Seattle Playwrights Salon kicks off a year of parity (plays by women!) by presenting Unhinged, by Seattle-based playwright, Pamela Hobart Carter at the Conservatory, 5813 South, Seattle, 98108. Admission is free! Beer, wine, cider, and food available for purchase before and after the show, and during intermission.
After facing a near-death experience, does Caitlin stretch her wings and bask in the joy of being alive, or has she become a little unhinged? With a curious and colorful cast of characters, Carter spins a tangled web, plunging us all into the heights and depths of human emotion.
CAST & CREATIVES:
CHARLES - Tom Fraser
SALLY - Rachel Glass
WAITPERSON - Kymberlee Della Luce LYLE - Terry Moore
CAITLIN - Molly Thompson
Stage Manager - Dan Niven
Director - Rachel Rene
PAMELA HOBART CARTER-PLAYWRIGHT
Pam used to be a teacher who wrote on the side. Now she is a writer who teaches on the side. Live Girls! Theater, Infinity Box Theatre Project, Macha Monkey, Theatre Schmeater, and The 14/48 Projects have read or produced her plays. She also writes poems, essays, and fiction. January 30 she will read short fiction at Paul Mullin's "Loud Mouth Lit" at St. Andrew's. Thanks, everyone!
TOM FRASER - CHARLES
Tom has been involved in Seattle theater & film since moving to Seattle many years ago. He's very happy to be reprising the role of Charles in this reading of Pam's fine play UNHINGED. Favorite previous roles include:
Joe Moore in Tigers Be Still (Catapult Theater), Ozzie in the Gregory Award winning UNDO (Annex Theater), Captain Lon McQuigg in The Racket (Theater Under the Influence) and Father in Scotto Moore's Twilight Dove(The 14/48 Projects).
RACHEL GLASS - SALLY
Rachel was seen as Tamora in Seattle Shakespeare Company's Titus Andronicus, as well as outdoors in SSC's doo-wop sensation, The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Regional theatre: NY, LA, SF Bay Area, Nashville. Local theatre: SCT, Book-It, Bridges, 14/48. Her films have been honored at several international film festivals. She was featured opposite
Sharon Stone in Last Dance. Rachel has recorded regularly with
Jim French Productions, and currently records audio books and voiceovers in the Pacific Northwest.
KYMBERLEE DELLA LUCE - WAITPERSON
Kymberlee della Luce is an interdisciplinary artist and scholar. Her explorations of the transpersonal rarely fit neatly into boxes and bios. You can find her at
kymberleedellaluce.com or barefoot at the beach. If you can catch her, she'll totally hug you or ask you to deconstruct civilization with her. You choose.
Terry Edward Moore - LYLE
Terry has acted and/or directed for most of the professional theaters in the Pacific Northwest. He is currently the Producing Artistic Director of Thalia's Umbrella, which will produce the world premiere of Y York's The Impossibility of Now at 12th Avenue Arts in March.
DAN NIVEN - STAGE MANAGER
Dan is delighted to return to The Conservatory, making his fourth(!) outing with the Seattle Playwrights Salon. When not involved in a local theatre production, he can be found singing with a variety of Seattle choral ensembles, or playing trombone in the UW Husky Alumni Band. A classic Enneagram Type 7, Dan stays grounded by designing and installing labyrinths, and invites you to check out his work at
moderndaedalus.com.
RACHEL RENE-DIRECTOR
Rachel Rene is a Seattle-based actor, director, music director, and stage manager and is thrilled to be working with Pamela on another of her lovely plays. Rachel Rene has worked with numerous theater companies around town, her most recent full-length directing credit being
Ben Butler with Burien Actors Theatre. She currently works as a performer and educator with
Living Voices and has become a regular troupe member with Theater for Young Children. <3 to Rx.
The Conservatory is a Seattle art space and coffeehouse, community meeting place, and artists' workshop in Seattle's Georgetown neighborhood, a growing and glowing arts haven in Seattle near I-5, just north of Boeing Field. The Seattle Playwrights Salon produces new play readings and full productions on the second Friday of every month at The Conservatory to give local playwrights a public place to present new work in development to a live audience. www.theconservatoryseattle.com
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