Letter from Jennifer Zeyl

#SharetheLove April 7-24

Artistic Director Jennifer Zeyl kicks off Intiman’s #SharetheLove campaign with a letter to the community. Read JZ’s vision for what comes next at Intiman, reflections on 2020, and why your support is so vital at this stage in our reopening.

The #SharetheLove campaign runs April 7th – 24th and is raising $100,000 in support of:

  • Establishing our new partnership with Seattle Central College (SCC) as the professional theatre-in-residence
  • Moving our operations to Capitol Hill 
  • Launching our new Associate of Arts degree, emphasis in Technical Theatre for Social Justice at SCC
  • Continuing our free education programs online, including STARFISH Project and South End Stories
  • Resuming production this fall at the Erickson Theatre and Broadway Performance Hall

Dear Inti-fam,

Hop in the way-back machine with me.   

In fall of 2019, our decision to furlough production for all of 2020 was not an easy one to make. What is a theatre company when we aren’t making theatre?  

As 2020 revealed its challenges, every arts organization in the world was suddenly confronted by this same question. By the time COVID hit, Intiman had been working for 6 months evolving toward the future: developing our board, investing in our education programs, engaging in a community-led strategic planning process, and building a significant partnership with Seattle Central College (SCC). The need for equity and justice in our sector is not new nor was it a new awareness at Intiman.    

Lack of representation onstage (actors, directors, writers) has begun to be addressed more widely on Seattle stages. But backstage? We have barely started. In 2017, I developed Intiman’s STARFISH Project with Sawhorse Revolution – a free, after-school technical theatre training program at high schools in the South End. The next step in cultivating the diverse backstage workforce of tomorrow is our new Associate of Arts degree in Technical Theatre for Social Justice – and there is support from the union and mounting excitement at other theaters to hire these AA graduates!  

We are overdue for bold action in the arts to address structural inequity. This is a first of its kind partnership, and affordable access to this training is almost non-existent. Looking back at a challenging year, I am certain that the work we put in was worth it. We developed curriculum in collaboration with multiple SCC departments, weaving together a rich and well rounded experience for our future students. An unprecedented national roster of guest speakers has been drawn together. We cultivated relationships with our new neighboring organizations and businesses in the Capitol Hill area. We have an updated mission, a new Managing Director, and our board of directors has been completely transformed. 

All of this planning and work needs your support. We can’t afford to have a “wait and see” mentality when it comes to signing on. Structural change is never easy – it takes all of us, together, saying: “Yes, this is possible.” National eyes are on us. The great work is here, now.  

-XOjz
Jennifer Zeyl, Artistic Director

Join in today.

Writing Fantasy Worlds

Writing Fantasy Worlds & Creating the Black Superhero

A #SharetheLove Panel Conversation with Inda Craig-Galván, Donte Felder, and hosted by Lisa Marie Rollins

Intiman Theatre invites you to join us for a #SharetheLove campaign event: Writing Fantasy Worlds & Creating the Black Superhero. We will be joined by playwright Inda Craig-Galván, comic book aficionado Donte Felder, and Intiman Visiting Artistic Associate Lisa Marie Rollins (moderator). Our conversation will explore historic Black superheroes and fantasy worlds / dream spaces as places to imagine ourselves in and outside our current lived experiences, and as a critical tool for liberation. How can we create stories that reimagine Black realities while pushing against traditional tropes? The conversation will touch on various comic book and superhero narratives, as well as Inda’s play “Black Super Hero Magic Mama.”

Wednesday, April 21st 2021, 5pm-6pm pacific.

Tickets are Free for Everyone. Reserve yours today to receive the Zoom link to join. Donations accepted with thanks, and will go towards our #SharetheLove campaign.

This event will be live captioned. Open to all ages.

Watch ON DEMAND

About #SharetheLove

In support of our reopening, Intiman invites you to #SharetheLove as we raise $100,000+ in 18 days from April 7-24, 2021!

