The Denver Gazette

Curious Theatre’s founder hands over his creation in historic fashion.

Curious Theatre founder announces succession plan

BY JOHN MOORE The Denver Gazette

Chip Walton, who has built Curious Theatre from nothing into Colorado’s most accomplished and socially relevant homegrown theater company of the past quarter century, has announced both his resignation and the historic appointment of longtime company member Jada Suzanne Dixon as the company’s new Artistic Director.

Walton put Curious on the national theater map with its spectacular rise from a grassroots start-up in 1997 into the nationally regarded Off-Broadway-scale company it is today. He may well go down as the most significant figure in Colorado theater over the past 25 years.

Walton’s programming mantra has been offering stories that are new to Denver, and during his tenure, Curious has produced 21 world premieres and 82 regional premieres. “I don’t want to do shows that have already been done in the area, or that don’t fulfill our mission-driven goal that it must stimulate conversation,” Walton

said in a previous interview.

“Chip has produced a legacy that will be hard to match in Colorado theater both in terms of the number of productions and certainly in the quality of work,” said Jim Steinberg,

President of the company’s board of directors.

The changes take full effect after a transition year that will celebrate the company’s 25 years in Denver, though Dixon will assume her new title this August. Walton will then serve as an artistic and business consultant for the company and will direct the final show of the 2022-23 season, “On the Exhale,” a one-woman play starring his wife, Dee Covington.

After that, Walton is reportedly moving to Mexico with Covington, also a founding Curious company member and its Education Director. She’s an actor, director and creator of Curious’ nationally renowned Curious New Voices, a development program for playwrights age 15-22.

“It’s been an amazing gift to have had the opportunity, along with Dee and so many other amazing Curious artists and supporters, to conjure, to create, and to cultivate Curious Theatre Company,” Walton said in a statement. “And now, it is time to cel

ebrate.”

Dixon is currently both starring in Curious’ new production of “Fireflies” and directing the Arvada Center’s family drama “Stick Fly,” which made her the first Black female director in that theater company’s 46-year history.

“I’m looking forward to leading Curious into the next quarter-century of bold theatrical work,” Dixon said. She promised a 25th anniversary season “filled with amazing plays, celebrations of our accomplishments and vision for the future.”

Her appointment makes her not only the first person of color in a full-time leadership position at Curious, but also the first woman of color to serve as Artistic Director of a Denver metro theater company she did not found. Talking with the Denver Gazette in March, Dixon said: “This is the time for the Colorado theater community to be looking inward and not only asking the tough questions, but to answer them – and then act accordingly.”

Lynne Collins, who hired Dixon to direct “Stick Fly” at the Arvada Center and who was just named Artistic Director of Theatre there, called Dixon’s selection “an excellent handoff.”

“I think Jada is a fabulous theatermaker and a real collaborator – both in the creation of art and in trying to steer through those tricky areas related to equity and diversity,” said Collins, who will be absorbing the duties of longtime Arvada Center artistic leader Rod Lansberry. “She’s not agenda-driven; she’s solution-driven. It’s just a fabulous choice. Yay to the ladies.”

Steinberg called Dixon “a wonderful choice” because she is a 10-year company member and knows both the organization and its audience. “It makes perfect sense for the company, but I also personally think it’s great for the community because she has such deep roots here. This is a win-win for Curious and for Denver.”

When the “We See You, White American Theatre” movement put companies across the country on notice following the 2020 George Floyd police murder, Curious already was way ahead of the curve. From the start, Walton had created Curious as a home for fearless political and progressive new works focused on social justice and equality.

Cases in point: The Civil War drama “The Whipping Man,” which won a record seven Henry Awards in 2014 and, two years later, “White Guy on the Bus,” starring Dixon. In 2019, Curious staged “Pass Over,” a modern, Black variation on “Waiting for Godot,” two years before the celebrated play became the toast of Broadway.

Over the past 10 years, 75 percent of Curious’ plays have been written by playwrights of color, LGBTQIA+ playwrights, or female playwrights, according to data provided by Business Manager Jeannene Bragg.

At its best, Curious’ programming under Walton has been provocative, risk-taking, infuriating, harrowing and groundbreaking. Curious was first to stage four straight Tony-winning Best Plays: “Proof,” “The Goat,” “I

Am My Own Wife” and “Take Me Out,” which imagined the violent fallout should a baseball superstar ever come out as gay.

For all its work for social justice over the years, though, Curious has been essentially an allied White theater company — a notion that fundamentally changes with Dixon now taking the helm.

Dixon, a winner of three True West Awards for her acting, broke into directing with “Fairfield” at Miners Alley Playhouse in 2019.

Last year, she both directed and starred in Curious’ “American Son,” playing the mother of a biracial teen killed by police.

Dixon was raised in Park Hill just north of the old Stapleton Airport. Her father was Deputy Mayor Bill Roberts, just the second African American elected to Denver City Council and considered a visionary for pushing for the construction of Denver International Airport.

Dixon performed children’s theater at the famed Bonfils Theatre but wanted most to be a dancer, studying with legends Cleo Parker Robinson and Mattie Springfield. She graduated from Machebeuf Catholic High School and New York University before earning her graduate degree from Harvard.

She returned in Colorado in 2003 to play a bone-chilling Lady Macbeth for Denver’s late Shadow Theatre Company.

Curious’ roots trace to a triumphant production of “Angels in America” that Walton directed for a company called Hunger Artists in 1997. Walton has since grown Curious into a company that has had as many as seven full-time employees, a $1.25 million annual budget and ownership of the former church it performs in at 1080 Acoma St.

“I think Jada is a fabulous theatermaker and a real collaborator – both in the creation of art and in trying to steer through those tricky areas related to equity and diversity. ... It’s just a fabulous choice.”

Lynne Collins, who hired Dixon to direct “Stick Fly” at the Arvada Center

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https://daily.denvergazette.com/article/282230899299417

The Gazette, Colorado Springs