and successfully created and toured her first original solo dance-theater work, Pipa, to Montreal, Winnipeg, Minneapolis and Edmonton Fringe Festivals, as well as Budapest, Hungary this past summer. She was awarded 'first-runner-up Best English Language Production' in Montreal, 5 Stars from CBC Winnipeg, and a Minneapolis Sage Award for Outstanding Performer for the work Pipa andZenon's Spring Performance.

The Price is Not Right by Carrie McIntyre
March 3, 22
An enquiring niece interviews her aunt for a history project and learns family secrets.

Rapid Slippage Along a Fault by Keira McDonald - Best in Shorts
March 3, 23
In the first minute of the first year of the 21st century a girl falls...in love. First comes the earthquake and then the declaration of war.

Keira McDonald (Creator/Performer) is a self-producing theatre artist who lives in Seattle. Her first one woman show Showerhead was seen at Mae West Fest, Odd Duck Studio, Re-Bar, Frontera Fest (Best of fest, Austin, TX) UNO SOLO festival (Victoria, BC) and Manhattan Theatre Source’s EstroGenius Festival (New York) Her second one woman show The Bridesmaid premiered at The Comedy Tree (London) and was featured at Theatre Off Jackson, CHAC and Bryant Lake Bowl (Minneapolis) It toured The Canadian Fringe Festival Circuit to sold out audiences in 2007. Her third one woman show BLAsTronaughy! premiered at The Regina International Theatre Festival and toured to Winnipeg and Saskatoon, San Francisco and Austin, TX. Her fourth solo show XXXplicit was performed at SPF #3 and is heading to Orlando in May 2010. She is the Founder and Producer/Curator of Seattle's Solo Performance Festival (SPF) at Theatre Off Jackson.

Returning The Bones by Gin Hammond
March 11, 19, 20
How do you choose between your country, your people, and yourself? This is the question Returning The Bones asks. It is based on the true story of the African American doctor, Caroline Beatrice Montier, (aka "Bebe") now 84. After being invited to finish her medical degree in Europe shortly after WWII, Bebe has to choose between staying in the South (and continuing to risk her life in the fight for Civil Rights), or escaping to Paris to live a life she's always dreamed of. Returning The Bones is a solo show with 26 characters and multiple dialects performed by Helen Hayes Award-winner, Gin Hammond. Classic storytelling combined with a fluid physical style will bring you on a journey of many miles, perspectives, and epiphanies.

Gin Hammond received her MFA from the A.R.T. at Harvard University/Moscow Art Theatre. She has performed nationally at theatres such The Guthrie, Arena Stage, The Longwharf Theatre, Seattle’s ACT, The Pasadena Playhouse, the ART, The Berkshire Theatre Festival and The Studio Theatre in Washington D.C., where she won a Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Lead Actress for her performance of The Syringa Tree. Internationally, she has performed in Russia, Germany, Ireland, Scotland and England. Ms. Hammond also received a Kathleen Cornell award, and WA state grants from Allied Arts, The Mayor’s Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs, Artist Trust, 4 Culture, as well as from the NEA. Her voice(s) can be heard of Jim French's Imagination Theatre, Super Granny, Cake Mania, Westward, and Nancy Drew video games, a wide range of industrials, audiobooks produced by Redwood and Cedar House Audio, and Halo 3 ODST. She currently resides in Seattle with her husband, where she writes, directs, teaches and performs.

The Riverboat Runs Aground: Based on a True Story by Wesley K. Andrews. - Best in Shorts March 3, 16 Wesley K. Andrews performs an excerpt from his original work, The Riverboat Runs Aground: Based on a True Story. Tonight's performance will be Chapter III: The Fairbanks High School Constitutional Crisis, a story of careless endangerment and rebellion in the context of a post-Columbine school system.