#SharetheLove to support:

  • Establishing our new partnership with Seattle Central College (SCC) as the professional theatre-in-residence
  • Moving our operations to Capitol Hill 
  • Launching our new Associate of Arts degree, emphasis in Technical Theatre for Social Justice at SCC
  • Continuing our free education programs online, including STARFISH Project and South End Stories
  • Resuming production this fall at the Erickson Theatre and Broadway Performance Hall

Meet the Panelists

Inda Craig-Galván

Inda (she/her) is happy to be back at Intiman, where she developed Black Super Hero Magic Mama in the 2016 Intiman Emerging Artist Program cohort. Her work has been developed/produced at Eugene O’Neill National Playwrights Conference, Geffen Playhouse, Playwrights’ Arena, Ojai Playwrights Conference, Kitchen Dog Theatre, and others.  Honors: Kesselring Prize, Jeffry Melnick New Playwright Award, Blue Ink Playwriting Prize, Jane Chambers Student Award for Feminist Playwriting, Stage Raw Best Playwright Award, Kilroys List, and Steppenwolf Theatre’s The Mix. MFA in Theatre, University of Southern California.

Donte Felder

Donte is the founder and Executive Director at South End Stories (one of Intiman’s new community partners) where they focus on “Trauma-Informed Arts Practice: Healing Through History and Creativity”. Donte is a former Seattle Public Schools educator and has been the recipient of WEA’s Humanitarian Award as well as Washington’s Golden Apple Award. Donte comes from a family of seasoned educators and community leaders focused on pursuing social justice by developing anti-racist and anti-oppression practices in schools and communities. Learn more by visiting www.southendstories-artsed.com

Lisa Marie Rollins

Lisa Marie (she/her) is a freelance director, writer and new play developer.  She is a Sundance Institute Theatre Lab Fellow (Directing) and an Associate Member of Stage Directors and Choreographers. Regional directing /dramaturg work include Hedgebrook Women’s Play Festival, Crowded Fire Theater, American Conservatory Theatre, Playwrights Foundation, TheatreFirst, Berkeley Repertory Theater, Shotgun Players, Custom Made Theatre, Magic Theatre, San Francisco Playhouse, TheaterWorks (CO). She has been a writing fellow with Hedgebrook, Djerassi, SF Writers Grotto, CALLALOO London, VONA, Just Theater Play Lab and Joshua Tree Highlands Artist Residency. She is currently the Visiting Artistic Associate at Intiman Theater in Seattle, a Community Arts Panelist for Zellerbach Family Foundation, and a Resident Artist with Crowded Fire Theater in San Francisco.  

New Play Development as a Tool for Community Building

New Play Development as a Tool for Community Building

A #SharetheLove Panel Conversation with Sara Porkalob and Andrew Russell, hosted by Justin Huertas

Intiman Theatre invites you to join us for a #SharetheLove campaign event: a panel conversation about developing and sharing new plays with Sara Porkalob and Andrew Russell, hosted by Justin Huertas. The panelists will discuss the power of storytelling for building community and advancing social change, while reflecting on Sara’s journey with DRAGON CYCLE and sharing exciting updates about the project. Intiman produced DRAGON LADY, the first play of the DRAGON CYCLE, in 2017. The event will feature a sneak peek performance from Sara Porkalob’s DRAGON BABY.

Wednesday, April 14th 2021, 5pm-6pm pacific.

Tickets are Free for Everyone. Reserve yours today to receive the Zoom link to join. Donations accepted with thanks, and will go towards our #SharetheLove campaign.

This event will be live captioned. Open to all ages.

Watch ON DEMAND

About #SharetheLove

In support of our reopening, Intiman invites you to #SharetheLove as we raise $100,000+ in 18 days from April 7-24, 2021!

