West Seattle, Washington
28 Tuesday
As we cool down from a recordsetting warm day (73 degrees!) we have a truly cool invitation: The eighth-graders of Our Lady of Guadalupe hope to see you in the audience at their one-night-only performance of “Frozen” this Thursday:
On with the snow! Our OLG 8th graders are thrilled to invite you to their one-night only performance of Frozen! All friends, neighbors and community members welcome!
Where: Our Lady Of Guadalupe School (Walmesley Center & Gym) – located on the stage inside the gymnasium:
3401 SW Myrtle St (34th & SW Myrtle)When: Thursday, March 27th, 7:00 pm (doors open at 6:30 pm)
Show Run Time: approx 40 minutes
Cost: The event is free with a suggested donation of $1 per person. We are accepting donations to help us recoup our costs and to help build our volunteer parent, teacher and student-run program.
Concessions: Snacks and beverages will be available for purchase before and after the performance. Proceeds benefit our 8th grade musical program at Our Lady Of Guadalupe. No outside food or drink, please.
Please come check it out and support our West Seattle community. The show is one night only – don’t miss it!
On this first day of spring, another look ahead to summer – Admiral Music in the Parks will return for another year! You can help ensure the three-concert series has awesome music – here’s the announcement from coordinator Meagan Loftin:
The Admiral Neighborhood Association is excited to bring back AMP: Admiral Music in the Parks (formerly Summer Concerts at Hiawatha) for its 16th year! AMP is a beloved community event that brings neighbors and visitors of all ages out for three weeks of free family-friendly concerts in our beautiful city parks.
Mark your calendars for July 17th, 24th, and 31st and follow us on Instagram @admiralneighborhood for more details in the future.
Join us in creating the best and biggest year for AMP yet! Your support funds local musicians while also providing free community programming to everyone in our neighborhood.
AMPlify your summer and consider donating here today!
Last year’s biggest concert was the series finale, The Abbagraphs at Belvidere Park (WSB coverage here).
Siena Jeakle enjoys living in L.A., but says she’s a West Seattleite at heart. This Friday she’ll be performing close to home – at Seattle Center’s Vera Project (305 Harrison) as a part of LA-based puppet sketch comedy group Freak Nature Puppets, sharing the bill with musical artist Worn-Tin.
(Photo courtesy Siena Jeakle, above left with fellow members of Freak Nature Puppets)
Jeakle grew up in West Seattle, before moving after high school. She says she takes every chance to visit, and is excited to be back in Seattle on tour. “I love the people, I love the weather, I love the vibes. West Seattle is my Seattle,” she said.
We have featured Siena before on WSB for her podcast Tossed Popcorn, which she described as “A comedy podcast about classic movies.” She and co-host Lianna Holston won iHeart Radio’s ‘Next Great Podcast’ award in 2020. You can find links to the podcast here.
Jeakle describes the upcoming performance as an “interactive world of mischief and magic”: “Essentially, we make large DIY puppet creations and feature them in comedy sketches or concerts.”
While she’s here, Jeakle plans to show the rest of her bandmates around Alki Beach and Lincoln Park, which she visits whenever she’s in the area. “I need to prove to them the Pacific Northwest is the best place in the world,” she said.
The group has performed alongside musicians such as Childish Gambino and comedians such as Jack Black Their upcoming tour will take them from Costa Mesa to Seattle and Portland, and then back to Los Angeles. You can get tickets to the 7 pm Friday show in Seattle here.
(Photo courtesy Brenda Walden, who is at right above with artist Jamie Allaire and city rep Nathan, who installed the plaque)
By Hayden Yu Andersen
Reporting for West Seattle Blog
A plaque put up this morning at the stairway on Admiral Way at 49th SW was the finishing touch for a weeks-long community mural project.
The stairway had only been complete for a few months before it was hit with graffiti vandalism, recalled area resident Brenda Walden. In response, Walden reached out to the City of Seattle with the idea to fight the vandalism with art. “Not only did I want to do something that celebrated the Alki community, I wanted it to be a welcome sign for folks who are coming into Alki,” which is just downhill from the mural site.
The mural, titled “Fun in the Sun at Alki,” blends more than a dozen colors in a portrait of Alki Beach with the mountains behind it and, of course, orcas. The design, created by local artist Jamie Allaire, was voted on by the community. The project was supported by the City of Seattle and A Cleaner Alki, the renowned volunteer group that aims to create a “cleaner, safer, more welcoming community in which to live.”
