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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Sep 22, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 498: Ben Rosenthal


Ben Rosenthal

Hometown:  White Plains - site of a famous losing battle in the Revolutionary War.

Current Town:  Brooklyn, NY

Q:  Tell me about Neptune Kelly

A:  A formerly mouth-breathing, kind of savantish auto mechanic develops a messiah complex and believes that one can place all their wretchedness in their foot and cut it off. Then they'll be free. He does so, with an axe, to both his feet, and soon young girls from the high school start following. The cutting spreads like wildfire and no one knows how to stop it. A famous psychiatrist -or as famous as they do get - is called to the town and eventually does battle with their local priest, who is likewise completely flummoxed by the mania. It's a very dark comedy and there's a cast to rival the size of the Russian army.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I'm working on several plays, one of which is sort of an omnibus pageant of doom, and that's the most I can say about it but the rest are a lot more naturalistic. Theater demands that you get small these days and I would like to write a chamber piece about couples over dinner and see how that turns out. Romulus Linney told me to write about my family years ago, when I was at school, and I've yet to directly heed that advice. Maybe I fear lawsuits?

Q:  Tell me, if you will, a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a writer or as a person.

A:  I've blocked out most of my childhood, but what I remember doesn't point with blinking arrows towards a writing career. Except for the heavy drinking and philandering, which started when I was six.

Q:  If you could change one thing about theater, what would it be?

A:  A fellow playwright said to me recently that theater is always forty years behind the other mediums. I agree but I think that's a conservative estimate. We've all heard the very accurate complaints that there are innumerable "development" purgatories and very few production slots, but the money's never going to be there, so theater should make its peace with that and not try and play to the room-temperature sensibilities that would probably reject much of what is in the modern canon if they saw it anyway... So long as it does that it'll keep itself mildly solvent but cease to matter in any real way. That's why we have the regimented mediocrity we have. That and the fact that mediocrity is often the result when five years of "work-shopping" and spiritual exhaustion and a spike in a theater's artistic budget combine. It's like Hollywood in that sense; it's a miracle anything organic survives sometimes.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  When I started it was Harold Pinter and to some degree it still is. I really think he's a genius in that there's a conceptual clarity to his plays but they don't feel academic or like intellectual exercises, because he wrote intuitively. It's that magic some great novelists have - to walk that high wire where every line pulses with the theme but you are still tracking real people in real time, and you're kind of terrified of where it's going because the author is a little crazy. There's a writer more people should know about named David Lefort Nugent who absolutely blows me away. Carson Kreitzer is so very gifted and she has a great precision, a kind of spare discipline where her plays sneak up on you. I think Lloyd Suh is truly remarkable and there's a scene in American Hwangap that is so brilliantly loaded and yet unforced and I remember watching it and thinking, this is a kind of valedictory moment for a writer. How do I get here? It's not the kind of thing that can be coached or taught.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I know the stock answer here is probably "dangerous" theater, but that means different things to different people.

I want theater to be an expression of something personal, not by-the-numbers liberalism where one cherry picks a societal trend and writes ninety or so minute of stage time about them, having mathematically considered what will not be offensive. If you were to read most playwrights on blind submission, could you tell them apart? Would you know who they were? Crazy, dangerous things happen on some of the better cable TV shows, because the creators of these shows have risked something personal, and the fiber optic distance of television allows people to watch them without shitting the bed. I think so long as we're seeing the writer bare something about themselves, we'll feel something relevant has happened. The preface to Gide's The Immoralist basically says I'm going to make you sick, but there's poetry in that, so shove it. It's not about making people sick, which I think might be fairly easy, but I think presenting work which comes from a propulsive place instead of a studied or schematic one. More of that would be helpful.
Q:  What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?

A:  I can't speak much to career advice, but no one's ever going to make it the way they think they're going to make it unless they're total hacks - in which case writing is algorithmic and why bother, so the only thing I would say is get yourself around other writers, even if it's painful and you're worried about losing the thread of yourself. For a playwright, especially one who is gifted with a personal approach, or whatever a "voice" is, being reminded of how much theater is about being present and engaged, is vitally important, otherwise, your work can calcify; you end up with black ciphers on a white page, not a living entity. It's too easy to disappear somewhere up your own fundament if you're not around other living writers..I would also say do what Saul Bellow did and double down on what you do after a rejection. Most people who are going to read your plays won't get them, and to be honest, there's no ultimate benediction. If Kenneth Tynan came back from the dead to write that I was good, would I believe it? Would my work be done? I'd probably get a swell head for a week and then be back tearing my hair out and diminishing Kenneth Tynan as a toff who liked to paddle fannies.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Come see Neptune Kelly at Ensemble Studio Theatre September 27th at 7pm and 28th at 8pm. It's a blast.