#SharetheLove to support:

  • Establishing our new partnership with Seattle Central College (SCC) as the professional theatre-in-residence
  • Moving our operations to Capitol Hill 
  • Launching our new Associate of Arts degree, emphasis in Technical Theatre for Social Justice at SCC
  • Continuing our free education programs online, including STARFISH Project and South End Stories
  • Resuming production this fall at the Erickson Theatre and Broadway Performance Hall

Meet the Panelists

Sara Porkalob

Sara (she/her) is a theatre maker, cultural worker, and creator of the DRAGON CYCLE. She’s based in Seattle but soon will be working all over the nation. She was Intiman’s 2017 Co-Curator and Emerging Artist Program Director. Intiman produced DRAGON LADY, the first play of the DRAGON CYCLE. DRAGON LADY is the recipient of three 2018 Gregory Awards for: Outstanding Sound/Music Design, Outstanding Actress in a Musical, and Outstanding Musical Production. The second in the cycle, Dragon Mama, premiered at American Repertory Theatre (ART) and won Best Original Script and Best Solo Performance for the 2019 Elliot Norton Awards. ART has commissioned the third in the cycle, Dragon Baby; it will premier on their stage in the near future. She will be making her Broadway debut in 2021 playing Edward Rutledge in the official revival of the musical 1776. Website: www.saraporkalob. Social @sporkalob

Photo by Justin Huertas.

Andrew Russell

Andrew is the former Producing Artistic Director of Intiman Theatre where he directed Hedda Gabler, Stu for Silverton, Angels in America: Parts 1 and 2, Dragon Lady and co-wrote John Baxter Is A Switch Hitter. His work has been featured at The Oregon Shakespeare Festival, American Repertory Theatre, La Jolla Playhouse, The Old Globe, The Public Theatre, The 5th Avenue Theatre, On The Boards, Kansas City Repertory Theatre, Seattle Repertory Theatre, and more. In addition to developing The Dragon Cycle with Sara Porkalob he’s currently developing projects for stage, TV, and film that include: the coming-to-age journey of New Orleans bounce artist Big Freedia, the fabulous and tragic diva-turned-detective tale of Dorothy Kilgallen, and the powerful story of America’s first trans mayor in Silverton, Oregon. He holds a BFA from Carnegie Mellon.

Justin Huertas

Justin (he/him) is a Seattle-based award-winning playwright, composer-lyricist, actor, and musician who last appeared with Intiman in Caught. Justin is a Filipino-American artist-activist committed to creating original hero stories that center Black, Brown, and Queer joy, empowerment, and love. His first original musical Lizard Boy world-premiered at Seattle Rep, toured to San Diego’s Diversionary Theatre, presented at NAMT’s Festival of New Musicals, and returns to the stage this fall at TheatreWorks Silicon Valley. Justin also wrote The Last World Octopus Wrestling Champion and A Very Merry Kraken Tea Party (both co-composed with Steven Tran) for ArtsWest Playhouse & Gallery and Lydia & the Troll (co-created by Ameenah Kaplan) for Seattle Rep. He is composer-lyricist for Book-It Repertory Theatre’s adaptation of Howl’s Moving Castle and The Lamplighter (co-written with Kirsten “Kiki” deLohr Helland and Sara Porkalob). He is currently under commission at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.

Building Back Bolder – A #SharetheLove Event

Building Back Bolder

Creating an Equitable Arts Recovery
A #SharetheLove Panel Conversation with Margie Johnson Reese and Randy Engstrom, hosted by Marcie Sillman

Intiman Theatre invites you to join us for a #SharetheLove panel conversation event: Building Back Bolder. We will be joined by national arts leader Margie Johnson Reese, recently departed Director of Seattle Office of Arts & Culture Randy Engstrom, and our host will be veteran art’s journalist Marcie Sillman. The panelists will discuss the current state of the arts and share their assessments and their hopes for the sector as a whole. How can we build back with the lessons we have learned to create a more inclusive cultural sector?

Wednesday, April 7th 2021, 5pm-6pm pacific.

Tickets are Free for Everyone. Reserve yours today to receive the Zoom link to join. Donations accepted with thanks, and will go towards our #SharetheLove campaign.

This event will be captioned. Open to all ages.

