Oregon Shakespeare Festival's Allen Elizabeth Theatre. (Photo by Tom Ryder)
Oregon Shakespeare Festival artistic director Nataki Garrett(she/her) had plenty to do on the day the Almeda wildfire started last month. Theatres around the country have been shut down since March due to COVID-19, forcing many companies to move any programming they have online. The end of May brought another major national reckoning for all citizens, including artists, with the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Every system that exists in the United States was placed under a microscope, and theatres have faced their own reckoning, with artists demanding equity in the ranks, and many theatres coming forward with solidarity statements.
Garrett had a full slate of meetings in her calendar for Sept. 8. But as the fire began to threaten Ashland, Ore., after powering through the nearby cities of Phoenix, Talent, and the outskirts of Medford, it was clearly time to change course.
Garrett and her new leadership team, which includes executive director David Schmitz(he/him) and associate artistic director Evren Odcikin (he/him), were ready to mobilize, with their own to-go bags placed in their cars in case of a mandatory evacuation. The specific jobs the three were hired to do would have to wait for another day. Making the theatre companys facilities the epicenter of a refuge from disaster was the companys new priority.
It was very clear to us that our role is to pivot and be supportive of the community we live in, said Schmitz, who came to Ashland on Aug. 24 after serving in multiple positions, including executive director at Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago for 15 years. Like any moment, its critical to articulate focus first. I think we did that, and then it was a matter of figuring out where we could best utilize our resources.
Southern Oregons Rogue Valley is home to a wide-ranging community of citizens. In addition to the hundreds of people who make their employment with the company, which boasts three theatres that seat as few as 270 and as many as 1,190 patrons, it is also home to a large immigrant community and others seeking affordable housing and employment in industries such as agriculture, hotels, and restaurants.
Wildfires are nothing new to the state or to OSF patrons. In 2018, nearly a million acres burned across Oregon, California, and Washington, which caused the cancellation and displacement of a combined 26 performances. The companys Green Show, a free event that runs six nights a week, was also canceled outright that same year. But this has been a West Coast fire season unlike any other in recent memory. Fires have devastated lives, homes, and property. A battering of wildfires in Northern California covered the entire San Francisco Bay Area in an apocalyptic orange hue, an ominous sky that made a valiant attempt on Sept. 9 to camouflage the Golden Gate Bridge.
The day before, the Almeda fire started in Southern Oregon and was driven by high winds and low humidity, ultimately destroying at least 2,357 structures and killing three people in the course of a week, according to the Jackson County Sheriffs Office. Those structures include more than 2,000 residential units: houses, mobile homes, and apartments.
Many of those who lost homes were furloughed in March due to the pandemicpeople who served the OSF community in multiple capacities, as ushers, costume shop workers, and goodwill ambassadors, to name a few. A number of OSFs resources not only went to support the Southern Oregon community at large, but to provide respite for many on their own staff. On the companys website, 22 crowd-sourced fundraisers for various company members are posted for those who want to donate.
The combination of the wildfires and COVID-19 formed a perfect storm for what would have been Garretts inaugural season, which looked beautiful on paper. She had arrived in Ashland with a fantastic theatre pedigree. An alumnus of the prestigious California Institute of the Arts with a MFA in directing, Garrett spent 10 years at her alma mater, serving as the associate artistic director of the CalArts Center for New Performance. Her passion for new work saw her lead world premieres from playwright heavyweights such as Lauren Gunderson, Matthew Lopez, Lauren Yee, Jos Cruz Gonzlez, and Katori Hall. She took the helm of OSF as the sixth artistic director of a company founded in 1935; she is only the second woman, and the first person of color, to hold the post in the organizations history.
Yet her transition to leadership in the midst of a crisis has a precedent of sorts, one rooted in her upbringing in the blue-collar East Bay Area town of Oakland, Calif.
My dad was a Civil Rights worker and I come from a family of organizersseeing them create spaces to enfranchise people got in my blood, said Garrett. All of my influences growing up sculpted me, folded in from my family and neighbors, which informed my upbringing. Theres a responsibility to take care of people around you, and I dont know many people from Oakland that dont feel that way.
Faced with actual natural disaster, of course our approach has to be how we can be of service. That feels very clear in this moment and that part is actually easy.
Odcikin, who left his home in San Francisco and followed Garrett to Ashland to join the Rogue Valley community and live full-time as an Oregonian, is not shy about stating the fact that his post at OSF is a dream job. He admits to being sad that Garretts first season at the helm has gone the way of other shuttered seasons around the theatre community, but his unwavering hopes for the future and the companys current mission do not let him get too down.