Sep 16, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 497: David Auburn


David Auburn

Hometown: Really, three of them, since we moved a lot: Columbus, Ohio; Jonesboro, Arkansas; Little Rock, Arkansas

Current Town: New York City

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  A production of Anna Christie I'm directing later in the year; some material that might or might not become a new play; a screenplay for Warner Brothers of the novel "A Discovery of Witches."

Q:  Tell me, if you will, a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a writer or as a person.

A:  I don't have a good answer to this one. I'm not sure where the impulse to write for the theater comes from, and I guess a bit reluctant to examine it very closely.

Q:  If you could change one thing about theater, what would it be?

A:  I teach playwrighting to NY public high school students. They want to write plays, they're passionate to try it. But they haven't seen very many. It's difficult to afford, difficult to manage. Some have never seen a straight play in a theater. In New York City! My fantasy would be that any public school student in this city could walk up to any play and buy a ticket for the same price as a movie.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Chekhov. The Romanian playwright and diarist Mihail Sebastian. George S. Kaufman, the ultimate pro and utility player. Samson Raphaelson. Harold Clurman. Viola Spolin. Odets. Quintero. Some contemporaries I've worked with, learned from and admire: Harris Yulin, John Lithgow, Dan Sullivan.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Very exciting always to see new plays by young American playwrights. We're in a strong period for new plays right now, I think.

Q:  What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?

A:  Don't sit around mailing plays to strangers. Produce yourself. Get together with friends and put on shows. Don't worry if you don't have an agent. Join the Dramatists Guild.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My most recent play, "The Columnist," now out in paperback.

Sep 14, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 496: Jean-Claude van Itallie



Jean-Claude van Itallie

Hometown: I was born in Brussels, Belgium, raised in Great Neck, New York

Current Town: I live simultaneously in two places: Greenwich Village, NYC and Shantigar in Rowe, Massachusetts.

Q: Tell me about Confessions and Conversation.

A: “Confessions and Conversation,” the one person show (I call it “an intimate evening”) I’m doing at La MaMa’s Ellen Stewart Theater Sept 20-23, 2012, is a kind of Mad Hatter tea party. I’ll offer tea from mint in my garden in Massachusetts.

The show is in part a homage to my friend/mentor, the great late Ellen Stewart.

I’ll also reveal all about my own exciting theatre and promiscuous gay sex life in the wild and seminal 60's off-off-Broadway birth time.

A little singin’ and dancin’ too, cause, hey, why not?

Q: What else are you working on?

A: I’m finishing my memoirs – called “War, Sex, and Dreams.”

I’m co-writing the libretto of an opera about the wild Tibetan hermit yogi, Milarepa, of a thousand years ago – “Mila, Great Sorcerer.”

I’m finishing writing an e-book – “Galaxy of Living Alone, a Guide to Delightful Living with Cool Games to Play.”

I’m setting up an advice website – “Write to Leonardo”

I’m editing Part I of a Regency Romance I wrote – “To Be a Duchess”

Q: Tell me about the Playwright's Workbook.

A: When I started teaching play writing, there were no texts about it, or techniques, as there are for acting. I had to slowly invent my own, often using performance techniques but applying them to writing.

In the 80's, as I was teaching play writing at Princeton, I received a postcard from a publisher: “Would you use a play writing text if we published one?” I answered, “Yes, if I wrote it.” The result is “Playwright’s Workbook.”

Q: Tell me about The Shantigar Foundation.

A: I live most of the time on a beautiful old farm in the hills of Western Massachusetts. I’ve known it since I was a kid.

The Open Theater came up there in the 60's to improvise and make plays. My Tibetan Buddhist teacher, Chogyam, Trungpa, did a year’s retreat up there, named it “Shantigar,” or "Peaceful Home." The beauty of the woods and fields nourishes both creativity and meditation, which, in my mind, are closely related. So I’ve turned the farm into “Shantigar Foundation for theater, meditation, and healing.”

In a super fast world, we all, especially artists, need intimate contact with nature to breathe, remember ourselves, create. Shantigar provides that. (Shantigar.org)

Q: Tell me, if you will, a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a writer or as a person.

A: When I was almost four, the Nazis invaded Brussels where I lived with my Belgian Jewish family. Most of the family survived; we got to America without my seeing a Nazi. But fear was stamped indelibly into my nervous system.

By contrast, Great Neck, New York, where I grew up, in the late 40's and 50's, was a kind of Doris Day facade of pretty azalea hedges with no death or suffering visible (as in the current TV show “Madmen”).