Watch ON DEMAND on the Seattle Channel

About #SharetheLove

In support of our reopening, Intiman invites you to #SharetheLove as we raise $100,000+ in 18 days from April 7-24, 2021!

#SharetheLove to support:

  • Establishing our new partnership with Seattle Central College (SCC) as the professional theatre-in-residence
  • Moving our operations to Capitol Hill 
  • Launching our new Associate of Arts degree, emphasis in Technical Theatre for Social Justice at SCC
  • Continuing our free education programs online, including STARFISH Project and South End Stories
  • Resuming production this fall at the Erickson Theatre and Broadway Performance Hall

Meet the Panelists

Margie Johnson Reese

Margie has a thirty-year portfolio as an arts advocate and arts management professional. She is an advisor to the International Council of African Museums based in Nairobi, Kenya. She is a Fellow at the Salzburg Global Institute in Salzburg, Austria and a long-time board member of Americans for the Arts. Margie served a six year tenure as Director of the Office of Cultural Affairs for the City of Dallas. After her time in Dallas, she relocated to Los Angeles to serve as the General Manager for the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs. She held that position under three Mayoral administrations. During her time in LA she developed Music LA!, which provides quality music instruction to young people throughout the city.
Margie’s expertise as a grantmaker was tapped by the Ford Foundation to advance cultural projects in West Africa. Based in Lagos, Nigeria and serving 14 West African countries, her work centered on cultural policy development and conservation of West Africa’s tangible and intangible cultural heritage. Her leadership led to the creation of an unprecedented collaboration between the British Museum and Nigeria’s National Commission for Museums and Monuments. The partnership established an initiative to strengthen technical conservation skills of Nigerian museum professionals, and contextualized the pre-museum existence of West African objects held in the collections of the British Museum. She was the driving force that enabled the scholarly work of the late Nigerian historian Dr. Ekpo Eyo’s Masterpieces of Nigerian Art, published in 2008. Through her vision and commitment to restoring dignity to West African antiquities, she became known as the “mother of the Lagos Museum.”
Margie is a faculty member for leadership programs organized by the National Guild for Community Arts Education and the Western States Arts Federation. In addition, she is an adjunct professor at the University of North Texas and at Goucher College in their graduate schools of arts administration.

Randy Engstrom

Randy (he/him) has been a passionate advocate and organizer of cultural and community development for over 15 years.  He is currently an Adjunct Faculty at the Seattle University Arts Leadership Program and an independent consultant focused on cultural policy, organizational development and racial equity. Most recently he served as Director of the Office of Arts and Culture for the City of Seattle from 2012 to 2020 where he  expanded their investments in granting programs and Public Art, while establishing new programs and policies in arts education, cultural space affordability, and racial equity. Previously he served as the Founding Director of the Youngstown Cultural Arts Center, a multimedia/multidisciplinary community space that offers youth and community member’s access to arts, technology, and cultural resources (www.youngstownarts.org).. In 2009 Randy received the Emerging Leader Award from Americans for the Arts and was one of Puget Sound Business Journal’s 40 Under 40.

Marcie Sillman

Marcie (she/her) is a long-time friend of Intiman. In her many years as KUOW public radio’s Senior Arts and Culture Reporter, Marcie covered Intiman through its artistic and institutional evolution, filing stories about these transformations both locally and for NPR. Marcie continues to be an ardent supporter of both Intiman’s mission and its leaders and looks forward to chronicling the stories that unfold in the future.

Photo by Megan Farmer for KUOW Public Radio.

STARFISH Project Home Kits

STARFISH Project Home Kit Unboxing

During COVID, Intiman’s STARFISH Project is supporting hands-on student learning with mailed Home Kits. STARFISH student Naj Ali (she/her) shares her unboxing experience! The students are working remotely to create an original hip hop theatre piece inspired by the works of James Baldwin, and they will share their work with the public this May! 

