Food & Drink

15 Best Things To Do in Seattle in March 2019

Our hand-picked list of best bets for entertainment this month

By Gavin Borchert February 25, 2019

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This article originally appeared in the March 2019 issue of Seattle magazine.

This article appears in print in the March 2019 issue. Click here to subscribe.

DANCE
A.I.M
3/29–3/30
Every artist claims to draw from diverse influences, but even so, few are as widely disparate as those of Pittsburgh-born choreographer Kyle Abraham, whose inspirations include baroque opera and street dance, Merce Cunningham and N.W.A. The MacArthur “genius” grant recipient brings his NYC-based troupe A.I.M (Abraham in Motion) to the Moore for a two-night stand of his solo and ensemble works. 8 p.m. Prices vary. The Moore Theatre, downtown, 1932 Second Ave.; 206.467.5510; stgpresents.org

COMEDY
Tiffany Haddish
3/21
Stand-up, sitcoms, animation voice work, memoir writing, SNL hosting and movie work (including her breakout role in Girls Trip, the top-grossing comedy of 2017): Haddish has moved from a foster care upbringing in South Central Los Angeles (which she often draws on in her act) to what she is today—the hottest thing in comedy. 7 p.m. Prices vary. Paramount Theatre, downtown, 911 Pine St.; 206.682.1414; stgpresents.org

THEATER
A Doll’s House, Part 2
3/15–4/28
What happened after Nora Helmer walked out on her husband at the end of Henrik Ibsen’s 1879 A Doll’s House, an ending that dumbfounded and enraged Europe? This season, Seattle Rep is one of 27 theaters nationwide (!) to show us by staging Lucas Hnath’s 2017 play, in which Nora returns, asks for a divorce and faces recriminations for her act. Times and prices vary. Seattle Repertory Theatre, Seattle Center, 155 Mercer St.; 206.443.2222

WORDS
Dean Baquet & Marty Baron
3/5
Asked on the air by Stephen Colbert what it was like to be vilified by the president, New York Times executive editor Baquet made lemonade: “The last year has been energizing for journalism,” he said, especially after a long and difficult period of economic retrenchment, and “all of a sudden I feel like people understand what we do and why what we do is important.” To reflect further on journalism’s role these days, he’ll be joined by Baron, executive editor of The Washington Post. 7:30 p.m. Prices vary. Benaroya Hall, downtown, 200 University St.; 206.621.2230; lectures.org

FILM
ByDesign
3/15–3/17
This annual festival, presented in collaboration with the American Institute of Architects’ Design in Public initiative, showcases films and presentations about architecture and design—visual culture of all kinds, really. Expect short- and feature-length screenings and performances, workshops and a design bazaar. Design-minded, artisan-crazed viewers shouldn’t miss opening night’s screening of Pablo Pivetta’s Endless Letterpress, about the resurgence of typesetting. Times and prices vary. Northwest Film Forum, Capitol Hill, 1515 12th Ave.; 206.329.2629

Dancer Kim Lusk appears in Peggy Piacenza’s sweet, rotten, sweet video installation. Photo by Jazzy Photo

DANCE
Peggy Piacenza
3/7–3/31
“I love bringing things from my prior work into my current work, because I’m not done exploring those images,” said veteran Seattle choreographer Peggy Piacenza during the creation of her 2017 piece The Event—and she still isn’t done, working material from The Event into a new format: a video installation titled sweet, rotten, sweet. It’ll be on view, for free, Thursday–Sunday, March 7–31. On selected days (March 16–17, 23–24, 29–30), Piacenza, who directed the video and choreographed its cast of four local dancers—Kim Lusk, Ezra Dickinson, Wade Madsen and Amelia Weber—but is not performing herself, will present a live performance including those dancers—a “visceral communal ritual”—for an intimate audience of only 25. Times and prices vary. Bonfire Gallery, Pioneer Square, 603 S Main St.; 206.790.1073

MUSIC
Emerson String Quartet
3/6
How often do artists know that their final work, while they’re working on it, is their final work? The ending of Benjamin Britten’s Third String Quartet, written in the fall of 1975, two years after a heart operation, offers no clue; its closing gesture seems to be left weirdly hanging in midair—a sort of a sonic semicolon—yet he lived a year more before ultimately succumbing to heart failure. One of the best quartets working today, ESQ’s strength, precision, clarity and insight reveal the soul of everything it plays; they’ll perform the Britten alongside music by Beethoven and Samuel Barber. 7:30 p.m. Prices vary. Meany Center, University of Washington, 4140 George Washington Lane NE; 206.543.4880

WORDS
Steve Wozniak
3/25
How’s this for a one-of-a-kind résumé? Wozniak was on Season 8 of Dancing with the Stars; he’s corresponded extensively with Kathy Griffin (as published in her memoir Official Book Club Selection); and he was a character in The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs, performed last month at Seattle Opera. Should be an interesting talk! (His day job has to do with computers or some such.) 7:30 p.m. Prices vary. McCaw Hall, Seattle Center, 321 Mercer St.; 206.733.9725; uniquelives.com

COMEDY
Aziz Ansari
3/18–3/19
Do you remember when Ansari, young and eager, performed at Bumbershoot in 2009? From there it took him only six years of stand-up to sell out Madison Square Garden, all while keeping up a sitcom career: a stint on Parks and Recreation, which led to an equally acclaimed starring role on the current Master of None, which he created. A #MeToo moment last year was poised to put it all in jeopardy, but the situation ultimately revealed the movement’s murkier areas, and given these two sold-out dates—an odd ticket or two still may be available, if you’re willing to sit alone—Seattle seems ready to accept him once again. 7:30 p.m. SOLD OUT. Paramount Theatre, downtown, 911 Pine St.; 206.682.1414; stgpresents.org

WORDS
Hugo Literary Series
3/15
Hugo House likes to commission new work from writers and musicians by giving them a shared theme and seeing what diverse points of view pop up. With Franz Kafka’s novella The Metamorphosis as the assigned inspiration for this night, we’ll hear fiction writer Benjamin Percy, journalist and author Vanessa Hua, poet Keetje Kuipers and singer-songwriter SassyBlack ponder what it would like to be an insect. 7:30 p.m. Prices vary. Hugo House, Capitol Hill, 1634 11th Ave.; 206.322.7030

Tiler Peck, a principal dancer at New York City Ballet who originated the role of Marie in Little Dancer, also stars in the revamped production, Marie, debuting in Seattle this month. Photo by Matt Karas

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