There are a number of playwriting groups around town that toil together in support of new work. Some of them are kind of class-based, like Freehold Studios and a spin-off of a group called Parley (led by Freehold instructor Rebecca Tourino Collingsworth). Some of them are newer iterations where one applies to be part of a small group supported by a theater (SeattleRepertory’s Writers Group, and a musical writing group at 5th AvenueTheatre).
There are three main large-group play writing entities in
town. Seattle Playwrights Studio meets a couple of Mondays per month at BurienActors Theatre. They are presenting some shorts in a weekend there, from July
24-26. Information about joining them is sketchy after a bit of a reorg, but Scot Bastian reports that there is no longer a monthly contribution (it had been about $5) and the group is open to new members.
WARP (Writers and Actors Reading and Performing) claims the
title of longest running playwright support group in town. They create three
shorts festivals a year and meet almost every Tuesday night at Stone Soup
Theatre. They ask for donations for space rental.
They also invite anyone who is at all interested and do not
require any prior experience, either to come and be a reader for plays
presented that evening, or for being established in any way as a playwright.
So, they are clearly the most inclusive, and a great place to start, if you’re
looking for a welcoming place to get your feet wet. More information at: http://warptheatre.org/about-warp.html
Seattle Playwrights Circle, which I am a member of, is open
to people who have a certain (fairly minimal) amount of play writing experience
and have had a play or two presented on stage somewhere. We generally have two
“table reads” a month at a local library on Sunday afternoons during the
“school year” and also in fall/winter, monthly public readings at Elliott Bay
Bookstore.