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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...
Jun 14, 2007
tomorrow at 5--hope to see you there
Friday, June 15, 2007 at 5:00 p.m.
Free Reading and Book Signing
New York Theater Review 2007
Special guests to include: Quiara Alegria Hudes (2007
Pulitzer Prize finalist for ELLIOT, A SOLDIER'S
FUGUE); Adam Szymkowicz (FOOD FOR FISH); Anne Washburn
(I HAVE LOVED STRANGERS);
and
George Hunka (Superfluities theater blog); Garrett
Eisler (Playgoer theater blog); Alan Lockwood (Beckett
centenary) and Caridad Svich (playwright and
founder/maestra of NoPassport)
Jun 13, 2007
post of note from Grote
"Of course, part of the paradox here is that critics
lament the lack of originality among playwrights, but
producers, ever risk-averse, push playwrights to
follow the "rules" more closely, making otherwise
original writers into something more familiar - that,
or they pick up a writer anyway because s/he is "hot,"
and and then screw up somewhere along the line - they
don't prepare their audiences enough, or the fire the
good, smart original casts and replace them with
slumming stars who can't handle the material, then
it's a self-fulfilling flop so they go with something
more traditional, and the cycle continues."
Jun 12, 2007
from an email I received from Enrique
fundraising, but playwright Marisela Orta made me
aware of this teacher in Queens who is trying to build
a theatre library for her students. She teaches in a
low income public school where the arts are severely
neglected and is trying very hard to teach the
importance and relevance of theatre to these kids. I
went online and donated $10. Now, you don't have to
donate anything, but I just did the math:
If every playwright I sent this to donated $3, this
school would meet their funding request for a theatre
library. Many of us piddle $3 on a coffee any given
day. Why not help me help these kids. We're always
complaining that there's no young people in the
theatre. This is a great way to help change that in
such a small way. And how cool would it be for this
school to have a brand new play library because of a
bunch of scrappy playwrights?!
Here's the info:
http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/proposal.html?id=92400&sindex=0
Here's to teachers who care about theatre!
--
Enrique Urueta
Playwright/Dramaturg/Private Dancer
(a dancer for money)
Jun 11, 2007
slog
h/t daisey
"Now, as the article notes, the U.S. is looking to
Saddam's old crew to "bring stability" and perhaps
"consolidate the minority Sunni power" against Shiites
(Iran) … JUST LIKE SADDAM WAS DOING!
I apologize for the krazy all-caps, but oy vey, man.
Indeed, not only was there zero connection between
Sadaam and al Qaeda, but Sadamm was a bulwark against
radical Islamists.
We are now fighting Saddam's war. Hey, George Bush,
Bite me. "
tomorrow
http://www.broadwayworld.tv/viewcolumn.cfm?colid=18969
The Dream Chain
An adaptation of La Vida es Sueño written by multiple
authors, each writing only one scene from the play.
Contributing playwrights include: Sheila Callaghan,
Marcus Gardley, Amlin Gray, Carmen Rivera, Adam
Szymkowicz and Candido Tirado Director TBD
8pm, Tuesday, June 12, 2007 at the Michael Weller
Theater, 311 W 43rd St, 6th Floor
is this new?
http://www.salon.com/ent/feature/2007/06/08/theater/index_np.html
Theatre gets overdeveloped. There are fewer slots.
the NEA is not around. A lot of playwrights go write
for TV where they can make a living. TV is better and
more adventurous than ever before, especially HBO.
I don't know about you, but I never have watched the
Tonys. It is so irrelevant, as are all awards, but
also to what I think of as theatre. The exciting
stuff right now in theatre is not on broadway. This
is not news. The exciting stuff for me is the stuff
that cannot be done on TV like Eurydice at 2nd stage.
And countless other plays written for the stage in the
vocabulary of theatricality.
I for one am tired of the endless articles about what
is wrong with the theatre. We know this. Tell me
what's right with it. Or if you don't know what's
right with it, stop seeing broadway and start seeing
the shows that matter.