I’ve remained mesmerized always by the contrast between the public mask and what lies underneath, hyper- aware of the lies of politicians, preachers, corporations...

Q: If you could change one thing about theater, what would it be?

A: I wish theater were not money-driven like the rest of society. I wish theater never gave pat answers in order to please.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: Some theatrical heroes: Ellen Stewart, Peter Brook, Oscar Wilde, Noel Coward, Harold Pinter, Stella Adler, Jerzy Grotowski, The Earl of Oxford, Voltaire, Anton Chekhov, Euripedes.

Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A: I’m passionate about theater of sacred intent – entertaining, funny, musical theater asking, in authentic new ways, the age-old unanswerable questions – Where are we going? What am I here for? Who am I?

Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?

A: I’d tell a playwright just starting out to study acting, to act – not to conceive of himself/herself as merely a walking mind. Writing is not only an intellectual act. Truth, drama, humor and music have their rhythmic source in the body.

Q: Plugs, please:

A: Please come see my one man show, “Confessions and Conversations,” at La MaMa, Sept 20-23, 2012. (LaMama.org)

Please take the “Continuum of Performance” workshop I am giving with the amazing Emilie Conrad – at LaMama, NYC: Nov 6-8, 2012 Open to everyone. (Shantigar.org).

Please check out Shantigar.org – come up and see me some time.

Please look out for my upcoming advice website: “Write to Leonardo.”

Sep 13, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 495: Tom Matthew Wolfe



Tom Matthew Wolfe

Hometown:  Hillside, New Jersey

Current Town:  New York City

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’m working on a new full-length play called THIS IS HOW WE EMERGE. It’s about a mid-career artist who loses an exhibition opportunity to his girlfriend and tries to alter/undermine her plans for it. It was inspired by the Narcissus/Echo myth, but the story doesn’t play out the same way. It’s also about living with day jobs, temp jobs, debts, delusions, loneliness, paternalism, ageism, mortality, grief, and the fear of having no impact—an entire life in obscurity. It’s a little wilder than my other work, more comedic and tense: there are death masks and bad punk songs, sharp reversals, and a protracted discomfort within scenes. I’m excited about it. I can’t wait to hear it at my playwrights group.

Q:  Tell me, if you will, a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a writer or as a person.

A:  I grew up with a lot of cats. One of them – named Bruce – loved to hang out on the front porch. He scared my friends even though he was quite friendly. He had long black fur and yellow eyes, big fangs that looked like something on a pit viper when he yawned. He liked to sit tall and motionless on the bookcase or spread his body across it so that his paws dangled off the edge. Sometimes he stood up on his hind legs when he was down on the floor and I reached out to pet him. One night I stepped out on the porch. It was dark: the overhead light was broken. I spotted Bruce standing up near the screen door, so I reached down to scratch the back of his neck. The fur was so stiff. I froze—my hand, my whole body. I heard a long, angry hiss. It sounded nothing like Bruce or any cat anywhere. I ran inside. My father was seated on the couch with his bare feet on a coffee table, eating jalapeño cheese. My sister was on a matching love seat. They were watching television.

“I think I just pet a possum,” I said.

They immediately laughed at me. My sister called me an idiot.

“Get the hell outta here,” my father said.

“The fur was all stiff. ”

“You sure it wasn’t the cat?”

“It made this … sound.”

“Alright,” he said, “let’s see your possum.”

So my father stood up and put on his moccasins, got his mag-light and 9mm handgun from a shelf above the bar in the hallway. He was a police officer in Hillside, a lieutenant at the time. There was always a gun in the house, small boxes of bullets. He stuck a clip in the gun (a distinctive sound, no comparisons), stepped out on to the porch and shut the door. After a few minutes of quiet, there was a gunshot. He came back inside, removed the clip, put his gun and mag-light back in the spot above the bar.

“Tommy, do me a favor and clean that up tomorrow, will ya?”

“Uh . . . okay.”

My mother found out about the incident and asked my father to perform cleanup instead. They fought about this, but he gave in and agreed, told me not to worry about it. Next morning, on my way out the door to school, I saw a possum on its back near my weight bench with a bullet wound in its chest, blood all over the floorboards.

I have no idea how this story explains who I am as a person or writer. But it feels like such a part of me. And I miss my father. So there you go.

Q:  If you could change one thing about theater, what would it be?

