2019 Productions | BULRUSHER 

Intiman Theatre presents

BULRUSHER By Eisa Davis
Directed by Valerie Curtis-Newton

August 20 – September 14, 2019 at Jones Playhouse, 4045 University Way NE, Seattle

Set in 1955, Bulrusher is an orphaned multi-racial girl who was found floating in a basket on the river as an infant in the town of Boonville, north of San Francisco. She is now 18 and struggling to find her place. Her gift of clairvoyance and her race have made her an outsider in this predominantly white town. Just when she thinks this small world might stifle her, a mysterious and alluring Black girl from Alabama arrives. Soon, the secrets and racial tensions that have been simmering beneath the surface of the town will be exposed, and Bulrusher will discover an entirely new place in her identity. This passionate and humorous coming of age story is filled with magic, live music and lyrical prose.

 


Finalist! 2007 Pulitzer Prize in Drama

Preview Performances

Tue, Aug 20 at 7:30pm
Wed, Aug 21 at 7:30pm

Opening Night

Thu, Aug 22 at 7:30pm

Production Run

Fri, Aug 23 at 7:30pm
Sat, Aug 24 at 7:30pm
Sun, Aug 25 at 2pm

Wed, Aug 28 at 7:30pm (Boss Womxn Night)
Thu, Aug 29 at 7:30pm
Fri, Aug 30 at 7:30pm
Sat, Aug 31 at 7:30pm
Sun, Sep 1 at 2pm (Talkback)

Wed, Sep 4 at 7:30pm (Staff & Board Alumni Night)
Thu, Sep 5 at 7:30pm
Fri, Sep 6 at 7:30pm
Sat, Sep 7 at 7:30pm
Sun, Sep 8 at 2pm (Talkback)

Tue, Sep 10 at 7:30pm (Industry Night)
Wed, Sep 11 at 7:30pm
Thu, Sep 12 at 7:30pm
Fri, Sep 13 at 7:30pm

Closing Night

Sat, Sep 14 at 7:30pm

Jones Playhouse
4045 University Way
NE, Seattle, WA 98105

Click for information on the venue and parking.

Beginning 1 hour before curtain, the box office will begin distributing 1 or 2 tickets per person on a first come, first serve basis. To receive your free tickets, show up to the theatre and check in with the box office. Note a line may form before the box office opens. Once all seats for that performance have been given away, a waitlist will be started. Intiman is setting aside a significant portion of tickets from each show for free distribution – walk up availability is guaranteed for all performances.

Advance tickets for BULRUSHER are on sale now, and are available at the link below. There are 3 ticket options for each performance date available in advance:

– SUBSIDIZED GENERAL ADMISSION TICKET: This is a low cost ticket, available to anyone with need. These tickets range from $15-$25, depending on the date. Please consider paying full price if your means allow.

– FULL PRICE GENERAL ADMISSION TICKET: This is the regular cost of admission for our professional production, with prices ranging from $35-$50, depending on the date. Your purchase allows us to pay all of the artists, actors and administrators working on the show. Thank you for supporting Intiman with your purchase of a full price ticket!

– DONOR RESERVED TICKET: These tickets include a $100 tax-deductible donation to Intiman, and help us offer subsidized ticket options to anyone with need, as well as free walk-up tickets on the day of the show. As a thank you for supporting access to the arts, we will reserve a seat for you in a prime location, and your first drink is on us. Thank you for your generosity!

All tickets are good until 5mins before curtain. If you have not arrived to the theatre and checked in with an usher to claim your seat(s) at least 5mins before curtain, your seats may be distributed to other audience members if there is a waitlist, with no refund. Every effort will be made to exchange your tickets to another show, but that may not be possible pending scheduling and ticket availability. 

Eisa Davis she/her (Playwright) is an award-winning actor, writer, and singer-songwriter working on stage and screen. She was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Drama for her play Bulrusher, and wrote and starred in Angela’s Mixtape, named a best of the year by The New Yorker. Other plays include Ramp (Ruby Prize winner), The History of Light (Barrymore nomination), Paper Armor, Umkovu, Six Minutes, Warriors Don’t Cry, Mushroom, and the collaborations Active Ingredients and Hip Hop Anansi. Eisa created the voiceover text for Cirque du Soleil’s first ice show, Crystal, which is currently on tour. Works in progress include Flowers are Sleeping, an art installation music performance piece, and a musical version of Devil In A Blue Dress. Eisa writes for the Netflix series She’s Gotta Have It.  