Home Kit Contents

  • 1) Carrying bag for supplies
  • 2) Artagain Drawing Paper
  • 3) Mix Media Sketchbook
  • 4) White Bristol Paper & Black Art Paper
  • 5) Colored Pencils
  • 6) Micron Pens 01, 03, 05
  • 7) Mechanical Pencils
  • 8) Dual Brush Grayscale Markers
  • 9) Water Brush
  • 10) Tacky Glue
  • 11) Glue Stick
  • 12) 12’ Measuring Tape
  • 13) Craft Scissors
  • 14) Scale Ruler
  • 15) Standard Ruler
  • 16) Felt Sheets
  • 17) Pearlized Pins
  • 18) Washable Marker
  • 19) Assorted Sewing Needles
  • 20) Pin Tomato
  • 21) Thread
  • 22) 2-hole & 4-hole Buttons
  • 23) Clothing Snaps
  • 24) Thread Snips
  • 25) Needle Threader
  • 26) Fabric Shears
  • 27) First Aid Kit
  • 28) Stage Model Box
  • 29) Model Figures
  • 30) STARFISH Notebook
  • 31) Backstage Handbook
  • 32) MagLite & Pouch
  • 33) 32Gb USB Drive
  • 34) USB Microphone
  • 35) Headphones
  • 36) LED Touch Screen Display
  • 37) CanaKit Raspberry Pi4
    • Computer Chip
    • Mouse
    • Keypad

 

Not Pictured:

  • ROSCO Lighting Gel Swatchbook
  • Fabric Swatch Book
  • Various Cables
  • Pencil Sharpener

Representation in Puppetry

Representation in Puppetry

Bringing Inclusivity into Child Education & Entertainment
A Panel Conversation with Donte Felder, Amy Escobar, and Bayje Felder

Intiman Theatre and South End Stories invite you to join us for a conversation about the power of puppetry to create inclusive learning environments and spark social change. The panelists will share personal memories from their childhood experiences with puppets and the media, and explore questions related to inclusion in puppetry, both in design and behind the scenes. This event will feature a viewing of the South End Stories original web series “Sunnyside Up,” and a selection of Amy Escobar’s puppetry work.

Tuesday, March 16th 2021, 5pm-6pm pacific.

Tickets are Free for Everyone. Reserve yours today to receive the Zoom link to join.

This event will be captioned. Open to all ages.

ON DEMAND viewing is not available for this event

Meet the Panelists

Donte Felder

Donte is the founder and Executive Director at South End Stories (one of Intiman’s new community partners) where they focus on “Trauma-Informed Arts Practice: Healing Through History and Creativity”. Donte is a former Seattle Public Schools educator and has been the recipient of WEA’s Humanitarian Award as well as Washington’s Golden Apple Award. Donte comes from a family of seasoned educators and community leaders focused on pursuing social justice by developing anti-racist and anti-oppression practices in schools and communities.  More information about Donte and South End Stories can be found HERE.

Amy Escobar

Amy (she/her) is a writer, performer, and producer who weaves communal spells with practical magic. Her work is influenced by her background as a professional puppeteer trained in a tabletop modification of the Japanese form, Bunraku, as well as object manipulation, rod, hand, and shadow puppetry. She is the recipient of a 2018 GAP Award from Artist Trust, a 2019 CityArtists Award from the Seattle Office of Arts & Culture, and 2018 4Culture Art Projects Grant for a commission with the 14/48 Projects as a part of their Parks Program which creates free summer theater for families in King County. Her first play Scary Mary and the Nightmares Nine (Annex Theater) was a 2017 Gregory Award nominee for Outstanding New Play and was published by Mneme Press. For more about Amy and her work, visit amyescobar.com

Bayje Felder

Bayje has been acting since the age of 5. She has starred in productions through Stone Soup Theater, Stage Struck, Columbia City Youth Theater Group, Orca K-8 Drama Program, and South End Stories. Some of Bayje’s favorite roles were as Charlie, in an Orca Drama reboot, Lavendar in Matilda the Musical, and as Hamilton in the Stage Struck Summer Program. Bayje is 13, enjoys soccer, basketball, baking, singing, hanging with her best friends, and playing with her pets Tyson the hedgehog and Kairo the Akita. Bayje’s favorite mottos are “Be yourself because everyone else is taken,” and “Live everyday like it’s your last.”