A:  I wish it were more affordable and diverse, in general.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Chekhov, Fornés, Pinter, Albee, Beckett, Tennessee Williams, Paula Vogel, Tony Kushner, Sam Shepard, Lanford Wilson, August Wilson, John Patrick Shanley, Christopher Plummer, Meryl Streep, Jane Hoffman, Heidi Schreck, Marylouise Burke, Young Jean Lee, Marshall W. Mason, David Adjmi, Kia Corthron, Curt Dempster, Jerry Wayne Roberts, Erma Duricko. I saw a production of A DOLL’S HOUSE by Mabou Mines a few years back and thought it was genius. So I’ll add Mabou Mines. Also, Ensemble Studio Theatre, The Civilians. My wife, Kara Lee Corthron, is such a brilliant writer; her discipline is a guide for me. Karen Hartman is an extraordinary playwright and teacher. There are so many people I’ve worked with personally that deserve to be mentioned. So many amazing actors have taken their time to just to read my stuff, and for no money. Those are my heroes. Also, I like Shakespeare.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I like a lot of different theatre, so long as it’s well crafted and full of life. I love the lyrical naturalism of Lanford Wilson and the way Young Jean Lee experiments with form to puncture the membrane between audience and actors. I like family plays and political theatre. I like vulnerability, humor, fun, a distinct point of view, surprise. I love subverted expectations. I’m interested in a theatre in which humor and great pain are not exclusive to one another. I like when characters have real problems. I’m fascinated by our delusions (I’ve had my share). I love plays that make me uncomfortable, or make me talk for hours—or weeks—after curtain. I love theatre that makes me question my own behavior. I love plays that don’t bore me.

Q:  What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?

A:  Advice is tough for me to give. I feel like I’m a perpetual student. But I do have my own code as a developing writer. Here it is. Build your craft. Write often. Surprise yourself. Don’t judge a scene while writing it. There’s time for that during revisions. Take classes and/or join a playwrights group. My playwrights group ‘Wright On! is so important to me. It keeps me working and sane. When a teacher asks you to try an exercise, just give into that. Don’t question it. What is there to lose in trying something new? Be kind.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Ach. Unfortunately, I have nothing going on right now, except a private reading of my newest play. But Kara will have two productions this Fall (ALICEGRACEANON, produced by New Georges at The Irondale Center in Brooklyn; HOLLY DOWN IN HEAVEN at Forum Theatre in Washington D.C.). Go check ‘em out!

Sep 8, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 494: Halley Feiffer


photo by Seth Kushner

Halley Feiffer

Hometown: NYC -- Upper West Side, Manhattan

Current Town: NYC -- Park Slope, Brooklyn

Q:  Tell me about Dear Darkness at the New Ohio.

A:  It's an evening of short plays by awesome writers with sick twisted imaginations; all the plays center on spooky-Halloween-y themes. The guidelines are very broad -- basically anything repulsive or macabre and hopefully something involving a famous monster of some sort. It's an incredible line-up of writers that includes John Patrick Shanley, Bekah Brunsetter, Michael Puzzo, and Adam Szymkowicz (that name sounds so familiar...) and I'm so honored to be included and show people how disgusting and vile my mind is, which most people really know anyway, but I feel like I want pretty much everyone to know that and the more the merrier, you know?

My play is called FRANKENSTEIN'S AMENDS, and it's about the fateful night when Frankenstein returns, after a long and very painful separation, to the home of the doctor who created him, with the intention of making his formal Ninth Step Amends as part of his recovery program in Alcoholics Anonymous.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I'm working on a play I wrote that will kick off the LAByrinth Theatre Company's Barn Series next weekend (Sept. 14-15), directed by Trip Cullman -- the play is called I'M GONNA PRAY FOR YOU SO HARD and it's also disgusting and vile, but in a different way (namely there are no monsters). I'm also working on a short play I wrote called I DIDN'T WANT A MASTODON that will be featured in the upcoming Barrow Group evening of short plays, performed by their Core Artists Ensemble. Also I am working on webseries I am making with my friend Adam Green called DON'T YOU WISH YOU WERE US; we're shooting the first episode in a few weeks, which we're very excited about. Also I have a TV series I'm currently shopping around with a friend. And I'm trying to write a new play, and a screenplay which is proving really hard.

Q:  Tell me, if you will, a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a writer or as a person.

A:  A few years ago I said to my mom: "Hey, Mom -- remember that amazing house we went to when I was really little, and I think it was in Florida or something, 'cause I remember it being really tropical-feeling? And there was this crazy amazing pool, with like fake rocks and a CAVE that like lit up crazy weird colors like purple and green? And then there was a crazy bathroom with walls of GLASS that were all covered in like tropical FOLIAGE? I think visiting that house and swimming in that cave-y pool and going to that bathroom -- I think that is my fondest childhood memory. What was that place???" And my mom was like, "Um, I think you're talking about the grotto at the Playboy Mansion." My dad used to draw cartoons for PLAYBOY and apparently Hef invited us over and we just swam in the grotten when I was, like, 4. Hef never showed up; he just let us swim. I feel like this memory is a pretty good example of my warped values (my attraction to and often obsession with glittery objects that are terrible for me), the power of memory to distort facts and twist them into a fantasy-reality, and the vastly inappropriate situations I often find myself in, which are all things I try to explore in my writing.

