Seattle Gay News
Issue 39, Volume 46, September 28, 2018
Arts & Entertainment
Funny and cathartic, ArtsWest’s Gilda a spellbinding love Skeleton Crew a deeply letter to a comedy legend moving production
Love, Gilda – Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures
by Sara Michelle Fetters SGN A&E Writer LOVE, GILDA Now playing Gilda Radner was a celebrity my parents could agree on. Not that either of them ever
really said out loud she was their favorite comedian or anything. But even as a little kid I could still tell. Both of them would randomly break out with a line of hers as Roseanne Roseannadanna or Lisa Loopner at random moments that always struck me as
see LOVE, GILDA page 7
Allyson Lee Brown as Shanita and Tracy Michelle Hughes as Faye in Skeleton Crew – Photo by John McLellan
by Paul Torres SGN A&E Writer SKELETON CREW ARTSWEST Through October 14
Life in the USA changed drastically in 2008. The economy collapsed and just when all hope was lost, we found a new sense of hope again with the election of our first African-American President, Barack Obama. Yet,
see SKELETON CREW page 3
Chills, thrills and more – PNB’s “Jerome Robbins On stage in October Festival” a delightful celebration of his genius
The cast of Oslo at ACT Theatre – Photo by Rosemary Dai Ross
by Miryam Gordon SGN A&E Writer There are indeed a few scary offerings for this month, but the range of topics and presentations in the coming weeks is a bit awe-inspiring! Come From Away is returning to town, along with opportunities to see 2017 Tony winner, OSLO, the return of Mike Daisey, and many productions with ethnic diversity of both subjects and casts! Check it out:
A Thousand Splendid Suns, Seattle Repertory Theatre and American Conservatory Theater, 10/5-11/10 (opens 10/10). Based on the sweeping, internationally best-selling novel, A Thousand Splendid Suns is the tale of the unlikely connection that blossoms between two Afghan women in war-torn Kabul. As rockets shriek down from the heavens, the friendship of Laila and Mariam develops into an iron-bound
see OCT. OPENINGS page 4
Pacific Northwest Ballet principal dancers James Moore and Rachel Foster in Jerome Robbins’ “Afternoon of a Faun”, which PNB is presenting as part of a two-part Robbins Festival to kick off its 2018-2019 season, September 21-29, 2018. – Photo by Angela Sterling
by Sharon Cumberland SGN A&E Writer PACIFIC NORTHWEST BALLET “JEROME ROBBINS FESTIVAL” PARTS A & B MARION OLIVER MCAW HALL Through September 29
The Pacific Northwest Ballet is currently celebrating the American choreographer Jerome Robbins with a two-evening extravaganza of his best-known works, from the elegant “Dances at a Gathering,” to the jazzy “West Side Story Suite.” Robbins worked
see PNB page 10