More than 30 volunteers showed up to help paint, some as young as four years old. “It was awesome to see such an incredible and positive response to the mural,” said Walden.
Allaire, a former teacher and set designer, said she drew on her experience to help direct the project and keep every volunteer engaged. “It was important to us that people of all skill levels and ages could contribute,” Allaire said. The mural was first sketched out in chalk, with sections labeled by numbers, corresponding to a color. Then, volunteers could fill in the blanks using the listed color, almost like a coloring book.
In the future, Walden and Allaire hope to paint the stairs themselves, allowing the mural to stretch all the way up the hill. According to Walden, they’re “just waiting for a dry day to do it.”
To prevent graffiti vandalism from damaging the mural, it has been given a special anti-graffiti coating, which allows paint to be safely cleaned off without harming the mural underneath. Walden and Allaire hope this will ensure the mural stays up for as long as possible, serving as both community artwork, and a visual welcome to people headed for the Alki area.
For more information about Jamie Allaire’s artwork, you can find her website here.
You can imagine that St. Patrick’s Day is busy for dancers from West Seattle-based Comerford School of Irish Dance. More than a dozen of the school’s students spent much of the day performing, including this stop this afternoon at the Center for Active Living in The Junction, where a standing-room-only crowd filled the upstairs hall:
The Comerford School’s Mike Nagan told the audience a bit about the school, which holds classes Tuesdays and Thursdays at the West Seattle VFW Hall in The Triangle (3601 SW Alaska).
Thanks to Steven Rice for the photo of the Space Needle hosting tonight’s GuideStar laser-art installation, as previewed here earlier this week. If you had trouble seeing it from this side of the bay, the photo may hint at a reason why – the light beams were slender. Converge Media streamed the show, including spoken word and music beneath the Needle – here’s the recording:
GuideStar was created by New York-based artists Mendi + Keith Obadike, commissioned by Seattle’s Wa Na Wari.
Looking ahead to this weekend, Holy Rosary Catholic Church will again be the setting for a one-of-a-kind concert, this time by the Northwest Symphony Orchestra, which has been sponsoring WSB this week to amplify the announcement. The orchestra, conducted by Anthony Spain, will be joined by singers on Saturday (March 15) to present “Music for the Soul,” a program of both instrumental and choral music that includes a world-premiere arrangement:
*Stabat Mater- Antonin Dvorak
With ChoralSounds Northwest
Soloists- Alexandra Picard, Rose Beattie, Brendan Tuohy, Charles Robert Stephens*Bogoroditse Devo (Hail Mary, Full of Grace)- Sergei Rachmaninoff – arranged for brass ensemble by Jon Boysen (world premiere)
*Du bist die Ruh- Franz Schubert
William Farmer, French Horn soloist
That’s just part of the program planned for the concert starting at 8 pm Saturday. Tickets are available online. The venue is at 42nd/Genesee.
5:20 PM: Two days after someone vandalized the sea-life mural on Alki Beach’s relatively new restroom building, artist Patrick “Dozfy” Nguyen was there restoring it today, as he told us he likely would do. The photos are courtesy of Alki resident Cami, who also shared her photo of the extensive damage shortly after it was done.
Dozfy painted the mural last June.
5:20 PM: Dozfy just sent post-restoration photos too, including this one showing two sides:
This Sunday, the Evergreen Ensemble brings their vocal artistry back to West Seattle, after sponsoring WSB this week to amplify the invitation to prospective concertgoers. They’re also offering a discount code that’ll get you 30 percent off the ticket price! Here’s the announcement:
Evergreen Ensemble Concert
REQUIEMMarch 9 – 3:00 pm, Holy Rosary Catholic Church (4139 42nd Ave SW)
evergreenensemble.com/requiemFor 30% off your ticket order, use the discount code REQUIEM30
Come hear Evergreen Ensemble’s final solo concert series of their 2024-2025 season; a stirring program that looks at the ways we confront death and tragedy through our music, and how despite the experiences of pain and despair, we can move forward with resiliency, grace, and hope.
The concert features two larger works for unaccompanied choir. Dale Trumbore‘s How to Go On was written following the death of a loved one for poet Barbara Crooker and asks, “How can we go on, knowing the end of the story?” The piece answers the question in eight movements that range from questioning and doubt, to introspection, and to an acceptance of mortality. Herbert Howells’ timeless Requiem was famously set aside after the untimely death of his 9-year-old son and was not performed for over 45 years before he was convinced to release it, at which point it quickly was recognized as one of the great choral masterpieces of the 20th century.
