SUBMIT UPDATES
It's the final week left to vote for the 2023 BroadwayWorld Seattle Awards! Voting ends on 12/31 at midnight. Don't miss out on making sure that your favorite theatres, stars, and shows get the recognition they deserve!
There's just two weeks left to vote and we have the latest standings as of Monday, December 18th for the 2023 BroadwayWorld Seattle Awards! Don't miss out on making sure that your favorite theatres, stars, and shows get the recognition they deserve!
It's December, and the first standings of the month have been announced as of Tuesday, December 5th for the 2023 BroadwayWorld Seattle Awards! Don't miss out on making sure that your favorite theatres, stars, and shows get the recognition they deserve!
Happy Holidays! The latest wave of standings have been announced as of Monday, November 27th for the 2023 BroadwayWorld Seattle Awards! Don't miss out on making sure that your favorite theatres, stars, and shows get the recognition they deserve!
The latest wave of standings have been announced as of Monday, November 20th for the 2023 BroadwayWorld Seattle Awards! Don't miss out on making sure that your favorite theatres, stars, and shows get the recognition they deserve!
Harlequin Productions' 2024 Season was revealed on Saturday, August 19, during the Season 33 Announcement at the State Theater in downtown Olympia. The night featured live music by local band Sugar and the Spitfires, with a presentation hosted by Eleise Moore and Producing Artistic Director Aaron Lamb.
Deathtrap by Ira Levin (1/19/24-2/4/24)
Deathtrap (1/19/24-2/4/24)
Deathtrap by Ira Levin (1/19/24-2/4/24)
Deathtrap (1/19/24-2/4/24)
Every Brilliant Thing (10/13/23-10/28/23)
The Revolutionists (9/8/23-9/23/23)
Falsettos (6/30/23-7/22/23)
Building Madness by Kate Danley (3/17/23-4/1/23)
Ken Ludwig's Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery (1/27/23-2/11/23)
A Christmas Carol (11/25/22-12/24/22)
Fun Home (10/7/22-11/5/22)
A group of five people—James L. This, Scot Whitney, Linda Whitney, Phil Annis and Ronna Smith—got together in 1991 and decided that they wanted to produce a more challenging style of theater than was available locally. We wrote our mission statement, pooled our start-up capital—a whopping $400 cash—and began producing individual shows at the Washington Center Stage II, a “black box” venue that seated about 100. Seventeen months after beginning our capital campaign, we opened the doors on the beautifully remodeled State Theater. Suddenly we had a theater, a mortgage and a staff. Our budget jumped from $150,000 annually to $750,000. Our full-time staff increased from one to eight. To keep up with the bills and the building, we knew we had to increase income, so we planned to expand from a four-show season to a six-show, year-round season, but the first year we panicked and added two additional shows for a total of eight. And these were not small shows. It was as close as we ever came to failing as a result of driving all human beings involved to near collapse. Then… a bunch of years passed, during which no one has had the time to keep this up to date. But that’s how it started.
Videos
Fat Ham
BAGLEY WRIGHT THEATER (4/12 - 5/4) | ||
What an Impossible Idea
Free Range Theater (4/28 - 4/28) | ||
Vietgone
Theatre Off Jackson (8/8 - 8/24) | ||
ALMOST, MAINE
Tacoma Little Theatre (4/26 - 5/12) | ||
The Cher Show
Capitol Theatre (5/16 - 5/17) | ||
Hamilton (Philip Company)
Paramount Theatre (2/4 - 3/2) | ||
Frozen
First Interstate Center for the Arts(Formally INB Performing Arts Center) (7/24 - 8/4) | ||
VIEW SHOWS ADD A SHOW |
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