by Chris Peterson
Hana S. Sharif has abruptly departed as artistic director of Arena Stage in Washington, D.C., according to Playbill, which reported that it had received a copy of her resignation letter. The news comes as Arena Stage is in the middle of one of its highest-profile productions of the season, CrazySexyCool – The TLC Musical, a new musical about the legendary R&B group TLC.
The timing is hard to ignore. CrazySexyCool began performances on June 12 and is scheduled to run through August 9 in Arena’s Kreeger Theater. The show is written and directed by Kwame Kwei-Armah, based on the music performed and recorded by TLC.
Sharif’s exit also comes less than three years after the theatre announced her as only the fourth artistic director in the company’s history. She succeeded Molly Smith, who led it for 25 years, and her appointment was presented at the time as a major new chapter for one of the country’s most prominent regional theatres.
According to reporting by The New York Times, Sharif’s resignation email made clear that she was leaving “under pressure” because of a clash of visions with the board over how Arena Stage should move forward.
That is the part that will likely raise the most questions in the theatre community. Artistic leaders and boards disagree all the time. Usually, though, those disagreements are handled quietly or with enough planning to make the public story feel orderly. This does not feel orderly.
Arena Stage is not just another regional theatre. This is one of the theatres that helped create the idea of regional theatre as a serious national force, not just a place where shows happen before or after New York.
It has had more than 20 productions go on to Broadway. That list includes Next to Normal, Dear Evan Hansen, Sweat, Swept Away, and the recent Damn Yankees production, which is eying a Broadway transfer in Spring 2027.
So when an artistic director leaves this abruptly, it is fair to ask whether this is only about one resignation, or whether it points to a deeper fight over what this theatre is supposed to be now.
There may be more details still to come, and there should be some caution before turning this into a simple hero-and-villain story. But the optics are rough. A major new musical is running, the institution is trying to sell audiences on its future, and the person hired to help shape that future is now gone.
Whatever happens next, leadership at Arena Stage has some explaining to do.







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