Wesley K. Andrews is a performer and playwright in Seattle, Washington. A 2004 graduate from the University of Puget Sound, Wesley has performed at On the Boards, Annex Theatre, Macha Monkey Theatre, Balagan Theatre, the Lee Center for the Arts, and other venues. Non-theatrical publications include ArtsReach Magazine and Redefine Magazine. He is employed at Kirkland Performance Center as Development and Communications Manager and Admins the Facebook group Seattle Comp Tickets in his spare time.

Samson by Billie Wildrick
March 8, 13, 18, 29
It ends with rubble. A great pile of destruction obscured by the unbreathable dust of collapse, moving like dry fog. It is over before the dust settles. We all know the end of Samson's story. But whose choices got him there? Why did the strongest man in the world lay his head in a woman's lap and allow her to begin the end of his life? Underscored by guitar and acoustic drum, and illuminated by a melodic vocal through-line, Samson's is a story of longing to tear through the pages of a life already written with humanity both given and denied by a then-silent god.

Billie Wildrick is a local singer/actor who has been described by the press as an “engaging” “super,” “awesome,” “adorable,” “sassy,” “charming,” “luminous,” “terrific,” “wildly talented” “bright-eyed and beautiful,” “sultry siren,” with a “Crayola box of skills,” “warmth,” “charm,” “effervesence and natural, unforced talents” who “sparkles,” “shines,” burns scenery “to a crisp” and “couldn’t be more appealing if she were a banana.” Her voice has been described as “lovely,” “bell-like,” “nightingale-caliber,” “crystal clear” “strong, “stunning,” “sweet,” “melodious,” “commanding” and “magnificent” full of “vivacity.” Billie was nominated for a Gregory Award for Best Actress in 2009 for her work in Sunday in the Park with George at The 5th Avenue Theatre and Dås Barbecu at ACT. She was named in The Seattle Times Footlight Awards for her performances in Wonderful Town at The 5th Avenue Theatre and Seussical! at Seattle Children’s Theatre. Billie has written and performed solo work that divorces and remarries music and theatre in places that no longer exist such as the Seattle Fringe Festival, the Liberty Deli and Thumper’s. She hopes SPF survives her efforts.


Shall I Compare Waxie To a Summer's Day by Waxie Moon -Best In Shorts

March 23


Sick by Elizabeth Kenny - Best in Shorts

March 3

SUBPRIME!: Inside the Heart of the Mortgage Meltdown by Norman Bell. March 10, 11 A fun, fast-paced roller coaster tour through the turbo-charged world of the subprime mortgage industry - a world of fast-talking loan officers, opportunistic condo flippers and hopeful first-time homeowners, all looking for their piece of the American Dream. Norman Bell is a solo performer and playwright. His original performances include SUBPRIME!, Mango, Little Hand and Think. Norman has also performed in theatre, TV and film. In theatre, he played a lead role in David Mamet’s Sexual Perversity in Chicago, and acted in Ghetto by Joshua Sorbol and The Hothouse by Harold Pinter. On TV, he was featured in the popular Spanish soap opera Cor de la Ciutat. In film, he played opposite Christian Bale in The Machinist.

The Total Package: A Journey Into Manhood by Ernie Von Schmaltz (Anna Allen)
April 1, 2, 3
Take a ride on the mustache express with this hilarious gender-bending guide to masculinity! Ernie Von Schmaltz leads this 30 minute excerpted show demonstrating the finer points of being a man. Using dance, song, film, humor and flow charts, you will experience a transformative seminar like no other.

Ernie Von Schmaltz is a ladies man. Ahead of the curve (in fact so far, he’s coming around from behind again) Ernie is a true renaissance dude. Known as The Man, The Myth, The Mustache, Ernie is a dancing, emceeing sex machine that’s been pushing the edge of Seattle’s burlesque scene since 2005. Ernie is the regular host of Seattle’s Dr. Sketchy’s anti- art school, was recently featured in burlesque films A Wink and a Smile and Waxie Moon. He has appeared many times all over the northwest and at national burlesque conventions.