Eisa was awarded the prestigious Herb Alpert Award in Theatre, and was a resident playwright at New Dramatists, where she won the Helen Merrill Award and the Whitfield Cook Award, among others. She has received fellowships from Sundance/UCross, Yaddo, the MacDowell Colony, Cave Canem, Williams College, and the Doris Duke, Van Lier and Mellon Foundations.

As an actor, she is an Obie Award winner for Sustained Excellence in Performance. Eisa recently concluded a celebrated run in Kings at the Public (Drama League nomination), was in the 2017 Shakespeare in the Park production of Julius Caesar, and appeared in Preludes by Dave Malloy, directed by Rachel Chavkin, for which she received her second Lucille Lortel nomination. Other recent theatre work includes The Cradle Will Rock directed by Sam GoldLuck of the Irish (Lucille Lortel and AUDELCO nominations), the world premieres of This and The Call, the first revival of The Piano Lesson at Yale Rep (also composer and music director), and the acclaimed Broadway rock musical Passing Strange, captured on film by Spike Lee. Current television work includes God Friended Me (CBS), Rise (NBC), Condi Rice on The Looming Tower (Hulu)and Succession (HBO). Eisa played Cynthia Driscoll on House of Cards, was Bubbles’ sister on The Wireand Alexandra on BlindspotShe has guest starred on Falling Water, The Family, Elementary, Madam Secretary, American Odyssey, Gotham, The Blacklist, The Good Wife, Mercyand Damages, and recurred on Soul Food, Smash and Hart of Dixie. Film work includes After The Wedding(Sundance 2019), First Match, Free Angela, Welcome to the Rileys (opposite James Gandolfini), In The Family, Robot Stories, The Architect, Confess, Happenstance, Pretty Bird, Apparition of the Eternal Church, Brass Tacks, The Letter and The Volunteer.

As a singer-songwriter, music from her albums Something Else and Tinctures are available through iTunes and Soundcloud. Selections from Tinctures were featured on the Showtime series Soul Food. Eisa sings her original music at venues including Joe’s Pub, BAMCafé, Bard Spiegeltent, Mass MoCA, the Whitney Museum, Rockwood, Le Poisson Rouge, and the Apollo. She is a Grace singing in Carrie Mae Weems’ Grace Notes (Spoleto Festival, Yale Rep, the Kennedy Center).

Eisa is a member of The Actors Studio, a Usual Suspect at New York Theater Workshop, and was an artist-in-residence at Symphony Space. A graduate of The New School and Harvard, she lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Valerie Curtis-Newton (Director) is currently the Head of Performance – Directing at the University of Washington School of Drama. She also serves as the Founding Artistic Director for The Hansberry Project, a professional African American theatre lab. Valerie has worked with theatre’s across the country including: The Guthrie Theatre, Playmakers Repertory Comany, Actors’ Theatre of Louisville, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Intiman Theatre, Seattle Children’s Theatre, The Mark Taper Forum, New York Theatre Workshop, Tacoma Actors’ Guild, Southern Repertory Theatre, Capitol Repertory Theatre among others. 

Awards:  2016: Seattle Times Footlight Award (Best in Show) 2014: Stranger Genius Awards in Performance and the Crosscut Courage Award for Culture; 2012: Gypsy Award for Excellence in Direction 2001: Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation’s (SDCF) Gielgud Directing Fellowship 1997-1999: NEA/TCG Career Development Fellowship  for Directors

Ayo Tushinde, she/her (Bulrusher) Bulrusher is Ayo’s Intiman debut. She most recently appeared as Drea in The Call (Seattle Public Theatre), Ren in Sheathed (Macha Theatre Works), and as Diana in All’s Well That Ends Well (Seattle Shakespeare Company). She is grateful to have the ability to share this gift of a story that champions the importance of representation on stage and in life. Ayo dedicates a special thank you to all of the professors who taught her to be forever wary of their evaluation of her worth, to the local theatres that have made her aware of the power of her voice, and to her inner circle of artistic friends who constantly inspire her. 

 

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Allyson Lee Brown, she/her (Vera)

Allyson is pleased to be making her Intiman debut in Bulrusher. She is a native of New Orleans, LA, and recently received her MFA in Acting from the UW School of Drama. She is also a proud graduate of the illustrious Spelman College where she received her Bachelor of Arts in Drama. Her credits include Citizen: An American Lyric (Sound Theatre), Skeleton Crew (ArtsWest Playhouse), Milk Like Sugar (ArtsWest Playhouse), The Bluest Eye (Le Petit Theatre), and Trojan Women: A Love Story, Angels in America: Perestroika, Fefu and Her Friends and Rutherford and Son, all at UW School of Drama. In addition to her passion for acting, Allyson enjoys mentoring, teaching and encouraging youth to tap into their greatness. She would like to thank her friends and family for their constant love and support, and she is so grateful to be a part of this amazing cast!