Im not going to mince my words, to not say I have to go through moments of mourning for the season we didnt have or the seasons we are not going to do in the next year, said Odcikin, who was born and raised in Turkey and has directing credits across the nation. Having said that, maybe its because I come from a smaller-theatre background, maybe because Im an immigrant, maybe because Im just an eternal optimist, what I want in this position for myself and what I want for the community and nationally is to be of service. Faced with actual natural disaster, of course our approach has to be how we can be of service. That feels very clear in this moment and that part is actually easy.
Service to the community meant turning the entire OSF campus, including theatres and rehearsal rooms, into a location where folks could have access to little things: a place to get inside from the smoke, enjoy a meal, charge their phones. Carpenter Hall, a space often used for events and educational programming, was transformed into a robust donation center open six days a week. The center is thriving, providing a critical lifeline to the community.
In an ironic turn of events, even the pandemic did its part to help. For those who lost housing, the company had plenty of apartment space that was available because visiting artists are not present for the cancelled season. According to Schmitz, the company has been able to house 60 families in those empty units, some of those being long-term situations.
I was on the phone with key members of the community within hours of that fire and we were working together to problem solve, which is the best way to get to know somebody.
While Garrett has not been able to showcase much of who she is as an artistic director just yet for OSFs patrons, her new community is getting to know her in a much more important context, which is simply fine by her.
In my first year, people have no clarity of who I am artistically because I am focused on the community and emergencies which has included the pandemic and the crisis that followed, Garrett said. People have lost everything they had in these fires, and what they get to learn is about who I am as a human and our shared humanity. David, Evren, and I all arrived at the same time, and the people this theatre company brought into the community are as impactful as the art they brought us in to create.
Any time there is a pioneer or a first in a position as high-profile as leading the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, there will be pushback, whether the decisions made are artistic or crisis-related. If its someone who is Black, Indigenous, or a person of color (BIPOC), the pressure is only amplified. Odcikin, who is present for Garretts every artistic and practical move, is bullish on what her appointment means and what he will do to support her. Most critically, he has seen firsthand what this moment has revealed about her character.
I am in a unique position, and its such a privilege that I get to support a Black woman in this sort of position, said Odcikin. And because of the enormity of what were facing, the difficulty of making sure that a woman, a Black woman, really succeeds in this kind of position became very acute for me. Its something Im thinking about a lot these days.
Supporting each other and supporting their adopted community has become the most important aspect of running a theatre company in these times. To that end, building relationships has accelerated rapidly.
I was on the phone with key members of the community within hours of that fire and we were working together to problem solve, which is the best way to get to know somebody, said Schmitz. That really accelerated my onboarding and relationship-building to the community. Im someone that is more known in the community because of all this.
In a normal year, the meetings that Garrett, Schmitz, and Odcikin would have had might have been all about season planning, budgets, and play development. But the needs of the community where theyll make theatre took on a new centrality. And in the intense, emotional week that began in early September, Garrett learned some valuable lessons about the team she assembled.
On a leadership team, you need alignment, and I will say thiscrisis tells on you and basically turns the light on in the room, said Garrett. It shines light in every corner and crevice. The benefit of clarity in crisis is that I learn who is on my team and whos in line with the direction Im trying to head.
David John Chvez (he/him) is a Bay Area-based theatre critic and reporter. He is the vice-chair of the American Theatre Critics Association. Twitter: @davidjchavez.
A just and thriving theatre ecology begins with information for all.If you are able, please join us in this mission by making a donation.As we reckon with the impact of COVID-19, the theatre field needs committed and nuanced journalism. Free and unlimited access toAmericanTheatre.orgis one way that we and our publisher, Theatre Communications Group, are eliminating barriers to crucial resources during this crisis.When you support American Theatreand TCG, you support these emergency resources andour long legacy of quality nonprofit arts journalism.Clickhereto make your fully tax-deductible donation today!