Black History Month conversation

Black Theatre Beyond the Politics of Representation

A Black History Month conversation
with Stacie McCormick, PhD, & Wind Dell Woods, MFA/PhD, hosted by Jasmine Jamillah Mahmoud, PhD

What are the tensions embedded in the politics of representation for Black theatre artists? How can Black theatre become a liberatory space that pierces the veneer of how blackness gets to be represented on stage? Intiman Theatre presents a virtual conversation that centers these questions alongside the work of Stacie McCormick, author of the 2019 book Staging Black Fugitivity, and Wind Dell Woods, playwright of Aaliyah in Underland. Open to all.

Tuesday, February 23rd 2021, 5pm-6pm pacific.

Tickets are Free for Everyone. Reserve yours today to receive the Zoom link to join.

Watch ON DEMAND

Meet the Panelists:

Stacie McCormick, PhD

Stacie is an Associate Professor of English, Comparative Race and Ethnic Studies and Women and Gender Studies at Texas Christian University. She is the author of Staging Black Fugitivity (Ohio State University Press 2019) which examines how contemporary Black drama represents and engages with slavery. In addition to her work in Black drama and performance, she researches and writes on corporeality, visuality, and life-writing in Black women’s expressive culture. She recently edited the special issue “Toni Morrison and Adaptation” for College Literature and she is developing a manuscript in process entitled, Notes on Creating Livable Futures: Black Motherhood, Medical Inhumanity and Reimagining Care which takes up Black women’s critical engagement (via text and performance) with obstetric racism and the medical industrial complex.

Wind Dell Woods, MFA/PhD

Wind is a playwright, scholar, and educator. As a theatre artist, his work explores the topics of race, gender, identity, community, and memory. His ten-minute play, The Black & White Minstrel Show, has been produced in Chicago, San Diego, Boston, Los Angeles, and New York City. His full-length plays include Jonny May’s Soul Kitchen, Skylark Dreams, A Bronzian Tale, Harold and I, and Aaliyah in Underland. Woods’ research interests are in the fields of Hip Hop Theatre, Hip Hop aesthetics, narratology, blackness and performance, as well as the themes of death and rebirth, identity, gender, and slang. Currently, he is an Assistant Professor of Theatre Arts at the University of Puget Sound. ​

Jasmine Jamillah Mahmoud, PhD

Jasmine is Assistant Professor in Performing Arts & Arts Leadership at Seattle University. She is a performance historian, urban ethnographer, and curator whose work engages contemporary artistic practices, arts/cultural policy, black aesthetics, embodiment, and spatial racism. She is the Board Chair at Intiman Theatre, a board member at On the Boards, and a Washington State Arts Commissioner. Her research examines how artistic practice, race, and policy influence urban geographies and processes of neighborhood change such as displacement, dispossession, and gentrification, as well as models for equitable neighborhood practices and anti-racist, decolonial urbanism. Her writing has been published in Modern Drama, Performance Research, TDR: The Drama Review, and Women & Performance. Invested in public scholarship and art criticism, she has written for Canadian Art, The Common Reader, Howlround, Hyperallergic, the South Seattle Emerald, and the Urban Cultural Studies Blog, where she is an Assistant Editor. In 2009, she co-founded and edited The Arts Politic, a magazine dedicated to solving problems at the intersection of arts and politics. She recently curated, Abstractions of Black Citizenship: African American Art from Saint Louis, an exhibition and series of public programming that transitioned to virtual engagement amidst Covid-19.  In 2019, students in her “Public Policy and Advocacy in the Arts” course (Seattle University) built the Seattle Arts Voter Guide, engaging Seattle City Council and School Board Candidates on their arts platforms.

