Seattle Repertory Theatre

[5] The building, extant as of 2009, was renovated in 1987 as a home for the Intiman Theatre.

[5] Actor Hal Holbrook had appeared at the Playhouse during the fair, and is believed to be the person who suggested it as a home for a repertory theater company.

[5] Stuart Vaughan was the founding artistic director[6] It received the 1990 Regional Theatre Tony Award.

[7] The Bagley Wright Theater, named in honor of the president of Seattle Rep's first board of trustees, opened on October 13, 1983 with the world premiere of Michael Weller's The Ballad of Soapy Smith, directed by Robert Egan, and featuring a cast of Seattle actors including Dennis Arndt (in the title role), John Aylward, Frank Corrado, Paul Hostetler, Richard Riehle, Michael Santo, Marjorie Nelson, Ted D'Arms, Kurt Beattie, Clayton Corzatte, and William Ontiveros.

The Leo K. was made possible in great part to a US$2 million gift from The Kreielsheimer Foundation, a US$1 million gift from then board chair Marsha S. Glazer, and the leadership of Capital Campaign chairs Ann Ramsay-Jenkins and Stanley Savage.

Courtyard of the Seattle Playhouse, during the period it was renamed the Intiman Playhouse (2009).
"Bringing Theatre into the Classroom" participants work on integrating tableaux into their lesson plans.
The balcony of the Bagley Wright Theatre during Bumbershoot 2008.