Related
Link:
Taking the Heat, and Leading Through Crises, at Oregon Shakes - American Theatre
- Facing a Nov. 21 deadline, residents at Milner Mobile Home Park harness hope in race to buy the land under their homes - Steamboat Pilot & Today - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- Gadsden County issues mandatory evacuation for all mobile homes ahead of Hurricane Helene - WFSU News - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- Mobile Homes For Rent, Trailer Homes For Rent - RentalAds - September 13th, 2022 [September 13th, 2022]
- Mobile Home Park Residents Sue Their Corporate Landlord : Consider This from NPR - NPR - September 13th, 2022 [September 13th, 2022]
- Three families receive new mobile homes through Webb Co. program - Laredo Morning Times - September 13th, 2022 [September 13th, 2022]
- Corporate landlords are gobbling up mobile home parks and quickly driving up rents heres why the space is so attractive to them - Yahoo Finance - September 13th, 2022 [September 13th, 2022]
- T-Mobile 5G Home Internet Takes Over the Northeast - Business Wire - September 13th, 2022 [September 13th, 2022]
- Innovations In The Pre-Fabricated And Modular Construction Sector - Real Estate - United States - Mondaq - September 13th, 2022 [September 13th, 2022]
- San Diegos recent wildfires a harrowing harbinger of global heating - The San Diego Union-Tribune - September 13th, 2022 [September 13th, 2022]
- Residents of troubled Oasis Mobile Home Park now dealing with power failures amid high temperatures - kuna noticias y kuna radio - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- What's Up With Water August 16, 2022 - Circle of Blue - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- FIRST-PERSON: In the day of trouble | Perspectives | kentuckytoday.com - Kentucky Today - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Leadville was an old mining town until COVID brought the tourists - The Colorado Sun - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Two Years After CZU: Still Tangled in Red Tape | Good Times - Good Times - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Las Vegas mobile homes in high demand as property values, rent continue to soar - FOX5 Las Vegas - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Greensboro couple creates mobile gaming bus to bring the party to you - WGHP FOX8 Greensboro - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- 2022 Best Cheap Homeowners Insurance in Connecticut - Motley Fool - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- National Weather Service confirms 6th tornado in SW Florida on January 16 - WGCU News - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Council to consider 120 townhomes along US 280 - Hoover Sun - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Extra mobile home to be added to traveller site on edge of Banbury area village despite councillors' objections - Banbury Guardian - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- 7 Dividend Stocks to Profit off the Hot Real Estate Market - InvestorPlace - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- How Austin Became One of the Least Affordable Cities in America - The New York Times - December 2nd, 2021 [December 2nd, 2021]
- Journey Is the Culmination of Two Years of Recon A Near-Perfect Mobile Home - autoevolution - December 2nd, 2021 [December 2nd, 2021]
- Remembering the Tornadoes of November 29th and 30th of 2016 - whnt.com - December 2nd, 2021 [December 2nd, 2021]
- 'The occupation is trying to uproot us. Art can bring us back' - +972 Magazine - December 2nd, 2021 [December 2nd, 2021]
- For Sale By Owners Tend to be Rural, Lower-Income Sellers in the U.S. - World Property Journal - December 2nd, 2021 [December 2nd, 2021]
- 5 most common winter bugs in Greater Lansing, and how to keep them out of your home - Lansing State Journal - December 2nd, 2021 [December 2nd, 2021]
- Gov. Edwards announces appointments to state boards - The Advocate - June 16th, 2021 [June 16th, 2021]
- Manufactured Homes and Mobile Homes Market Still Has Room to Grow investigated in the latest research -... - WhaTech - June 16th, 2021 [June 16th, 2021]
- Mobile home residents worried new access road will lead to housing development - expressandstar.com - June 16th, 2021 [June 16th, 2021]
- Prefab construction could be having a renaissance, and WSU's Ryan Smith is at the forefront - Pacific Northwest Inlander - June 16th, 2021 [June 16th, 2021]
- Evicted at age 10: Her family was forced out of their home. She just wanted to keep them together - San Francisco Chronicle - June 16th, 2021 [June 16th, 2021]
- Mountain View looks to congestion pricing to get tech workers out of cars - Mountain View Voice - June 16th, 2021 [June 16th, 2021]
- How these Palestinians thwarted settlers in northern West Bank - Al-Monitor - June 16th, 2021 [June 16th, 2021]
- Mobile Homes Have Come a Long Way. Here's What's Holding Them Back - Motley Fool - December 25th, 2020 [December 25th, 2020]
- One person killed in Anderson mobile home fire - The Herald Bulletin - December 25th, 2020 [December 25th, 2020]
- Man killed in trailer fire identified, remembered as a good neighbor - The Herald Bulletin - December 25th, 2020 [December 25th, 2020]
- New project aims to invest in the community, provide more affordable housing - Wooster Daily Record - December 25th, 2020 [December 25th, 2020]
- Is Winnebago Industries (WGO) Outperforming Other Construction Stocks This Year? - Zacks.com - December 25th, 2020 [December 25th, 2020]