The character behind the character is Anna Allen. Anna grew up in a small northern California town enjoying theatre, dance and costumed expression. In college, she minored in theatre arts and took every physical movement and acting class she could get her hands on.After relocating to Seattle in 1996, Anna sought out fringe theatre (EXITheatre) and was a founding member of a Seattle comedy improv group (Comedy Court). Post improv, she found burlesque at the Academy of Burlesque and began developing her personae. She also helped found Seattle’s award winning comedy burlesque power trio The Von Foxies in mid 2004. In 2009, The Von Foxies said goodbye and Anna is now pursuing a solo burlesque career.

Traveling Panties by Mike Harris
March 6, 10, 18, 22

An angry cross dresser tales tells of I-90, thongs and beyond!


What You are Unaware of is This by Tina Kunz Rowley - Best in Shorts
March 16, 23


Worse Places by Erin Jorgensen
March 30, 31
Music, singing and text combine in a hypnotic voyage incorporating amplified and acoustic marimba, original music, Bach, a Disney tear-jerker, and stories of childhood visions and accidental evil.

Erin Jorgensen is a musician with a day job. She dropped out of college, where she studied classical percussion and composition, to focus on playing marimba. She plays music ranging from Johnny Thunders to J.S. Bach. You can find her playing in bars, at weddings, in museums and theaters, among other places. She lives in Seattle and works at On the Boards. For more info and upcoming events, visit erinjorgensen.com

Your Own Personal Alcatraz by Suzanne Morrison
March 12, 18
Stories from growing up on an island in the Northwest and of adolescent fascination with Ted Bundy (who just so happened to be a good family friend.)

Suzanne Morrison is the author of Yoga Bitch, a memoir that will be published by Broadway Books in Spring of 2011 and internationally in Summer of 2011. Based on her long-running one-woman show of the same title, Yoga Bitch has been called “Ambitious, ballsy, and hilarious” by Seattle Weekly and “New Age Nirvana” by Time Out London. A 2009 recipient of 4Culture and Artist Trust grants for solo performance, Suzanne is developing a new show,Your Own Personal Alcatraz, about growing up on an island in the Northwest and her adolescent fascination with Ted Bundy. A blogger for the Huffington Post Books Section, you can also find Suzanne at her own blog,suzannemorrison.blogspot.com, where she writes about absolutely everything she’s reading, writing, and rehearsing. Your Own Personal Alcatraz is made possible in part due to the generous support of 4Culture and Artist Trust.


SPF #4 Calendar of Events

Our Solo Performance Festival #4 Calendar of Events:
Tickets available now through Brown Paper Tickets!

Wednesday March 3:
Best in Shorts
Above Normal Range
by Becca Davis
Daddy is Plastic by Elspeth Walker
A One Man Miss Saigon by Manuel R. Cawaling
Rapid Slippage Along a Fault by Keira McDonald
The Riverboat Runs Aground: Based on a True Story by Wesley K. Andrews
Sick
by Elizabeth Kenny


Thursday March 4:
The Dwellers by Jonah Von Spreecken
Pipa by Tamara Ober

Friday March 5:
Frontier: Valley of the Shadow by Ki Gottberg
Pipa
by Tamara Ober

Saturday March 6:
Not. Stable. At All.
by Paul Budraitis
Pipa by Tamara Ober
The Price is Not Righ
t by Carrie McIntyre
Traveling Panties
by Mike Harris

Monday March 8:
The Dwellers
by Jonah Von Spreecken
Samson by Billie Wildrick

Tuesday March 9:
Demonstrate the Place of My Abode by Lisa Koch

Wednesday March 10:
Not. Stable. At All.
By Paul Budraitis
SUBPRIME! by Norman Bell
Traveling Panties
by Mike Harris

Thursday March 11:
Returning the Bones by Gin Hammond
SUBPRIME!
by Norman Bell

Friday March 12:
Demonstrate the Place of My Abode by Lisa Koch
Kitty in The City
by Jeff Frieders
Your Own Personal Alcatraz by Suzanne Morrison

