Advanced Archive Search >>

Most Popular

"Most Popular" tools sponsored by:

Recent Articles

Recent Articles by Steve Wiecking

National Features >

  • Broward-Palm Beach New Times

    Sexual Healing

    For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.

    By Michael J. Mooney

  • City Pages

    Your Friendly Neighborhood War Profiteer

    It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.

    By Jeff Severns Guntzel

  • The Pitch

    Supersizing Sonic

    How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."

    By Justin Kendall

  • Houston Press

    Temples of Tex-Mex

    A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.

    By Robb Walsh

Best Crossover Director

Arts & Entertainment

Steve Wiecking

Published on August 03, 2005

All someone had to do was ask. The imagination and ambitiousness of Linda Hartzell have made Seattle Children's Theatre one of the city's most reliable venues for resourceful stagecraft—any place that manages to turn the monosyllabic pleasures of a picture book like Go, Dog. Go! into solid entertainment is doing something right. But no one had invited her to take on local work outside of the company since she became artistic director in 1984. Enter Intiman Theatre's artistic director, Bartlett Sher, no stranger to imagination and ambitiousness himself, who had the bright idea to assign Hartzell to directing chores on The Grapes of Wrath, which makes its appearance as part of Intiman's American Cycle this coming October.

"Bart hired me because I tend to do shows that are episodic, where you're going from place to place with large numbers of people onstage," Hartzell explains. She deals with book adaptations on a regular basis at SCT, having grappled with everything from The Red Badge of Courage to The Outsiders, a show that said volumes about the class divide between S.E. Hinton's warring teenagers using only a metal fence. "I tend to like the minimalist, abstract approach to shows because the audience really has to participate to complete the visual picture," Hartzell allows.

There's another reason she seems like a fine choice to tackle the Joad family's travails, and you can hear it in her voice when she proudly maintains that she approaches every play—whether about 1960s delinquency or Depression-era drudgery—"as if we were doing Macbeth or Marivaux." Sher obviously found it in her, too, and told her so when he offered her the job.

"He said he thought I had the heart for it," Hartzell recalls.

We agree.

Seattle Children's Theatre, Seattle Center, 206-441-3322, www.sct.org.