Sorry to be picking on this article, partially because
I agree with much of what the writer says.
Did your parents get a divorce?
Author"
Only one more performance.
http://matthewfreeman.blogspot.com/2007/06/pretentious-festival-shill-for-friday.html
Jun 9, 2007
Jun 8, 2007
Friday
or in the mornings. I don't know if this will
continue but at the moment I'm enjoying the freedom of
it. Also, I like to rhyme.
Jun 7, 2007
event 1 for next week
The Dream Chain: an adaptation of the play written by
multiple authors, each writing only one scene of the
play. Contributing playwrights include: Sheila
Callaghan, Marcus Gardley, Amlin Gray, Jason Grote,
Carmen Rivera, Adam Szymkowicz and Candido Tirado
Directed by August Schulenburg
Tuesday, June 12, 8pm
Michael Weller Theater, 311 W 43rd St, 6 Floor
event 2 I will attend next week
Time: Friday, June 15, 2007 5:00 PM
Title of Event: New York Theater Review: Reading and
Book Signing
Friday, June 15, 2007 at 5:00 p.m.
Free Reading and Book Signing
New York Theater Review 2007
Special guests to include: Quiara Alegria Hudes (2007
Pulitzer Prize finalist for ELLIOT, A SOLDIER'S
FUGUE); Adam Szymkowicz (FOOD FOR FISH); Anne Washburn
(I HAVE LOVED STRANGERS);
and
George Hunka (Superfluities theater blog); Garrett
Eisler (Playgoer theater blog); Alan Lockwood (Beckett
centenary) and Caridad Svich (playwright and
founder/maestra of NoPassport)
The 2007 edition of the New York Theater Review
features essays from Playgoer's Garrett Eisler, Alan
Lockwood, Brook Stowe and Caridad Svich, and the
complete texts of new, full-length plays by Quiara
Alegria Hudes, a 2007 Pulitzer Prize finalist for
Elliot, A Soldier's Fugue (introduced by P73's Liz
Jones & Asher Richelli); Adam Szymkowicz' Food for
Fish (introduced by fellow playwright Crystal
Skillman) and Anne Washburn's I Have Loved Strangers
(introduced by fellow playwright Jeffrey M. Jones).
Plus a great big, juicy group interview with some of
the top movers and shakers in contemporary alternative
New York theater and a photo recap of last Fall's
fundraiser at the Brick Theater that helped make this
issue possible. Introduction by Superfluities' George
Hunka. Cover design by Savage Candy.
Jun 5, 2007
thoughts on "Conservative Theatre"
http://lauraaxelrod.typepad.com/
I'm generalizing here but I think there are many
reasons there is not a lot of conservative theatre.
First of all, the best places for theatres are cities
and cities are the most liberal part of every state.
Wherever the most people congregate, you will have the
most theatre and also the most liberals. So in almost
every community, theatre is set in a place where your
audience and your practitioners are liberal.
Artists by a large majority are liberal if you take
that word to mean generally inclusive. (theatre is
pretty inclusive in terms of different types of
artists and different types of people, but also
oddballs end up in theatre for various reasons and
stick around because they find acceptance.)
In some ways conservative theatre is an oxymoron...
which is not to say it doesn't exist, just that the
word conservative doesn't go with the idea of theatre.
When I think of the word conservative, I think of
certain constricting values that exclude instead of
including which I think is why there isn't a lot of
conservative theatre. Even the work required to sit
and watch a theatrical piece involves a certain
openess and going to the theatre is about putting
yourself in front of something unpredictable that has
not been vetted by any rating system or governing
board and being open to the effect it may have on you.
Jun 4, 2007
coming soon
Stage Fright Productions
Writer: Adam Szymkowicz
Director: Moritz von Stuelpnagel
FringeNYC favorite, Susan Louise O'Connor, and her
best friend Jay try to find Susan a boyfriend by
holding auditions for an imaginary production in hopes
of finding Mr. Right. Or at least a date. Or even just
a freakin' kiss.