- The tornado that hit Pinellas was the most powerful in 28 years - Tampa Bay Times - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- A rural tribe tried to keep Covid at bay, but a last hurrah seeded an outbreak - KUOW News and Information - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- 'Just Something That Wasnt Right About Him: Student's Killer First Masqueraded As A Witness - Oxygen - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- 190,000 UK properties can't access broadband speeds to meet modern needs - The Guardian - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- Tiny home setups that prove why micro-living will be the next big trend: Part 5 - Yanko Design - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- Pikewood Manor in Elyria clears hurdle in proposed expansion - The Morning Journal - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- The GoSun Dream Tiny Home Solves the Problem of Cramped Space, Will Go Off-Grid - autoevolution - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear: Author Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling on the Free State Project - Vox.com - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- It Happened Here | It Happened Here | greenevillesun.com - Greeneville Sun - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- Eastern Shore Gets New Perspective on Affordable Housing - easternshorepost.com - October 10th, 2020 [October 10th, 2020]
- State fire marshal's office joins investigation into Ohio 101 fire - The News-Messenger - October 10th, 2020 [October 10th, 2020]
- Urban wildfire: When homes are the fuel for a runaway blaze, how do you rebuild a safer community? - The Bakersfield Californian - October 10th, 2020 [October 10th, 2020]
- In Oregon, it's been a year of fanned flames both literal and figurative - Las Vegas Sun - October 10th, 2020 [October 10th, 2020]
- Parts of Vermilion Parish now under mandatory evacuation - The Kaplan Herald - October 7th, 2020 [October 7th, 2020]
- Writers on the Range column: Fanning the flames of hate in Oregon - Glenwood Springs Post Independent - October 7th, 2020 [October 7th, 2020]
- New trailer homes donated to Indio families left only with ashes after devastating fire - KESQ - October 7th, 2020 [October 7th, 2020]
- Mobile Application Market Expected to Grow 18.6% by 2027 - GlobeNewswire - October 7th, 2020 [October 7th, 2020]
- Run-down resort and fish camp to be revitalized - The West Volusia Beacon - October 7th, 2020 [October 7th, 2020]
- Out and About Week of October 5th WLKM Radio 95.9 FM - WLKM Radio - October 7th, 2020 [October 7th, 2020]
- Four Black Men, Lost in Thought - The New York Times - October 7th, 2020 [October 7th, 2020]
- The global market for Home Health Hub is projected to reach US$1.1 billion by 2025 - GlobeNewswire - October 7th, 2020 [October 7th, 2020]
- Finally home: 66 days in the hospital, 6 days on a ventilator - HNGnews.com - October 7th, 2020 [October 7th, 2020]
- Blackstone bets $550M on mobile homes - The Real Deal - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- 12 days in the life of a firefighting crew: Portland-area battalion helps save southern Oregon homes - OregonLive - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Garden City closer to city water access - therepublic.com - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Hundreds Rescued as Floods From Hurricane Sally Hit Florida and Alabama - The New York Times - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana Brace for Hurricane Sally; Cars Lost to Water, Sand in Dauphin Island - The Weather Channel - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- The U.S. Is on the Path to Destruction - Defense One - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Group home for former mental health patients approved in Greensburg - TribLIVE - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Watson rallies in US Open with home, hurricane on mind - USA TODAY - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Two homes in new Bothell neighborhood torched by arsonist - KING5.com - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Tropical Storm Beta: Here's the impact Cameron Parish can expect weeks after Hurricane Laura - Daily Advertiser - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Smoke in your home: How to clear the air, clean up and prevent fires from spreading - oregonlive.com - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Greg Walden says Oregonians in shock from Oregon wildfire devastation but federal response will make differ - OregonLive - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Heartbreak and devastation in Pensacola after Sally: Residents begin to venture out - Pensacola News Journal - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Cantey says racism behind Lumberton City Councils halting of housing project - The Robesonian - September 20th, 2020 [September 20th, 2020]
- Perrin explained the effects of mobile homes in Union Springs - Union Springs Herald - September 10th, 2020 [September 10th, 2020]
- 'I Heard Popping And Houses Blowing Up': Deadly Wildfires Rage On West Coast - NPR - September 10th, 2020 [September 10th, 2020]
- Coachella Valley serial burglar sentenced to more than 17 years - KESQ - September 10th, 2020 [September 10th, 2020]
- Pierson to get mobile-home community for those age 55-plus - The West Volusia Beacon - August 27th, 2020 [August 27th, 2020]
- Public Hearing conducted by Planning Commission | News - Union Springs Herald - August 27th, 2020 [August 27th, 2020]