For Colored Boyz Beautifully Presents Black Men in Their Own Words and Worlds
Reviews Raegan Ballard-Gennrich Reviews Raegan Ballard-Gennrich

For Colored Boyz Beautifully Presents Black Men in Their Own Words and Worlds

On September 5, I attended the West Coast premiere of For Colored Boyz (On the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown/When Freedom Ain’t Enuff), written by Bryan-Keyth Wilson with direction by Lynette Winters and Ry Armstrong and choreography by Jimmy Shields. Brought to us by The Underground Theater, the play was described as a choreopoem, utilizing poetry, movement, and music to detail the unique intersectionality of being a queer Black man in America.

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Masterful Morgue Anne Spills Rendezvous Tea, Urges Support for Displaced Performers
Interviews, Points of View Nicole Bearden Interviews, Points of View Nicole Bearden

Masterful Morgue Anne Spills Rendezvous Tea, Urges Support for Displaced Performers

Over the past decade, Morgue Anne has forged a creative home at The Rendezvous, a historic venue in the heart of Belltown, where, until a few weeks ago, you could see everything from live music, to comedy shows, public figure drawing sessions, burlesque performances, and beyond. “I’ve been working at the Rendezvous in one way or another for the last ten years or so. I’ve been the events and booking director for the past three years,” she said. But her experience goes beyond just booking the shows:

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Sound Cinema: Oak Harbor Cinemas
Columns Zach Youngs Columns Zach Youngs

Sound Cinema: Oak Harbor Cinemas

The Oak Harbor Cinemas is unlike many of the other exhibition spaces covered here in Sound Cinema. For one it is located on Whidbey Island which is in Puget Sound just west of Anacortes. It is certainly a unique space and a bit off the beaten path. What Oak Harbor Cinemas really has going for it is its price, especially as the theater focuses on new releases with at least one new film every week.

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Parker’s Pages: A Philosophy of Walking
Columns Parker Dean Columns Parker Dean

Parker’s Pages: A Philosophy of Walking

While Frédéric Gros is not native to the Puget Sound, and his book, A Philosophy of Walking, is not rooted in the Pacific Northwest, it has completely revolutionized how I navigate and experience the city of Seattle and the University District where I live. In a part of the world so close to nature with comfortable temperatures most of the year, and a large hiking, biking, and travel culture, A Philosophy of Walking feels like a necessary read.

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Screwdriver Bar Honors Seattle’s Grunge History
Overviews Nisha Karanam Overviews Nisha Karanam

Screwdriver Bar Honors Seattle’s Grunge History

So what makes Screwdriver Bar unique?

The spot was particularly popular during the late 80s/early 90s “grunge” era. As a former recording studio and rehearsal space, it housed a plethora of different bands and singers. One of the most notable groups to rehearse here was Nirvana, during the period between their albums Bleach and Nevermind. The basement became a second home for the band and for other rising grunge acts, cementing its place as an early landmark of Seattle’s grunge movement.

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Fall Film Fests to Fit into Your Travel Plans
Overviews Zach Youngs Overviews Zach Youngs

Fall Film Fests to Fit into Your Travel Plans

It’s lucky if you live here around the Puget Sound because you do not have to go far to experience great cinema. There are vast possibilities here that will have destinations like Port Townsend, Tacoma, and Orcas Island on your mind. Here are a few highlights of local film festivals and archival series coming this fall.

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Witness Immersive Experiments with Seattle Audiences in The Double
Reviews Calista Robbins Reviews Calista Robbins

Witness Immersive Experiments with Seattle Audiences in The Double

Witness Immersive is a New York and London based company which has spread its innovative creativity to various cities around the country. Its second show in Seattle, The Double, performed by a stellar local cast, brought an interdisciplinary performance medium to the city which has thus far gone mostly untapped—immersive dance theatre.

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The Divided Line: Dunya [Part 1]
Columns Calista Robbins Columns Calista Robbins

The Divided Line: Dunya [Part 1]

The Old Man began to play. 

It was like no music she’d ever heard, tainted and raw and beautiful. 

When he finished the song, he stood, opened the window all the way, and held forth the instrument. “Do you want to try?” 

Five words which dictated the rest of Dunya’s life. 

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Trans* Talk: Current Events
Columns Parker Dean Columns Parker Dean

Trans* Talk: Current Events

This week, I wanted to provide an update on current and relevant Trans* and Queer news from the past month. Legislation is moving quickly, and it can be difficult to keep track of important Trans* rulings that can keep you and/or your loved ones safe.