The program will close with a West-coast premiere of a beautiful piece titled Dawn by WA composer John Muehleisen, originally commissioned as a companion piece to the Howells. Finally, the concert will end with a beautiful set of African American Spirituals, which of course give us a message of struggle and perseverance from a group of people dealing with unspeakable worldly oppression, and who still call to us all to move forward in hope and love.
They hope the concert offers people some relief from any stress, anxiety, or grief they may be experiencing, and that they can look forward to at least an hour and a half with us where they can be in community and hear music that can soothe the soul and send them back into the world refreshed and hopeful!
For more information or to purchase tickets you can visit evergreenensemble.com/requiem or purchase your tickets at the door. For anyone ordering tickets in advance, you can use the discount code REQUIEM30 for 30% off your order!
You can learn more about the Evergreen Ensemble here.
An arts program serving two schools has just extended its fundraiser – here’s the donation invitation we were asked to share with you:
Support Denny-Sealth Performing Arts!
We are inviting all community members to use the Snapraise links below to support the performing arts at Denny International Middle School and Chief Sealth International High School. Our amazing performing arts programs need your support to provide coaching, instruments, uniforms, maintenance and repair, and performance/competition opportunities for students.
We just passed the $10,000 mark with a goal of $15,000. Help us reach our goal!
Last day to contribute is Tuesday, March 11!
Denny International Middle School – https://raise.snap.app/donate/denny-middle-school-music-booster-2025
Chief Sealth IHS – https://raise.snap.app/donate/chief-sealth-intl-music-booster-2025
If you are a local business or community member wondering how you can support our programs directly, please contact DSPA co-chairs, Mary Wiener (mary_r_wiener@yahoo.com) and Jaeney Hoene (jaeney@me.com)
One week from today, Tibbetts United Methodist Church in West Seattle plans a tribute to the organist who’s been at their keyboard for 44 years – here’s the announcement, with some history:
(Photo courtesy John Van Lierop Jr.)
On Sunday, March 2, for the 10:00 am service, Tibbetts United Methodist Church, 3940 41st Ave SW, will honor John Van Lierop Jr’s 44 years of service as their organist. The church was not able to recognize John’s 40th year of service due to the Covid outbreak.
John started his organ playing in the church that his Father was minister of in Portland, Oregon, Hope Presbyterian Church, in the mid-’60s. His first official organ position was at Centenary-Wilbur Methodist Church in 1966 while he was a student at Lewis and Clark College in Portland. From there, John played the organ in churches in Spokane and Seattle, with his previous organist position prior to coming to Tibbetts being Mt. Baker Park Presbyterian Church in Seattle, where he served 7 years.
When John came to Tibbetts, the organ was a 2 Manuel Balcom & Vaughn pipe organ. Due to upkeep costs on that organ and other issues, Tibbetts decided to replace it with an electronic organ. After a successful fundraising campaign, a 3 Manuel Allen Digital Organ was purchased and installed in late 1989. The Dedication Recital was held in 1990, with John at the organ.
In addition to his usual organ playing in church and choir accompanying, John enjoys doing piano/organ duets during the church services. His piano partner is the talented Shirley Lindberg, who happens to be the director of the bell choirs at Tibbetts, in addition to directing the Bells of the Sound, a professional bell group based in Seattle. During these last 44 years at Tibbetts, John has worked under 7 ministers and 10 choir directors. He enjoys using the Tibbetts sanctuary with its 7-foot Steinway grand piano for his student piano recitals in Winter and Spring. Also, the Annual Guild Piano Auditions are held in church’s sanctuary.
John doesn’t plan on retiring quite yet from being the organist at Tibbetts but hopes to stay a little while longer.
Summer will be full of creative fun at Mode Music and Performing Arts and sibling Mode Music Studios (WSB sponsor) in North Delridge! Registration is open for summer camps – here for example is the MMPA schedule:
Graze that and you’ll see camps including Stage Combat, D&D, more. Go here to learn more about the camps.
At Mode Music Studios, rock-band camps are the heart of the summer, with sessions for ages 6-12 and for ages 13+ – learn about those, and register, by going here!
Story and photos by Aspen Anderson
Reporting for West Seattle Blog
Wander into Caffe Ladro in south Morgan Junction one of these chilly mornings, and you’ll find Eleanor Doughty‘s West Seattle in watercolor.
