Skip to content

This Week in Shows: What to Watch When You Can’t Leave the House

As we pivot to digital arts consumption, the ingenuity displayed by our local and national arts communities is staggering, but not surprising.

By Gemma Wilson March 19, 2020

SSO_2020-01-30_Carlin-Ma-0374

As theaters of all sizes go dark and stages remain empty, those of us who find solace in these spaces are left wondering where to go, while many artists are wondering how they’ll pay rent. Artists are resilient (more resilient than they should have to be, given the way this country historically values them), so while the ingenuity displayed by our national arts community in the last week is staggering, it’s not surprising.

Death Cab for Cutie frontman Ben Gibbard performs live from his home. Broadway fixture Seth Rudetsky’s Stars in the House series presents daily in-home concerts from stage stars. Celebrities are going bonkers on Instagram: legendary Tony-nominated performer Debbie Allen taught a dance class via IG Live, for god’s sake, which is such a random and cool idea (Gal Gadot’s mash-up of celebs singing “Imagine” in 100 different keys was arguably less cool, but they can’t all be winners). 

One silver lining of self-isolation: proximity no longer affects access. Theater streaming platform BroadwayHD is offering a free week, and it offers more than just Broadway shows: San Francisco’s A.C.T. Theatre has released recordings of its recently canceled productions (Gloria by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins and Toni Stone by Lydia R. Diamond) on the site, and more are likely to follow. Watch nightly world-class performances from the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Take virtual tours of the British Museum, Musée d’Orsay in Paris, The National Gallery of Art in Washington DC and many others, thanks to Google Arts & Culture. Actor Ali Stoner and playwrights Lily Houghton and Matt Minnicino started the Instagram account @theatrewithouttheater, “a nightly theatrical broadcast aiming to fill the current artistic void at curtain time.” 

Bookmark The Social Distancing Festival, a brilliant online clearinghouse of live performance available online, with a calendar that includes links to everything from jazz to opera to puppet theater. Meanwhile, some established theaters and dance organizations are making recordings of canceled shows available to ticketholders (union regulations complicate release of these recordings to the general public, but these are unprecedented times, so stay tuned for more information about local theaters’ policies as it becomes available). 

Livestreaming of live arts will never replace the real thing, but as we stay home to participate in this massive act of human solidarity, it can fill temporarily fulfill our need for creativity and connection. The ghost light, a single light always left on center stage, is a theater tradition (and superstition) to keep ghosts away, but also a reminder that theaters never really go dark. 

If your job is unaffected by this health crisis, consider donating some of that money you’re saving by not going out to artists and gig workers who aren’t so lucky. If you have a ticket for a show that was canceled, don’t ask for your money back. Buy subscriptions for next season now. If an artist is making their work available online, donate to their Patreon or support them via Venmo. When we come back together, let’s make sure we come back strong.

If you’re an artist, the good people at Northwest Folklife have compiled a massive list of support streams here; fans, donate to author Ijeoma Oluo’s Seattle Artist Relief Fund Amid COVID-19 for local artists here. Below, find an ongoing, non-comprehensive list of events big and small to enjoy from home. Are you an artist with a digital performance or event to share? Email me at gemma.wilson@tigeroak.com.

 

Follow Us

Holiday Hunt in Pioneer Square

Holiday Hunt in Pioneer Square

A daily ornament drop turns December into a neighborhood-wide scavenger hunt.

The holidays tend to bring out the kid in all of us. And if opening presents and eating too many treats weren’t enough, there’s also a scavenger hunt in Seattle’s oldest neighborhood. Pioneer Square’s Holiday Ornament Scavenger Hunt has returned for its third year. Twenty-five handblown glass ornaments—all made at Glasshouse Studio—are hidden across 25…

Chit-Chat Kids

Chit-Chat Kids

Phone a friend.

Twenty years ago, before everyone walked around with a device in their pocket, kids used to call each other on a landline—often tethered to the kitchen in their home. It was a simpler time, when parents didn’t have to worry (nearly as much) about a potential predator contacting their child. Nowadays, things are different, which…

A Plate for Pickleball

A Plate for Pickleball

The design celebrates the state’s official sport. Additional plates are on the way.

Washington served up a new license plate last week, honoring the state sport of pickleball. In the works for three years, it’s the second of seven specialty plates to hit the market since getting approved by lawmakers earlier this year. “We’re thrilled to see our efforts become reality,” says Kate Van Gent, vice president of…

Seattle-Based Agency Brings Real Voices to NBC’s New Campaign

Seattle-Based Agency Brings Real Voices to NBC’s New Campaign

DNA&STONE built the project around candid conversations to understand what audiences want from reporting.

“I turned off news altogether. I want to be able to form my own opinions. Just tell the truth.” These lines open NBC News’ new national campaign, a 60-second ad that drifts over forests, farms, neighborhoods, and cityscapes while Americans talk about how worn out they feel by the news. The landscape carries the conversation…