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1100 Playwright Interviews

1100 Playwright Interviews A Sean Abley Rob Ackerman E.E. Adams Johnna Adams Liz Duffy Adams Tony Adams David Adjmi Keith Josef Adkins Nicc...

Stageplays.com

Aug 31, 2006

someone tell me why my blogroll wants to be so far down the page. is there an expert in the house?

Beginning the 9th

You are cordially invited to attend A workshop production of Pretty Theft by Adam Szymkowicz Directed by Moritz von Stuelpnagel with Stephen Bel Davies, James Patrick Davis, Maxwell Angelo de Paula, Ravenna Fahey, Anna O'Donoghue, Jasmin M. Tavarez, Leigh Wade.

Where: room 306, Juilliard (65th and Broadway) When: Sat, Sept 9 at 1pm and 6pm Sun, Sept 10 at 2pm Mon, Sept 11 at 7pm

There is limited space. Please let me know if you wnat to attend.

http://blog.myspace.com/johnnaadams

From Johnna's notes on Stephen Dietz workshop:

Don't be envious of other playwrights. Especially the ones who have early success. Those writers are the most likely writers to never write again-- if early plays go straight into major productions. Struggling early on teaches you persistence. If you can be persistent in the face of early defeats-- you are more likely to also be persistent in the face of success. What you are working toward now is the ability to be ready for theaters to ask you for commissions. That is the next step. To write something new, perhaps without inspiration, on command. Train for that.

Criticizing others is not an accomplishment. Sometimes getting together and bonding over a camaraderie of shared hatreds feels like you are accomplishing something. You aren't. It is easy and it even feels good, but it doesn't really create anything. Your job when you go to see bad plays is not to tear down the writers, directors, and actors as skillfully as possible with your friends. Instead, think about:

1. Where did it go off track?

2. Was a later entry point needed? Did it start too soon? '

3. Did it go on too long? Should it have ended at a different place in the story?

4. Do the characters work?

5. If this were my play, what would I do to fix it?

Don't be "here to sneer" at anything.

Good plays get done. You have to believe your play will get done. You may need to write 6-8 full length plays that are "teaching plays." These plays are just for you to teach you how to write [Johnna's note: THE MIRACLE OF MARY MACK'S BABY-- my first produced play was my 6th full length-- so he is right on as far as I am concerned]. Write extensively and balance your self-esteem on the back of many plays-- not just one or two.

Aug 28, 2006

After 3 months of feeling like I was getting nothing done writing-wise I finished a new draft of a play called Incendiary that I first drafted in early june. I'm also almost a third of the way through something new. it's something short. don't be too impressed.

I also watched a lot of cable tv this weekend. I'm surprised i was able to do anything else. but I did do the dishes. finally. after they sat there for a week.

new arrival

Please welcome to the blogosphere Larry Kunofsky who starts off with his short play the Future of Tra Tra Tra.

http://www.larrykunofsky.blogspot.com/

NY times Article

The median hourly wage for American workers has declined 2 percent since 2003, after factoring in inflation. The drop has been especially notable, economists say, because productivity — the amount that an average worker produces in an hour and the basic wellspring of a nation’s living standards — has risen steadily over the same period.

Aug 25, 2006

Stone Pusher and Bee Eater

Stone Pusher and Bee Eater went walking hand in hand. It is so sad they said to see so many plays panned If only they would stop writing them Wouldn't that be grand?

Ken Urban's group blogging their rehearsal process

http://thecommitteetheatre.blogspot.com/

Ok, so I am started writing something new, a kind of show I've never tried to write before. I don't want to be too specific because I don't want input yet but I am very excited about it and if it works I think it could be very good.

I'm also reading this book "This is not a novel" which is mostly about various artists, when and how they died, what they thought of one another, bizarre facts about them and about art. It's adding up. Part of what I'm getting is that there are so many different specific ways to be an artist. Some people didn't start writing until late in life. Some have a tremendous output and some have very little. Some were hugely successful in their lives and are now unknown and some are famous now but were unknown or poor or both when they died.

It's something to think about. For me it's mostly affirmation. I just have to keep doing it and not care what people think. and work hard on the next one and the next and the next.