Lincoln Park at sunset. The Fauntleroy ferry terminal, boats coming and going. The neon glow of Luna Park Café. These familiar West Seattle landmarks, captured in rich, atmospheric layers of watercolor and ink, currently line the walls at 7011 California SW.
“My goal is helping people appreciate the places around where they are, even if they’re not a fantastic postcard view,” Doughty said.
Doughty is a Seattle-based illustrator whose work has a distinct, almost-retro quality — perhaps because she sketches on-site, absorbing the essence of a place rather than simply replicating it.
“All of these are drawn on location,” she said. “You are capturing a series of moments and trying to consolidate all of that into one picture… it’s a journal, it’s capturing a moment in time.”
Her favorite pieces on display include paintings of Lincoln Park, where she sketched along the water, and a standout of the Fauntleroy ferry terminal — layered with different boats as they arrived and departed.
“Seeing the place that you love captured in a painting — it makes people emotional,” she said.
Doughty has painted cities around the world, but West Seattle is a recent addition to her collection. Whether sketching ferry docks or neighborhood cafés, she says painting in real time offers a depth that photography cannot.
“Everyone has a camera in their pocket, but sitting on location for an hour or more gives the painting significance,” she said. “I found that the more you tap into what makes you feel something, rather than what you’re literally seeing, the more interesting the painting looks.”
Doughty’s West Seattle paintings are on display and available for purchase at Caffe Ladro, which is open daily from 6:30 am to 6 pm.
6:24 PM: Student-created pottery is part of what you’ll see if you visit Chief Sealth International High School (2600 SW Thistle) for tonight’s ArtsWalk, on until 8 pm. Visual and performing arts showcases are happening in multiple spaces until everyone gathers in the theater for the “grand finale” at 7:30 pm.
It’s also a fundraiser for the school’s arts programs. More to come!
ADDED: WSB’s Aspen Anderson stopped in for a little jazz …
And poetry:
The greeters were Coral Dixon, Lida Henrikson, and Ronin Mann:
In addition to the regular West Seattle Art Walk tomorrow night (Thursday, February 13), which we’ll be previewing later today, you’re invited to an ArtsWalk at Chief Sealth International High School, two hours full of student performances:
Chief Sealth IHS ArtsWalk
Thursday, February 13, 6:00-8:00Kick off your Valentine’s weekend with an evening of music, poetry, drama, and more music! Arrive at Chief Sealth anytime between 6:00 and 7:30, grab some refreshment, and wander from room to room, taking in band, choir, and orchestra ensembles, performance poetry, and drama improv, capped off at the end of the night by a finale in the auditorium! FREE Admission.
The school is at 2600 SW Thistle.
Local writer Julia Douthwaite Viglione sent the invitation to the next free “Write YOUR Story“ for 7- to 11-year-olds:
Write YOUR Story Spring 2025
Enrolling now
Theme: Defiance and Protest!Who is invited? People age 7-11 who like stories
When? Every Wednesday, March 5—May 7, 2025, 4:30—5:30 pm
Where? Upstairs activity room, Curious Kidstuff toy store, 4740 California Ave SW
Write YOUR Story, est. 2012, is a free workshop led by local writers for local kids
“We read, we write, and we have a lot of fun.”For info or to enroll, contact: juliawsea@gmail.com
We will read The Queen Always Wanted to Dance and Papagayo, The Mischief Maker: two tales that show how to defy oppression in joyous community!
Received via postal mail:
Want to play handbells?
The West Side Ringers are looking for people to ring English Handbells. No experience is necessary, as we are open to all skill levels. We meet on Wednesdays from 3:30 to 5 pm. Our group currently plays at retirement communities as a service to seniors.
If interested, send an email to anjdroege@gmail.com
(WSB video/photos)
The Seattle Chinese Garden‘s Lunar New Year festival today not only had a lion-dance “workshop” and children’s crafts…
… it also had a visit from Mayor Bruce Harrell, who spoke for five minutes, preceding a proclamation with a spirited defense of diversity, equity, and inclusion, currently under federal siege:
As the mayor pointed out, north-end City Councilmember Dan Strauss – who has visited Seattle’s Chinese sister city Chongqing, home to the garden’s stylistic inspiration – was also at the festival, which offered music and games as well. The garden’s regular visiting hours are here.