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Letter from The Editor
Points of View Mary Adner Points of View Mary Adner

Letter from The Editor

I joined The Echo because I see the same spark and desire in everyone who creates with us. When one of our writers interviews someone with important, silly, or beautiful things to say about their work or life, we all shine. When another writer pours their thoughts and emotions into a piece of narrative or poetry, someone’s cup is filled for the day. Or when still another Creative captures a salient scene with their camera, Truth regains a beacon.

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Sound Cinema: The Rose Theatre
Columns Zach Youngs Columns Zach Youngs

Sound Cinema: The Rose Theatre

The Rose Theatre, thus far the oldest theater in the Sound Cinema catalog, opened back in 1907 in Port Townsend, a city on the eastern tip of the Olympic Peninsula. The theater started as a vaudeville performance space—like most in that era—before converting to movies. The space went through a couple of transitions after its initial run as a movie house, and by 1992 it was a junk shop in the heart of the lower portion of the city. At that time, a group of community volunteers, donors, and investors brought the theater back to life, and for the over thirty years since, the Rose Theatre has become a community staple. 

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The Grown-Ups Whimsically Lacks Production Maturity
Reviews Calista Robbins Reviews Calista Robbins

The Grown-Ups Whimsically Lacks Production Maturity

In all our lives, there comes a frightful day when catastrophe strikes. We look around the room to find support from the nearest adult or superior, as we have always done, but when we do, we realize with great suddenness: Oh no. We are the adults in the room. The Grown-Ups, written by Simon Henriquez and Skylar Fox and originally devised by Nightdrive, took its humble place as Dacha Theatre’s third mainstage show of their season. It toured parks and campfires in and around the Seattle area, bringing its nostalgic story to a widespread public. 

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Parker’s Pages: We Are Not Strangers
Columns Parker Dean Columns Parker Dean

Parker’s Pages: We Are Not Strangers

We Are Not a powerful graphic novel. Written and illustrated by Josh Tuininga, We Are Not Strangers explores the relationship between Marco, a Jewish immigrant, and his friend, Sam Akiyama, a first generation Japanese American. Marco and Sam navigate the discrimination and displacement of their communities in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor and during World War II while trying to look out for their families and for each other.

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Movies by the Tower: Free Outdoor Screenings for Sci-Fi Fans
Overviews Zach Youngs Overviews Zach Youngs

Movies by the Tower: Free Outdoor Screenings for Sci-Fi Fans

Seeing a movie outside is like a campfire story. You and your friends and family gather around a glowing screen on blankets or short chairs to sit back and relax. In August, a partnership of the Maple Leaf Community Council and Scarecrow Video, sponsored by Áegis Living, are running the fourth edition of Movies by the Tower. For three Saturdays there will be free movies in Maple Leaf Reservoir Park.

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Announcing: We’re Powered by Shunpike
Overviews Nicole Bearden and Mary Adner Overviews Nicole Bearden and Mary Adner

Announcing: We’re Powered by Shunpike

The Evergreen Echo, a burgeoning PNW arts and culture publication, has secured fiscal sponsorship through Shunpike, a Washington-based arts organization that provides artists with equitable access to vital expertise, opportunities, and business services via their programs, such as Fiscal Sponsorship, ACES: Artists of Color Expo and Symposium, Shunpike Artist in Residence & Storefronts, and The Studio @ 2+U.

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The Divided Line: Ivy [Part 2]
Columns Calista Robbins Columns Calista Robbins

The Divided Line: Ivy [Part 2]

Three prisoners staggered out of the truck: two men and a woman. The men knew each other. Their hands grazed and their gazes met. The woman stood alone, clinging to the broken neck of a violin. They were all unchained, but fear and shock were as good a shackle as any. Until it was disrupted, at least. 

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Evergreen Style: PNW Climate Week
Columns JeLisa Marshall Columns JeLisa Marshall

Evergreen Style: PNW Climate Week

From July 16 to 25, PNW Climate Week hosted various community-led events across the region to inspire climate action. Cheryl Scheiderhan is a member of the small but mighty team who worked hard to make this year the most impactful one yet.
As a fashion professional, Cheryl is focused on the complex relationships between climate, clothes, and consumption. Being in a city like Seattle, which thrives on technical solutions, it’s proving difficult to convey the relevance of fashion.

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