 

 

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Adam Fontana, he/him (Boy)

Adam is very happy to be making his debut with Intiman, helping tell such a poignant story. NY credits: Civil War (Off B’way and Tour); Chance Wayne in Sweet Bird of Youth and Tulsa in Gypsy (Gallery Players); Henry in Next to Normal (Hangar Theatre). Colorado credits: Elf: The Musical (Arvada Center); Lysander in A Midsummer Nights Dream, Bert in Mary Poppins, Adam in The Shape of Things, Dick in Dames at Sea and Jinx in Forever Plaid (Merely Players). Thank you Kaytlin, Val, Phillip and Jennifer for inviting me to play. And thank you, Mrs. F, for being the partner you are.

 

 

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Reginald André Jackson, he/him (Logger)

Mr. Jackson is a local actor/playwright, and a frequent collaborator of director Valerie Curtis-

Newton. In July, through Intiman, he had the great fortune of being a recipient of the esteemed Lunt-Fontanne fellowship. Favorite Intiman appearances include Flip in Stick Fly, and Chris Keller in All My Sons. He recently played Frederick Douglas in West of Lenin’s The Agitators. An ACT core company member, Jackson has also been seen at Seattle Repertory Theatre, Arena Stage (DC), Artist’s Repertory Theatre (Portland), The Shakespeare Theatre (DC), Village, Book-It, Seattle Shakespeare Company, Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival, and Arts West, among others. Upcoming productions include Black Beauty at Seattle Children’s Theatre (September), and a turn as Bob Cratchit in A Christmas Carol at ACT. As a playwright, he is the recipient of the American Alliance of Theatre & Education’s Distinguished Play Award for his adaptation of Christopher Paul Curtis’ novel Bud, Not Buddy.

 

 

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Charles Leggett, he/him (Schoolch)

At Intiman: Arnold, Hir; James T., Barbecue; Franklin, John Baxter Is a Switch Hitter; Roy Cohn, Angels in America; Phlaccidos, Lysistrata; Narrator, Stu for Silverton; Doctor/Cop/Musician, The Streetcar Named Desire. Charles is a three-time nominee (Ray, Yankee Tavern, ACT; Lennie, Of Mice and Men, Seattle Rep) and recipient (Shylock, The Merchant of Venice, Seattle Shakespeare Company) of the Theatre Puget Sound “Gregory” Award for Outstanding Actor, and has twice been nominated for the Stranger Genius Award.  In and around Seattle, he has also worked at Seattle Children’s Theatre, Book-It, The Village Theatre, 5th Avenue Theatre Company, many smaller local companies, and regionally at Portland Center Stage and Portland Playhouse.  His voice work includes over fifteen audio books (mostly for Seattle’s Cedar House Audio) and several gratuitously violent video games, and his film work includes Lynn Shelton’s Outside In (2018), with Edie Falco, Jay Duplass, and Kaitlyn Dever.  

 

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Christine Pilar, she/her (Madame)

Intiman debut. Before taking a sabbatical from acting, Christine, an enrolled member of the Acoma de Pueblo tribe, co-founded Red Eagle Soaring theater group for Native youth. She has had the pleasure of performing at the Seattle Children’s Theater, Group Theater, and the Seattle Rep to name a few. Most recently, she has spent her creative energy melting peoples faces off with her brass band, Artesian Rumble Arkestra in Olympia and diving into stand-up. Christine would like to raise her hands to her mother and daughter, Kalea, for their undying love and support, and also to her friend Marsha for letting her stay in her spare room, saving her thousands of commuter miles – Dáwáa-é (thank you). Her performance is dedicated to her father who recently passed away – “My parents never missed one of my shows. So I know dad’s here watching over us, he may be ‘resting his eyes’ as he always put it, but he’s here.” 

Valerie Curtis-Newton – Director

Jennifer Zeyl (she/they) – Scenic Designer

Ricky German (he/him) – Costume Designer

Robert J. Aguilar(he/him) – Lighting Designer

Matt Starritt (he/him) – Sound Designer

Cathy Fazio (she/her) – Stage Manager

Amanda Sheller (she/her) – Assistant Stage Manager

Devin Petersen (he/him) – Assistant Scenic Designer

Ryan Spickard (he/him) – Fight Director

Finalist! 2007 Pulitzer Prize in Drama

“Davis explores her themes in unexpected and evocative ways…The still waters of Bulrusher turn out to run pretty deep.” – San Francisco Chronicle