11th & Pine
By Nikki Yeboah
A riveting look into the beating heart of Seattle’s 2020 Protests
Public Staged Reading
Friday-Sunday, March 17-19
at the Erickson Theatre Off Broadway
Several years after the 2020 protests against police violence that ushered in a racial awakening across the nation, a deposed protest leader sends out a call to fellow activists. Her goal? To reconstruct the occupation she led in her city. As they relive moments both utopian and excruciating, the activists find the task of explaining what happened is not so simple. Did they succeed? Did they fail? How will they be remembered? Meanwhile, old tensions resurface and the group contends with powerful opponents who want to tell the story in their own way. Based on interviews with Seattle’s Capitol Hill Occupied Protestors, 11TH & PINE explores the impact of organized protest, asking “can we make a difference, and if so, at what cost?”
Accessibility
Due to a vendor/provider shortage, we were unable to secure ASL interpretation and live captions for the run as originally planned. If you are an audience member in need of a script of 11TH & PINE for access reasons, our Front of House staff can provide a Chromebook with a digital script upon request.
The venue has two wheelchair accessible entrances for accessible seating options, which you can request by purchasing an “Access Seating” ticket. For other questions or requests, contact access@soundtheatrecompany.org
COVID Policy
Sound Theatre is still enforcing masking for audience members, staff members, and artists. Actors will be unmasked when they are performing on stage, but will otherwise remain masked.
Meet the Playwright
Nikki Yeboah is an Assistant Professor of Playwriting in the School of Drama at the University of Washington. As an artist-scholar, Dr. Yeboah uses oral history performance to create alternative records of Black life using a Black feminist aesthetic. Her work includes the documentary theatre piece THE (M)OTHERS, an account of the shattering impacts of police violence on family members; OF SMALL AND BLACK THINGS, a solo performance using oral history and Ashanti folklore to create a parable about Black female migration; and AKOSUA GOES HOME, a sonic duet that plays with motherhood, sisterhood, and the limitations of memory.
Production Team
Nikki Yeboah | Playwright |
Oona Hatton | Dramaturg |
Leah Adcock-Starr | Director |
Christie Zhao | Stage Manager |
Myriah Marsh | Stage Manager |
James Theodore Washburn | Co-Stage Manager |
Cast
Maggie Carrido Adams |
Hazel Rose Gibson |
Ronnie Hill |
Jesse Smith |
Patrick Tolden |
Andreya Pro |
Casey Kitzman |
Kieran Adcock-Starr |
Charissa J Adams |
Caitlin Francis Branston |
Tracy Michelle Hughes |
Ejay Amor |
Gabriel Dane FitzPatrick |
Truxton Ivory |
Jesimiel Jenkins |
Radical Hospitality Ticketing
At Sound Theatre Company, we believe that theatre should be accessible for all. As such, we have tickets available at a sliding-scale structure.
$75 – Benefactor Rate
$50 – Patron Rate
$25 – General Admission Rate
$5 – Inclusion Rate