Aug 23, 2006

PT in Sept

A workshop production of Pretty Theft by Adam Szymkowicz Directed by Moritz von Stuelpnagel with Stephen Davies, James Patrick Davis, Maxwell Angello De Paula, Ravenna Fahey, Anna O'Donohue, Jasmin M. Tavarez, Leigh Wade

Where: room 306, Juilliard (65th and Broadway) When: Sat, Sept 9 at 1pm and 6pm Sun, Sept 10 at 2pm Mon, Sept 11 at 7pm

There is limited space. Let me know if you want to go and I'll put you down.

Aug 22, 2006

I keep discarding what I've written and starting over. I have a couple things I want to write but am not sure I'm ready to sit down at the computer with them yet. Their skeletons are still being built.

Went to a rehearsal last night of the workshop production of Pretty Theft going up at Juilliard Sept 9. It's going really well. Let me know if you want to go and I'll let you know how to get in to see it.

Aug 20, 2006

40 yr old

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0405422/

I saw the 40 year old virgin and it's really really funny. the previews made it look stupid but it's actually really a progressive comedy in terms of the casting and social criticism not to mention it's really funny. Judd Apatow is a genius. He created Freaks and Geeks and Undeclared. Seth Rogen and Steve Carell are also pretty amazing but really it's an ensemble piece. I highly reccomend.

Stop the occupation

http://www.iraqbodycount.net/

Aug 18, 2006

Get The Motherfucking Snakes Off the Plane

http://impeachbushcoalition.blogspot.com/

Get The Motherfucking Snakes Off the Motherfucking Plane

http://www.impeachbush.tv/

Reprinted with permission—this is part of a message Patrick Gabridge posted in a discussion over at playwrightbinge yahoo group. Very wise words Mr. Gabridge.

“ . . .It's not realistic to expect that your early work will be universally loved and produced. Writing plays is a tough thing, and it takes years to get good at it, and even then you still write stinkers (or at least I do). Also, as you build a body of work, it's so much easier to get productions, because you know which work is better and more likely to get picked (and people notice that you have a track record). I have a pretty sizable collection of short plays, but I don't submit them all with equal frequency. Some are stronger than others.

I would think a beginning writer would be lucky to have an acceptance rate of 5% (1 in 20).

Sometimes I talk to fiction writers, and they talk about how they got so many rejections, 15 or 20, before placing a piece. That must makes me laugh. I just added up the numbers in my database, and I've had about 704 rejections of play submissions since 1990. I don't mind getting a rejection, because I know that I'm doing my job (of sending plays out) and the theatres are doing theirs (reading the scripts and making decisions). I'm much more perturbed by theatres who never respond (I've done my job, but they're shirking theirs). The percentage of folks who respond can be quite high.

I must say, I'm a bit befuddled by the focus so much on rejection. Almost all of a writer's submissions will be rejected. That's just the way it is. If it's going to drive you into deep depression, you're better off being in another business, because it never goes away. My rule with rejection letters is: read them once and file them away. I don't dwell on them or study them. If they say something nice, I put them into a file for follow-ups. If they don't, I put them in a file that doesn't require follow ups.

The best way to stop being bothered by rejections is to get lots of them, because you're sending out lots of scripts. This means you're doing your job. A rejection is not cause to need a shoulder to cry on, it's just a sign that you should send out something new.

By all means, if a script is rejected time after time, maybe you'd better get the message. Maybe it's time to stop sending it out. (Not everything we write is pure genius. Except perhaps Mr. Levine.) Write something new. Write something better.”

Aug 15, 2006

Back in rehearsal. Back to life in NYC. Back to work. I work in administration. Administering. To the photocopier.

Welcome Malachy Walsh, my former roommate and a hell of a writer to the blogroll. (The Lit Dept) I know i don't alphabetize and that makes it hard to find people even for me but I will continue not to alphabetize or organize the blogroll in any way.

Aug 13, 2006

Dear Readers,

I have been approached to advertise on my blog for cash money. Should I do this? I did not start blogging as a money making venture but god knows the playwriting is not raking it in for me. ( not that this will allow me to quit my day job either)

What do you think? Is it morally bankrupt? I don't think it would affect my content in the slightest. but it is annoying. Ads annoy me. And I don't like capitalism but i do live in capitalist-daddy america and can't and I enjoy having money to pay rent and I enjoy owning things and being able to eat out sometimes.