Saturday March 13:
Frontier: Valley of The Shadow
by Ki Gottberg
Samson by Billie Wildrick
and
10pm LATE NIGHT at The Canoe Social Club: Monologue Slam hosted by Kevin Kent

Tuesday March 16:
Best in Shorts
Blue's Not Black
by David Schmader
De: Colores: Flying with Color by Ben Gonio
Little Boy in Flames by Guiseppe Ribaudo
No Game by Noah Benezra
A One Man Miss Saigon by Manuel R. Cawaling
The Riverboat Runs Aground: Based on a True Story
Wesley K. Andrews
My Little Loves by Rebecca M. Davis
What You are Unaware of is This by Tina Kunz Rowley


Wednesday March 17:
Demonstrate the Place of My Abode by Lisa Koch
The Dwellers by Jonah Von Spreecken

Thursday March 18:
Samson by Billie Wildrick
Traveling Panties
by Mike Harris
Your Own Personal Alcatraz
by Suzanne Morrison

Friday March 19:
The Dwellers
by Jonah Von Spreecken
Returning the Bones
by Gin Hammond

Saturday March 20:
Kitty in the City by Jeff Freiders
Returning The Bones
by Gin Hammond

Monday March 22:
Kitty in the City by Jeff Freiders
The Price is Not Right
by Carrie McIntyre
Traveling Panties by Mike Harris

Tuesday March 23:
Best in Shorts
Black's Not Blue by David Schmader
De: Colores: Flying with Color by Ben Gonio
No Game by Noah Benezra
Rapid Slippage Along a Fault by Keira McDonald
What You are Unaware of is This by Tina Kunz Rowley
100 Years of Solitude by Connor Marx
Shall I Compare Waxie to a Summer's Day by Waxie Moon

Thursday March 25
Jake's Gift
by Julia Mackey
Gunpowder
by Jayson McDonald

Friday March 26:
Jake's Gift
by Julia Mackey
Gunpowder
by Jayson McDonald

Saturday March 27:
Jake's Gift
by Julia Mackey
Gunpowder
by Jayson McDonald
and

10pm LATE NIGHT at The Canoe Social Club: Monologue Slam hosted by Kevin Kent

Monday March 29:
The Dwellers by Jonah Von Spreecken
Samson by Billie Wildrick

Tuesday March 30:
Worse Places
by Erin Jorgensen
Demonstrate the Place of My Abode by Lisa Koch

Wednesday March 31:
Worse Places
by Erin Jorgensen
Kitty in The City
by Jeff Freiders

Thursday April 1:
Growing UP and liking it
by Jennifer Jasper
Ben DeLaCreme's Piece de Resistance: (the piece she should have resisted) now in IMAX 3D!
by Ben DeLaCreme
Ernie Von Schmaltz: The Total Package by Ernie Von Schmaltz (Anna Allen)

Friday April 2:
Growing UP and liking it
by Jennifer Jasper
Ben DeLaCreme's Piece de Resistance: (the piece she should have resisted) now in IMAX 3D!
by Ben DeLaCreme
Ernie Von Schmaltz: The Total Package
by Ernie Von Schmaltz (Anna Allen)

Saturday April 3:
Growing UP and liking it
by Jennifer Jasper
Ben DeLaCreme's Piece de Resistance: (the piece she should have resisted) now in IMAX 3D!
by Ben DeLaCreme
Ernie Von Schmaltz: The Total Package
by Ernie Von Schmaltz (Anna Allen)
***

Theatre Off Jackson ensures that a vibrant arts culture thrives in Seattle by operating a sustainable venue dedicated to performance, art and community. A 140 seat venue, Theatre Off Jackson is located at 409 7th Avenue South, just off Jackson Street in the International District. theatreoffjackson.org

Please contact Keridwyn Deller, Public Relations & Marketing Director, at (206) 412-0269 or by email at keridwyn80@gmail.com with questions or to schedule individual interviews.

Tickets at Brown Paper Tickets: http://bit.ly/spf4tix