Seattle Now & Then: Annex Theatre’s 40th anniversary

(click to enlarge photos)

THEN: Brian Finney, left, and Paul Giamatti in “Some Things You Need to Know Before the World Ends: A Final Evening with the Illuminati” by Eddie Lee at Annex Theatre in Seattle’s Belltown neighborhood, circa 1990. Giamatti considers Finney “one of the greatest actors I’ve ever known.” (Courtesy Annex Theatre)
NOW: On the set of “Disappearance at the Rocky Mountain Leatherdyke Snowpicnic,” a recent show at Annex Theatre, are founders and current stewards. From left: Justin Lauer, Chris Jeffries, Allison Narver, Lucien Oberleitner and Stephen McCandless. (Jean Sherrard)

Published in The Seattle Times online on July 9, 2026
and in Pacific NW Magazine of the printed Times on July 12, 2026

Annex Theatre collective digs up onstage treasure for 40-plus years
By Jean Sherrard

When actor Paul Giamatti was working with film director Paul Mazursky — on the 1998 HBO biopic “Winchell” — he mentioned his formative years in Seattle. Mazursky stopped him.

Every artist, Mazursky said, has a Seattle in their past — that singular place where everything came together, pure and unfettered, before the world got complicated.

The Annex logo, designed by future Town Hall Artistic Director Wier Harmon, who also acted with the company

For Giamatti, it was literally Seattle, more specifically, a second-floor walk-up on Fourth Avenue in Belltown, where an adventurous collective called Annex Theatre was doing things no one else dared to do.

“It gave me everything,” he says. “I’m not a guy who uses the word ‘magical’ a lot. But it really was.”

He wasn’t alone. Starting in 1986, the boards at Annex boasted an

The Annex Theatre marquee at 1916 Fourth Ave., Seattle, in the early 1990s. For 14 years, the second-floor former Fred Astaire Dance Studio hosted dozens of world premieres and post-show rock concerts.

improbable roster: playwrights whose words later helped bring to life the Netflix series “Stranger Things” (Karl Gajdusek) and the musical “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark” (Glen Berger); Wier Harman, who went on to lead Town Hall Seattle; and Allison Narver, who continues to direct plays in major theaters across the country. As Annex’s artistic director from 1989 to 1995, she habitually booked bands nobody had heard of.

“We told audiences they had to watch the play first,” Narver says. “Then they could stay for the music.”

The bands included Nirvana.

It was, as celebrated composer and musician Chris Jeffries puts it, “a pirate ship.” Everyone divvied up equal shares of buried treasure — and the risk.

In the 1980s and ’90s, Seattle was less expensive, failure meant setback rather than ruin, and the city was alive with scrappy little black-box theaters in garages, walkups and former funeral homes.

From a pact made by Bainbridge Island high school students who scattered to colleges with a promise to return with recruits, Annex was born.

Somehow, the pact endured. Recently, founders and current stewards gathered on the Annex stage to compare notes across 40

Chris Jeffries and Allison Narver, who is pointing toward Annex’s former second-floor Belltown location. Narver went on to serve as resident director of “The Lion King” on Broadway and in London, then as artistic director of the Empty Space Theatre, and recently directed “Mary Jane” at Seattle Rep. (Jean Sherrard)

years. Their spirit, remarkably, is unbroken. The collective, on Capitol Hill since 2007, the model endures. New plays are still chosen by company vote. The artistic director, managing director and marketing director are still volunteers, each holding down a full-time job elsewhere while running Annex.

Question is, does Seattle still have a “Seattle?”

The troupe remains passionate about presenting new plays on a shoestring, but funding sources have dried up, audiences are smaller since COVID, and live theater everywhere is under siege. As managing director Stephen McCandless puts it, it’s easier to stay home and watch a rerun of “The Office.”

Lucien Oberleitner, Justin Lauer and Stephen McCandless onstage

Going forward, Narver says, takes bravery. The same bravery that built something worth inheriting.

“If this is a pirate ship,” says Artistic Director Lucien Oberleitner, “there’s a lot of mercy on the high seas.”

WEB EXTRAS

For our narrated 360 degree video, click here.

To hear Paul Giamatti reflecting on his magical time in Seattle at the Annex, click on the link right below.

 

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.