Photos by Dave Gershgorn for West Seattle Blog
(Musicians Fin McGinty, Loch Liddell, Ana Geraghty play while dancers including Abu Abdirahman, Xen Grey, Theo Mohundro, Clara Peak, Mia Herbig perform)
This was the second Lunar New Year that West Seattle High School‘s AAPI Club and Chinese Program invited the community to a big party. Tonight’s celebration started with performances in the WSHS Theater:
(Ribbon dancer Indigo Ewing, with musicians Jettson Stone on Gu Zheng, left, and Henry Oprinsky on Pi Pa)
(Martial-arts demonstration by Ambrose Pho-Tung from Evergreen Tang Soo Do)
Then it was on to the Commons for food and drink:
Games too:
And a picture-perfect photo booth:
This was the second of our area’s three big Lunar New Year events to which community members were invited – the third one is tomorrow at the Seattle Chinese Garden.
The latest wave of business openings includes a sizable dose of the arts. Today, we have news that Low Tide Arts is about to open a studio in the Fauntleroy Church building, with a “studiowarming” chance to visit this weekend. The founder, teaching artist Kim Hamlet (right), says Low Tide Arts will be a “nonprofit community art studio … offering art classes, workshops, and open studio hours for youth and adults.” Kim is a West Seattle resident who “spent 15 years working as a graphic designer before transitioning to teaching art and founding Low Tide Arts.” The motivation for Kim’s first business? “The goal of giving back to the creative community here in West Seattle.” You can visit Saturday (February 1) between 11 am to 5 pm. Fauntleroy Church is at 9140 California SW.
That’s the trailer for the current season of the Byrd Ensemble, which is bringing its vocal artistry back to West Seattle this Saturday, and sponsoring WSB for the week to amplify the announcement. In addition, they’re offering a ticket deal again – a special code to get 30 percent off. But first, let’s talk about the concert. This time, the vocal group directed by Markdavin Obenza is presenting Renaissance music from Scotland and England, at 7:30 pm Saturday (February 1) at Holy Rosary Catholic Church (4139 42nd SW). Here’s how the program is described:
The program showcases English and Scottish Renaissance music from the Carver Choirbook, a unique 16th-century collection that is one of Scotland’s only surviving sources of Renaissance polyphony. In addition to the Renaissance works are three contemporary pieces by Scottish composer James MacMillan and English composer Alexander Campkin.
You’ll find more details here. For tickets, go here, and be sure to enter the code WSBLOG30 at checkout to get the discount.
Tomorrow (Wednesday, January 29) is the day our state will officially observe Lunar New Year. We’ve received announcements about three celebrations coming up in West Seattle as the Year of the Snake begins:
(2023 photo courtesy Vietnamese Cultural Center of West Seattle)
SATURDAY, VIETNAMESE CULTURAL CENTER: The center at 2236 SW Orchard welcomes everyone to join its Vietnamese New Year celebration this Saturday (February 1), noon-3 pm, with festivities including a lion dance and flag-raising.
FEBRUARY 7, WEST SEATTLE HIGH SCHOOL: For the second year, the WSHS AAPI Club and Chinese Program are presenting a Lunar New Year celebration, promising food, music, and culture, 7-8:30 pm in the school’s commons (3000 California SW).
FEBRUARY 8, SEATTLE CHINESE GARDEN: The garden just north of the South Seattle College campus (6000 16th SW) promises a Lunar New Year Festival, with performances and other activities, 11 am-3 pm. Free, but $6 donation appreciated.
Barely a month after Funky Janes Consignment closed at 4455 California SW, the space has a new tenant. Signs in the window announce that Emerald City Drama Club will be there soon. We talked with proprietor Jessie Kuehm this afternoon by phone to find out more about her plans. She’s been teaching performing arts for about 12 years, she told us, but this will be her first standalone location. Her classes will be mostly for kids K-8; along with classes in acting, musical theater, and moviemaking, she also offers summer camps and even “D&D campaigns.” (As in Dungeons & Dragons.) If you have one or more kids in school locally, you might know Jessie already – she’s directing the Alki Elementary musical, for one, and teaching afterschool enrichment at some other schools.
Why a storefront? Jessie is hoping to take advantage of the “open space,” perhaps even install a curtain so Emerald City Drama Club can do some performances for students’ families, though she might also stage performances at larger West Seattle venues. And she also has ideas about turning it into a “third space for young people” – somewhere to hang out, maybe events like movie nights and book clubs. Right now, she’s expecting to be in the space teaching classes by the end of March for starters. “I’m so excited to have this spot!” she told us, especially because it’s within walking distance of her West Seattle home.
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