Skip to main content Skip to footer site map

Sound Theatre Presents 11TH & PINE, A Staged Reading Revisiting The Capitol Hill Occupied Protest

Performances are March 17-19.

Sound Theatre Presents 11TH & PINE, A Staged Reading Revisiting The Capitol Hill Occupied Protest

Sound Theatre's latest presentation hits close to home in 11TH & PINE, the Working Title of playwright Nikki Yeboah's incisive new play that takes us into the beating heart of Seattle's 2020 protests. In a uniquely community-engaged development process, interviews with 30 local community members form the backbone of a story about a group of strangers who came together to fight against the system in hopes of creating lasting change.

Two and half years after the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest (CHOP), Sound Theatre will present a limited engagement (March 17, 18, and 19) public staged reading about its undoing - while also offering attendees different forms of healing, reflection, solo, and group processing throughout the weekend. Leah Adcock-Starr will direct.

11TH & PINE is the living product of a unique ethnodrama process - with Yeboah and a team of eight University of Washington researchers weaving in first-person accounts of protestors, community members, police reports, and media as source material for the play. Located at Erickson Theatre Off-Broadway within the six city blocks that formed the month-long autonomous zone, the reading is meters away from being classified as a site-specific play.

"11TH & PINE gets to the heart of the uniquely localized circumstances that gave birth to this incredible movement. The development process unfolded with the intention of seeking more expansive ways to include the community in creative processes that mirror their experiences back to them," said Yeboah. "It began with interviews, then later as most traditional plays do, with me working alongside dramaturg Oona Hatton, and director Leah Adcock-Starr to develop the script. However, what sets this play apart from more traditional works is not only that it started by collecting oral histories but also what happened after the initial draft was written."

In the vein of plays like SWEAT (by Lynn Nottage), 11TH & PINE takes an ethnodrama rather than verbatim theatre presentation of narratives derived from interviews.

In a series of February private table reads with the CHOP community members whose stories are featured in the play, "the open, honest conversations that followed shaped my subsequent drafts and guided my ongoing creative process, eventually culminating in this final version and a series of public readings open to the larger Seattle public," said Yeboah.

Yeboah's other work includes The (M)others, an oral history performance about four women brought together after losing a loved one to police violence. For more information, visit www.nikkiyeboah.com.

"We are still shaped by CHOP and will be for many years to come, so we must seek to understand it as a community. Nikki is brilliant, thorough, and nuanced in her multifaceted exploration of the major events and the complex dynamics of this moment in Seattle's history," said co-artistic director Teresa Thuman. "The ultimate goal is for Seattle's theatre community to hold ongoing space for this essential Seattle story - a story that requires extra care and awareness in its development process and presentation."

CHOP/CHAZ, acronyms known in Seattle and nationally, left behind a thousand narratives - and equally as many unresolved questions. As recent news cycles about Tyre Nichols serve a searing dose of déjà vu, Yeboah's play prompts the questions left unanswered after CHOP: What will it take to end the cycle of police brutality against Black bodies? How can we reconcile larger systems and internal conflicts - in order to foster true community healing? 11TH & PINE (Working Title), a play written for Seattle's citizenry, invites you to explore the questions. For ticketing details, visit https://cloud.broadwayworld.com/rec/ticketclick.cfm?fromlink=2225265®id=17&articlelink=https%3A%2F%2Fsoundtheatrecompany.org%2F2023-season%2F11th-pine%2F?utm_source=BWW2022&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=article&utm_content=bottombuybutton1



REFUGEES IN THE GARDEN CITY By Jim Moran To Have World Premiere In Seattle Photo
Pratidhwani - a Seattle-area based organization of South Asian performing artists, and ReAct Theatre will present the world premiere of Refugees in the Garden City, a play in English by Jim Moran, produced in collaboration with Taproot Theatre in the Isaac Studio at Taproot Theatre in the Greenwood neighborhood of Seattle. The production will run March 25th through April 16th.

Review: SUITE SURRENDER at As If Theatre Photo
With a parade of mismanaged guests, lurking press, and plucky staff, SUITE SURRENDER at As If Theatre offers us a classic farce for your enjoyment. The show is a treasure trove of classic tropes and exemplary comedy. With the weight of winter receding into memory, this show invites you in for a good laugh as therapeutic as the spring sunshine.What did our critic think of SUITE SURRENDER at As If Theatre?

Seattle Theatre Group Presents Indigenous Enterprises INDIGENOUS LIBERATION Photo
Seattle Theatre Group (STG) will present Indigenous Enterprise, a Native American dance troupe consisting of dancers from the US and Canada, in “Indigenous Liberation” for one night only on Friday, April 21 at 7:30 PM at the Moore Theatre. This event is part of STG's 2022/23 Performing Arts Season.

The School of Drama Producing Artist Laboratory at the University of Washington Presents I Photo
The School of Drama Producing Artist Laboratory at the University of Washington will present IN THE BLOOD, a play written by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks, directed by graduate M.F.A. directing students Kate Drummond and Nick O'Leary, Wednesday, May 3rd, 2023 – Sunday, May 7th, 2023. 


More Hot Stories For You


REFUGEES IN THE GARDEN CITY By Jim Moran To Have World Premiere In SeattleREFUGEES IN THE GARDEN CITY By Jim Moran To Have World Premiere In Seattle
March 19, 2023

Pratidhwani - a Seattle-area based organization of South Asian performing artists, and ReAct Theatre will present the world premiere of Refugees in the Garden City, a play in English by Jim Moran, produced in collaboration with Taproot Theatre in the Isaac Studio at Taproot Theatre in the Greenwood neighborhood of Seattle. The production will run March 25th through April 16th.

The School of Drama Producing Artist Laboratory at the University of Washington Presents IN THE BLOODThe School of Drama Producing Artist Laboratory at the University of Washington Presents IN THE BLOOD
March 17, 2023

The School of Drama Producing Artist Laboratory at the University of Washington will present IN THE BLOOD, a play written by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Suzan-Lori Parks, directed by graduate M.F.A. directing students Kate Drummond and Nick O'Leary, Wednesday, May 3rd, 2023 – Sunday, May 7th, 2023. 

Seattle Theatre Group Presents Indigenous Enterprise's INDIGENOUS LIBERATIONSeattle Theatre Group Presents Indigenous Enterprise's INDIGENOUS LIBERATION
March 17, 2023

Seattle Theatre Group (STG) will present Indigenous Enterprise, a Native American dance troupe consisting of dancers from the US and Canada, in “Indigenous Liberation” for one night only on Friday, April 21 at 7:30 PM at the Moore Theatre. This event is part of STG's 2022/23 Performing Arts Season.

Taproot Theatre's Acting Studio Hosts Improv Class With Joe GuppyTaproot Theatre's Acting Studio Hosts Improv Class With Joe Guppy
March 16, 2023

Explore basic improv with veteran improvisor and teacher Joe Guppy with Taproot Theatre's Acting Studio this spring. Spring Improv Basics with Joe Guppy runs for 7 weeks on Monday evenings, April 3 through May 15.

Experience Joie De Vivre at Seattle's French Fest: A Celebration Of French-Speaking CulturesExperience Joie De Vivre at Seattle's French Fest: A Celebration Of French-Speaking Cultures
March 15, 2023

Seattle's French Fest: A Celebration of French-Speaking Cultures, part of the Seattle Center Festál series, celebrates the diversity of traditions, ideas, dialects and more that comprise French-speaking cultures around the world.