TeenTix Logo
Login
Sign Up

cure for boredom

Dial M for Murder at SIFF Cinema Ray Milland puts together an elaborate plan to kill his beautiful, unfaithful wife—Grace Kelly—for her money, but when his plan goes awry (Kelly kills the hired assailant!) Milland turns to a diabolical Plan B—scheming to have Kelly indicted for murder!Part of this weekend's "Hitchcock: Master of Suspense" series at SIFF Cinema--double features today and tomorrow!Dial M for MurderSunday, October 11th7:00 PMSIFF Cinema

Read More

search results: passport

"Passport photo (1987)" by Mike Knell on flickr(search results is an art project. Everyday we search for and post a random flickr photo using the search term "passport".)The Teen Tix Passport to the Arts contest is still on!Here's how it works: - Download the passport - Take it with you and ask for a stamp at the box office every time you use your Teen Tix pass - Once you have 6 stamps, return your passport to us to be entered to win fabulous prizes like a $200 gift card to a retailer of your choosing (choose from Barnes & Noble, Best Buy, GAP, iTunes, Pagliacci, Starbucks, Target, or a pre-paid Visa card). The contest runs through December 29th, 2009, so you still have plenty of time to see art and win! Download your passport and all of the contest details here.

Read More

search results: passport

"Passport photos" by Cupps on flickr(search results is an art project. Everyday we search for and post a random flickr photo using the search term "passport".)The Teen Tix Passport to the Arts contest is still on!Here's how it works: - Download the passport - Take it with you and ask for a stamp at the box office every time you use your Teen Tix pass - Once you have 6 stamps, return your passport to us to be entered to win fabulous prizes like a $200 gift card to a retailer of your choosing (choose from Barnes & Noble, Best Buy, GAP, iTunes, Pagliacci, Starbucks, Target, or a pre-paid Visa card). The contest runs through December 29th, 2009, so you still have plenty of time to see art and win! Download your passport and all of the contest details here.

Read More

Plate Tectonics

Review of Annie Proulx at Seattle Arts & Lectures by Tucker Cholvin This Wednesday, Seattle Arts and Lectures hosted Annie Proulx, author of Postcards, The Shipping News, Wyoming Stories, as well as the short story Brokeback Mountain (later adapted into the Oscar-winning film) at Benaroya Hall. Proulx read from her new book, entitled Bird Cloud: A Memoir in Progress, giving a condensed but powerful taste of her style as a writer. Audience members were also given the chance to submit questions afterward for a question and answer session. Annie Proulx | photo by John Harding/Time & Life Pictures--Getty Images

Proulx, in her writing and her life, is deeply tied to Wyoming, her adopted home, and its land. She began with the setting of her house along a great cliff named Bird Cloud, describing the plate tectonics and slow forces that formed it, and that will reshape it again in the future. She progressed to describing the indigenous peoples who settled the area first, and then remembered the land as it was when she came to it. As visceral and raw as the wild land she loves, she delights in setting the scene with the small details. Her style reveals not only her great love of the land but also surrounds one in its untamed world. This wild landscape, created so attentively at the start, becomes the foundation for all other things—a fatal car accident on a state highway, an exchange with an overeager shopkeeper in her old hometown, or a fly-fishing expedition are all set against this vibrant backdrop. No matter the subject, Proulx infuses a physicality into her stories that throws one into the moment and makes her stories come alive. The euphoria of her joy is tangible and real; its swift and merciless destruction bites just as coldly as if it had been us. In their extremities, they mirror the blossoming summers and brutal winters of Proulx's Wyoming, where nothing can truly last. Wielding all the power and force of nature and the earth, her writing becomes a living, breathing creature, strong and potent. This mere taste of her book pulled me in, leaving me hungry for more and in awe of a great writer. -Tucker C. October 7, 2009 Annie Proulx was a one-night event Next up in Seattle Arts & Lectures Literary Series: Lydia Davis Wednesday, November 4th @ 7:30 Benaroya Hall more info

Read More

search results: passport

canadian passport by striatic on flickr(search results is an art project. Everyday we search for and post a random flickr photo using the search term "passport".)The Teen Tix Passport to the Arts contest is still on!Here's how it works: - Download the passport - Take it with you and ask for a stamp at the box office every time you use your Teen Tix pass - Once you have 6 stamps, return your passport to us to be entered to win fabulous prizes like a $200 gift card to a retailer of your choosing (choose from Barnes & Noble, Best Buy, GAP, iTunes, Pagliacci, Starbucks, Target, or a pre-paid Visa card). The contest runs through December 29th, 2009, so you still have plenty of time to see art and win! Download your passport and all of the contest details here.