Q:  If you could change one thing about theater, what would it be?

A:  Well it would cost way less. Way more people would go from way more diverse backgrounds. Nobody would give a shit about reviews. Oh wait that's three things. I think nobody caring about reviews is the most important thing to me. So that one.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I have so many. My favorite dead ones are Chekhov, Ibsen, Strindberg, Tennesse Williams, August Wilson -- such great storytellers and such masters of combining humor and tragedy to make situations that are, because of that delicate tincture, even funnier and sadder. Living heroes are Annie Baker, Stephen Adly Girugis, Kenneth Lonergan, John Guare, Adam Rapp, Bruce Norris -- for the same reasons.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love theatre that keeps me absolutely on the edge of my seat because I don't know if I should be laughing or crying. I love theatre that shows me characters who are at once infuriating or even loathsome and also totally loveable and relateable. I love theatre that surprises me often and takes turns that feel at once shocking and inevitable, and leaves me feeling utterly flabbergasted and satiated.

Q:  What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?

A:  Don't be afraid to share your work with people; I was so scared of showing my work for so long -- it felt so private and vulnerable. Someone told me, "Dude, just email your plays to people," and I started doing that -- just taking the action and letting go of the result -- and the more and more I did it the less I thought about it, and now I never think about the vulernability of sharing my work, really, because I'm used to it and I have so much more confidence as a result of taking these at-first extremely uncomfortable actions. Also, write in your own voice and write about things that interest you because people can tell if you're pretending to be something you're not or writing about something that doens't really turn you on.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  I co-wrote, produced and act in an upcoming feature film called HE'S WAY MORE FAMOUS THAN YOU, directed by Michael Urie. Here is a link to its IMDB page: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2076216/

Also here is a link to the info about my play in the upcoming LAByrinth Barn Series: http://labtheater.org/2012/09/barn-series-spotlight-halley-feiffer/

I don't have a link to the Barrow Group Evening but their Facebook page is: http://www.facebook.com/coreartistensemble

Also please follow me on Twitter I really want to eventually have more followers than Gaga: @halleyfeiffer

Also come see DEAR DARKNESS! Here is a link to its Indiegogo page: http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/203689

Also I'm available for hanging out and friendship and birthday parties.

Sep 4, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 493: Marie Jones


Marie Jones

Hometown: Belfast

Current town: Belfast

Q:  Tell me about Fly Me to the Moon

A:  Fly Me to the Moon is a play about two community care workers. The two women travel around the community caring for old people who need assistance. They arrive one day to do their usual routine of care of David Magee who is 84. Only this day will not be like any other day. Davy will breathe his last and they are faced with a dilemma. Do they inform the authorities or take advantage of the situation. Their actions spiral out of control and leave them in a desperate situation.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I am working on the Film Script of ‘Stones In His Pockets’ This was a play that has been performed all over the world including Broadway and the West End.

Q:  Tell me about your experience at Charabanc Theatre Company.

A:  Charabanc was a life changing and empowering situation. Five women started a company to create better roles for women. I never knew that I would end up as the Playwright. It was not by design it was a need.

Q:  Tell me, if you will, a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a writer or as a person.

A:  When I was a child I used to go with my Mother when she visited her many sisters. I would sit and listen to them tell stories and laugh and wish and dream and cry. They were all natural story tellers. That is what playwrighting is, being able to tell a good story that people can relate to

Q:  If you could change one thing about theater, what would it be?

A:  I cant think that there would be any thing I would change about the theatre…it is an ongoing changing thing…its live .

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: My theatrical heroes are the men and women who are totally passionate about it. Especially the people who live in small rural towns in Ireland and have devoted their lives to bringing theatre to their communities and inspiring and encouraging young people who might not ever had the opportunity to see it as a career.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Good theatre excites me…no particular style. If I can sit for two hours and not think about what I have to do in the morning or what I have to get in the shop on the way home then it works for me.

Q:  What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?

A:  My advice would be, only do it if you have a story you want everybody to hear and you can hear it in your head…word for word.

Q:  Plugs, please!

A:  Fly Me to the Moon runs at 59E59 Theaters from September 5 – September 30. It’s part of 1st Irish.