Also I've been charging Matt Freeman for sometime to have his link on the blogroll. Sorry Matt.

Aug 12, 2006

got to sneak some writing in

I'm not complaining, I swear. It's just that I've been in rehearsal nonstop since may and I just had one week off in the woods sleeping in a tent by the most beautiful lake. At nights it was 50 degrees out and there was the threat of bears and my cell phone didn't work and my computer was home at its desk and it was wonderful relaxing adn it was calm and quiet and peaceful and nice and now back to the day job and now back to rehearsal. not that I'm complaining. this will make 4 full length plays this summer. And I have a stack of unproduced plays that for years I've been trying to get people to do and many of them will still never get done I'm sure but now when it rains... well I'm very tired right now. I don't know that I can stand it. and I love it and I can't handle it...and the day job and the day job, oh that day job. i'm back. how are you?

Aug 4, 2006

My friend Enrique got into Brown with a play called The Danger of Bleeding Brown. I feel this is no coincidence and so I am writing a new play called

Princess Grace Strolling Down Cherry Lane with Jerome and MacArthur and Eugene O'Neill and Other New Dramatists On The Way to the Summer Play Festival.

I'm off. See you in a week.

Aug 3, 2006

Photos by Zak Szyszko from Food For Fish Production
So yes, I've been busy, it's true, but the writing has gone out the window. It is true I've written a scene or two but I have no idea why I'm writing them or what they're about and I've already discarded one play (for now at least) and I have this problem where if I'm not writing I get edgy. I'm edgy. K and I are going camping for a week in the Adirondacks this next week so you may not hear from me for a while. Partially I'm annoyed because I used to be overflowing with stuff and I would have so much I would just throw stuff up here that was related to nothing, just doodles of words that I enjoyed and now I don't have those available. Not that I know you all were enjoying them, but not only do I have a responsibility to myself to write but I feel a responsibility to you too, misguided though that probably is.

self restraint muscle and you. or why I never do the dishes. Sorry, K.

http://theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,19460829-12332,00.html At first glance, research of this sort is a comfort to those of us not exploding with raw talent. The science seems to back up the writer Kingsley Amis's well-known advice that "the art of writing is the art of applying the seat of one's trousers to the seat of one's chair". Why, in that case anyone can write a book. Yet a small problem remains; namely, the problem of keeping the seat of one's trousers applied to the seat of one's chair.
Interesting conversation about marketing and theatre over at Matt Freeman's

Aug 2, 2006

thanks to Ripley (RIPPED) for this

http://www.kabc.com/mcintyre/listingsEntry.asp?ID=432586&PT=McIntyre

AN APOLOGY FROM A BUSH VOTER By Doug McIntyre Host, McIntyre in the Morning Talk Radio 790 KABC

"So, I’m saying today, I was wrong to have voted for George W. Bush. In historic terms, I believe George W. Bush is the worst two-term President in the history of the country. Worse than Grant. I also believe a case can be made that he’s the worst President, period. "

"I believe, as I have said countless times, the two party system is on the brink of a second collapse. It’s currently running on spin, anger, revenge, and pots and pots and pots of money."

"With a belated tip of the cap to Ralph Nader, the system is broken, so broken, it’s almost inevitable it pukes up the Al Gores and George W. Bushes. Where are the Trumans and the Eisenhowers? Where are the men and women of vision and accomplishment? Why do we have to settle for recycled hacks and malleable ciphers? Greatness is always rare, but is basic competence and simple honesty too much to ask? "

Jesus was not pro war?

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/30/us/30pastor.html?ex=1154664000&en=304c373abd2cc406&ei=5087%0A

After refusing each time, Mr. Boyd finally became fed up, he said. Before the last presidential election, he preached six sermons called “The Cross and the Sword” in which he said the church should steer clear of politics, give up moralizing on sexual issues, stop claiming the United States as a “Christian nation” and stop glorifying American military campaigns.

Sermons like Mr. Boyd’s are hardly typical in today’s evangelical churches. But the upheaval at Woodland Hills is an example of the internal debates now going on in some evangelical colleges, magazines and churches. A common concern is that the Christian message is being compromised by the tendency to tie evangelical Christianity to the Republican Party and American nationalism, especially through the war in Iraq.