Read More

cure for boredom/video of the day

Jeremy at The Sunbreak says "Don't be fooled by the fact that it's playing at Seattle Children's Theatre : If there's one can't-miss theatre performance this weekend, it's Yaser Khaseb's Mysterious Gifts: Theatre of Iran."SCT says "It is a rare opportunity for us in the Pacific Northwest to see an authentic piece of theatre art from Iran. Performance artist Yaser Khaseb has crafted a show devised of several movement-based pieces, making the language barrier inconsequential, that give us entry into his world."Our video of the day is from Mysterious Gifts dress rehearsal:

Read More

Welcome Spectrum Dance Theater!

We know that so many of you are HUGE dance lovers, and so it makes us oh so happy to announce that Seattle largest contemporary dance company, Spectrum Dance Theater, is our newest Teen Tix participating organization. From their website: "Spectrum Dance Theater (SDT) was founded in 1982 to bring dance of the highest merit to a diverse audience composed of people from different social, cultural, ethnic and economic backgrounds" and (we love this part) "We believe that exposure to and participation in the performing arts can be a transforming experience for individuals and communities." So you can see why we like them so much. There's very little that we could say further that isn't better expressed by this absolutely stunningly beautiful video narrated by Spectrum's Artistic Director, Donald Byrd. Watch it, and when you get to the end and are left wanting more, go see Spectrum's Studio Series starting this weekend at their Madrona studio. Spectrum Dance Theatre800 Lake Washington Blvd.Seattle, WA 98122directions206.325.4161Byrd Retrospective Festival Studio SeriesOctober 10th - 25thmore info

Read More

search results: passport

untitled by sa_ku_ra on flickr(search results is an art project. Everyday we search for and post a random flickr photo using the search term "passport".)The Teen Tix Passport to the Arts contest is still on!Here's how it works: - Download the passport - Take it with you and ask for a stamp at the box office every time you use your Teen Tix pass - Once you have 6 stamps, return your passport to us to be entered to win fabulous prizes like a $200 gift card to a retailer of your choosing (choose from Barnes & Noble, Best Buy, GAP, iTunes, Pagliacci, Starbucks, Target, or a pre-paid Visa card). The contest runs through December 29th, 2009, so you still have plenty of time to see art and win! Download your passport and all of the contest details here.

Read More

SAM has a new blog. And it’s called SOAP! Soap?

SAM's new director, Derrick Cartwright, says:"Even the name 'SOAP' should be considered as something provisional. SOAP was picked from many clever, and maybe some less clever, names (my personal favorite was 'SAMbiguous') which I think merits a blog entry in its own right. That could come soon. For now, I am curious to hear any responses to it, since we are open to improvements as we go."So...what do you think of "SOAP", Teen Tixers? Read SOAP here

Read More

YCW Grads: Where Are They Now?

For part five in our series, Young Critics Workshop grad Leah Menzer supplies hyperbolic ad copy for YCW. And it's all true. Leah, take it away!I see you, Seattle high-schooler, wearing that flannel shirt, a pair of wayfarers, and listening to KEXP podcasts. If you really want keys to the hipster castle, look no further than the Young Critics Workshop. Nothing is cooler than Seattle’s outrageously large art scene, and nothing will get you more involved with it than YCW. I bleed obscure art references now, (an oddly useful college skill) and I’d say most of it stems from this class. Also if you tell your parents you are going to see a play they will probably start crying with joy, and maybe not be so angry when you get a C on that chem test or whatever.Honestly, the only relevant things I still have on my resume from high school are this class and a fictional company I was CEO of. Don’t waste your time thinking that being Co-Secretary of Japanese club is really going to help you later in life, I promise you it will not. INSTEAD why not find out about mysterious avant-garde warehouse plays and underground art tours while improving your writing with a REAL LIVE (charming) newspaper editor from the best paper in town?I cannot stress enough how much I looked forward to every class. In my fake-wood college desk drawer I still have some handouts from the class I look at if I need inspiration.- I’m a sophomore at American University in Washington DC, waffling between sticking with a Political Science major or switching into something radio-related I would actually love that probably won’t get me a job.The Young Critics Workshop is a 5-month-long critical writing seminar for 11th & 12th graders and college freshmen who are interested in learning about arts criticism and journalism. It's taught by Brendan Kiley, Arts Editor at the Stranger. Applications for this year's workshop are due October 15th. Download more info here. Download the application here. Email questions to teentix@seattle.gov

