Skip to content

The New-Look Seattle Magazine and Summer (We Hope) Have Arrived

Our June issue celebrates fun in the sun, a cast of high-school talents and a fresh look.

By Rachel Hart May 26, 2017

June-2017-cover-good-540

In addition to rejoicing over the long-awaited return of the glowing orb in the sky (fingers crossed!), this month, in several stories, we also celebrate the creative process, from a high-end leather artist to the extraordinary talent found in local high school musical productions.

The 5th Avenue Theatre, whose 15th Tony Awards–style program (which we cover in this month’s issue) on June 12 recognizes this emerging youth talent, is, of course, also a Broadway incubating machine, churning out hit after hit. One of my “bucket list” projects has been to photograph the cast and behind-the-scenes talent of one of these Broadway-bound shows that are first staged locally. The stars finally aligned with Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion, which opens this month. Photographing this group of experienced stage actresses and behind-the-scenes professionals almost felt like cheating: When the shoot started, our subjects snapped into action and effortlessly captured the fun, awkward, flirty, eye-rolling experience of a high school reunion we were going for. Robin Schiff, who wrote the play on which the movie was originally based (yes, Romy and Michele were initially side characters in the play “Ladies’ Room”), the movie and the stage musical, especially got into it.

It’s hard to fully appreciate how much work goes into producing a shoot like this. We are grateful for the army of creative minds who helped, especially our staff photographer Hayley Young. Another cool insight into the creative process: While we were setting up, artistic director David Armstrong would occasionally pop in a pair of ear buds and pace the floor. He told me he was listening to different potential opening numbers for the musical. Though I didn’t get to listen in, it seemed that he landed on “the one.” The whole photo shoot left everyone with that feeling of creating something fantastic together (well, at least we think so).

We debut our own show of sorts in this issue with our redesign of Seattle magazine, under the art direction of design director Matt Cole. It’s hard enough to find people who know how to design print well, let alone someone with magazine editorial experience. But Matt, who has been directing art for Seattle mag for more than a year now, is a fellow magazine junkie and has the necessary design talents in spades. And, he happens to be a really, really nice guy. The redesign is the visual expression of the experience that our entire team has been working hard to craft and deliver: one that takes full advantage of the visual nature of a glossy magazine, something you still won’t find on your smartphone or tablet; an experience that provides a beautiful, lush, photographic respite from the barrage of media messages, together with stories that deliver funny, insightful, entertaining, surprising, deferential and thoughtful information about and reflections on our rapidly changing city. My aim for every issue is to create a “cultural time capsule” of Seattle in these pages.

Welcome to Seattle magazine’s 2017 version—let us know what you think.

 

Follow Us

Microsoft Awards $5M Worth Of Grants To AI innovators

Microsoft Awards $5M Worth Of Grants To AI innovators

The grants are part of the company’s 50th anniversary this year

Microsoft has given 20 organizations $50,000 each as part of its AI for Good grants program. The grants — part of an initiative to celebrate Microsoft’s 50th anniversary this year — recognize organizations for their innovations in artificial intelligence. The organizations — who applied for the grants earlier this year — receive resources to help…

Seattle Commute Survey Shows More Office Activity

Seattle Commute Survey Shows More Office Activity

Both transit travel and driving trips are on the rise

Downtown Seattle foot traffic still isn’t nearly what it was prior to the pandemic, but more people are commuting to offices on a regular basis. The 2024 Commute Seattle Survey finds that both transit travel and drive-alone trips are on the rise as remote working drops. Citywide, the percentage of people reporting that their jobs…

Seattle Pride Seeks Support As Sponsorships Dry Up

Seattle Pride Seeks Support As Sponsorships Dry Up

The nonprofit has launched a fundraising campaign to make up for a $350,000 deficit

For Patti Hearn, no amount is too small. Every little bit helps. Hearn, executive director of Seattle Pride, is working feverishly to bridge a $350,000 fundraising gap because of shifts in corporate sponsorship. Seattle Pride — a nonprofit foundation that produces the annual Seattle Pride Parade and a slew of other events, including Seattle Pride…

Tapped Out

Tapped Out

Washington lawmakers propose doubling beer and wine taxes

You might be paying significantly more for your pint next year.  House Bill 2079, introduced by Representative Lauren Davis (D–District 32), would raise the tax on beer from $4.78 to $9.56 per barrel for most breweries. The bill also proposes doubling taxes on wine from 1 cent to 2 cents per liter and increasing taxes…