Associate of Arts Degree – Learn more

Intiman Theatre is launching an Associate of Arts degree, emphasis in Technical Theatre for Social Justice with Seattle Central College! Learn more about this new 2-year program as Jennifer Zeyl (Artistic Director) and Dr. Crystal Yingling (Education Director) share all of the exciting details. The program kicks off in the fall of 2021 at Seattle Central College.

 

LEARN MORE

Amy Zimerman is new Managing Director

Intiman welcomes Amy Zimerman as new Managing Director

Seasoned nonprofit executive and trusted advisor to nonprofit boards, Amy Zimerman, has joined Intiman Theatre as the new Managing Director. She will lead the organization alongside Artistic Director, Jennifer Zeyl, and Board Chair, Jasmine Mahmoud.  

“I am delighted to have the opportunity to co-lead this distinguished theatre,” says Zimerman. “This is an exciting time as we build on our tremendous momentum to re-open the theatre and continue developing and nurturing innovative programs and partnerships.”

Amy is a CPA and former auditor specializing in nonprofit organizations with a deep passion for education and the live arts. She holds Master’s degrees in Nonprofit Leadership from Seattle University and in International Relations from the University of Cambridge, and she holds an MBA from the Madrid Business School. She is the Lead Instructor for the Nonprofit Management Certificate Program at the University of Washington and is a former faculty member in the Master of Nonprofit Leadership Program at Seattle University. Amy is a Board Member of the Washington Women’s Foundation and Vice President of the Cedarmere Foundation Board of Trustees. Most recently, she served as the Interim Executive Director of The Community School of West Seattle.

After a robust search and interview process that included public town halls, the Intiman board of trustees is thrilled to begin working with Amy as she guides the move to Capitol Hill and prepares the theatre to resume production in the fall. 

“When finalizing the hiring decision, our board was drawn to Amy’s strong financial management and nonprofit leadership background and her broad education experience. We felt she will best complement our team, bringing new skills to the table that will help Intiman reach the next stage,” says Board Chair, Jasmine Mahmoud.

Amy took over this role from Interim Managing Director, Josef Krebs, of arts consulting firm Scandiuzzi Krebs, who served in this capacity for 14 months. During that time, the company focused on strategic planning for the future and board growth. After a year of preparation, the company is proud to welcome the next full-time leader in this role.

Intiman recently announced a partnership with Seattle Central College that will include a home for the theatre’s operations and productions at the Broadway Performance Hall and Erickson Theatre, as well as launch a new Associate of Arts Degree emphasis in Technical Theatre for Social Justice. The theatre plans to resume production at their new location in November, 2021, and will make program announcements in early summer.

A Message from Amy

Dear Inti-fam,  

This role fulfills a longtime dream for me: it combines my career experience in nonprofit and financial management with the theatre! After first moving to Seattle, I saw To Kill a Mockingbird at Intiman. For 14 years, I have loved Intiman from afar and am now delighted to have the opportunity to co-lead this distinguished theatre.

As with most of life right now, theatre is in the midst of a transformative change. I will be partnering with the board and staff to build systems, spaces and operations that enable justice, equity, diversity, inclusion and access to thrive at Intiman. As the chief administrator, I uniquely understand the power that policies, procedures and practices have in advancing the anti-racist future that we know is possible.

There is tremendous momentum surrounding our move to Capitol Hill and the launch of the Associate of Arts emphasis in Technical Theatre for Social Justice program at Seattle Central College. Intiman is elevating educational programming as part of our new strategic plan – a move that aligns closely with my personal values, having been a champion of education throughout my nonprofit career.

I am relentlessly optimistic about the future of Intiman. I intend to work alongside and build meaningful relationships with you – our Seattle-area communities and institutions. I can’t wait to meet you, and someday soon, when it is safe again, see you in the lobby before a show.

Warmly,
Amy

Meet Amy

Join us for a community Town Hall with Amy on Thursday January 21st, 5-6pm PT. We are looking forward to this virtual conversation with Amy where she will welcome any questions you may have!

The Stranger: The Events

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