Read More

cure for boredom

TONIGHT: Author Annie Proulx is speaking at Benaroya Hall. Proulx is the author of some very good books and short stories you might not have heard of (Postcards, Accordion Crimes, Bad Dirt) and a couple of you probably have heard of (The Shipping News, Brokeback Mountain) because they've been made into movies (and we know how you kids love the talkies). Books blogger John Detrixhe says that Proulx is a reluctant interview subject:"It's this reluctance that makes her words so gratifying. There's a certain guilty thrill in listening to Proulx speak, when one knows that she would rather be in Wyoming, where she lives, or Newfoundland, where she owns a home. And she would probably be happiest if she were in either of those places writing, instead of giving a lecture in Chicago or responding to the media. Still, one senses that Proulx rarely does what she doesn't care to do, and when she answers a question it is only because she is willing, and not because she necessarily cares how you will react to her answer."Sounds like someone I'd like to hear speak. You? Okay, let's go.Annie ProulxTonight, Wednesday, October 7th7:30 PMBenaroya Hallmore infoThis event is produced by Seattle Arts & Lectures, a Teen Tix Participating Organization. Teen Tix members can get $5.00 tickets at the door. The box office opens at 6:00 PM.

Read More

Hamlet is my favourite play ever. I read it, and t…

Hamlet is my favourite play ever. I read it, and then I reread it a good four or five times, and I still find the plot engaging, the characters extremely likeable, and the ideas presented thought-provoking. I'm not even joking: I would love to be IRL friends with Prince Hamlet lol.

Read More

Your Five-Minute Dutch Vacation

Today's video of the day is a walk through the streets of a Dutch city (looks like Amsterdam to me) with three guys with whom it would be a pleasure to amble the streets of any city, European or no: Reggie Watts, Tommy Smith, and (wait for it) Brendan Kiley (who is apparently now the mascot of this blog). Reggie and Tommy's new show Transition runs October 15 - 17 at On the Boards.

Dutch A/V (sample) from Tommy Smith on Vimeo.

Read More

search results: passport

"pink lady passport photo" by david bessent on flickr(search results is an art project. Everyday we search for and post a random flickr photo using the search term "passport".)The Teen Tix Passport to the Arts contest is still on!Here's how it works: - Download the passport - Take it with you and ask for a stamp at the box office every time you use your Teen Tix pass - Once you have 6 stamps, return your passport to us to be entered to win fabulous prizes like a $200 gift card to a retailer of your choosing (choose from Barnes & Noble, Best Buy, GAP, iTunes, Pagliacci, Starbucks, Target, or a pre-paid Visa card). The contest runs through December 29th, 2009, so you still have plenty of time to see art and win! Download your passport and all of the contest details here.

Read More

Professor Kiley Takes On Front Porch Theatre

It's high time we blogged about Intiman's Front Porch Theatre series, awesome participatory theatre events at "unexpected venues" like coffee shops, libraries, and churches. And today gives us the perfect motivation, because our own Professor Kiley (also known as Brendan Kiley, Arts Editor of the Stranger and teacher of our upcoming Young Critics Workshop) will be reading the part of Young Abe Lincoln. Oh, this is going to be wonderful. Come on down!Intiman Front Porch Series for Abe Lincoln in IllinoisTONIGHT! Tuesday, October 6th @ 6:00 PMMount Zion Baptist Church1634 19th AveSeattle, WA 98122About FRONT PORCH THEATER (from INTIMAN's website):Front Porch Theater brings the stories on our stage to life in neighborhood gathering spots (including coffee shops and libraries) and unexpected venues that encourage spontaneous participation. Family, friends and neighbors come together to read an excerpt from the American Cycle play aloud, followed by moderated conversation about the issues and ideas it inspires. All are welcome; those who don’t wish to read are encouraged to attend as audience and participate in the discussion. This fall, Intiman will join with community partners to co-host a Front Porch series for Abe Lincoln in Illinois, with readers taking on iconic roles from the play. For more information about the schedule or to participate please write us at frontporch@intiman.org. Abe Lincoln in IllinoisINTIMAN TheatreThrough November 15th

Read More

Login

Create an account | Reset your password