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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...
Apr 18, 2008
nice post from melon
"Is it such a strange thing to believe that artists be paid for their job? It speaks to the entire question of the necessity of art. Try as people might to debate that question, it is fairly irrelevant, being that art does exist and has since the beginning of man, hence confirming that there is some innate need for it. Why we need it, is what makes it so damn interesting.
Conversely, there is also an artist's need to do it. Doing great art is like doing crack. An addictive, supreme high. So you go searching for more."
http://middleofthemelon.blogspot.com/2008/04/i-also-juggle.html
Apr 17, 2008
NYTW codes The Sound and the Fury
this is Elevator Repair Service who did Gatz as you will recall
Tickets for all performances April 15 – May 18 are just $40 each (reg. $55).
Use code SDFBLG7 when ordering.
To purchase tickets, call (212) 947-8844 or visit http://www.broadwayoffers.com/
New York Theatre Workshop also offers both Student Tickets and CheapTix Sundays.
CheapTix Sundays: All tickets for all Sunday evening performances at 7pm are just $20 each! Tickets are available in advance but must be purchased at the NYTW box office on a cash-only basis.
Student Tickets: Full-time students with a valid student ID may purchase $20 tickets for all performances (subject to availability). Limit one ticket per ID. Tickets must be purchased in person and require an ID at the box office.
The NYTW box office is located at 79 East 4th Street (between Second Avenue and Bowery) and is open Tuesday - Saturday from 1pm - 6pm.
Download a free ticket for the Women's Project's new play
For the preview period (April 11 through 19) of Women's Project's new show, Catherine Trieschmann's comedy crooked directed by Liz Diamond, 1000 free tickets will be downloaded from the Women's Project web site, www.WomensProject.org.
Apr 16, 2008
LA
So I'm back from my LA trip, spending the day recovering and trying to not be jetlagged. I had 20 meetings with TV folks while I was there. No, really. It was a culture shock but it was a lot of fun. I met some cool people. What else? Jeffrey Emerson took me to a rave or something like that. I saw a Circle X reading of Scarcity--I had missed the show in NYC and was glad to see it. It's a pretty terrific play. I'm pretty sure I saw a reading of it at MCC like 5 years ago. I also got to hang at SCR a bit. Saw the Kate Robin show which I really enjoyed. It was a lot about what it is to be an artist and brought up a lot of stuff I'm thinking about a lot right now. Met Kate, another playwright Sharr, hung out with Megan and my friend David from Columbia.
Had some drinks with Mandi and Terry from Note. Spent a lot of time with Jen K and David V who I'm crazy about. They let me crash at their pad in echo park and David introduced me to some new comic books. What else? I don't like to drive, but I can do it. Flying is also not so much fun. There was a heat wave over the weekend. 90 or hotter in April. I wanted some of that moderate weather they are famous for. Ah well. next time I guess.
tomorrow, come see me read something
I'm planning to read from the beginning of my as yet unfinished novel. swing by if you can. Drunken! Careening! Writers! Thursday, April 17, 7pm KGB Bar 85 E. 4th St., NYC/www.kgbbar.com FREE “April Showers: It’s Raining Men! (Hallelujah)” Andrew W.M. Beirle Tim W. Brown Paul McComas Adam Szymkowicz with your hostess, Kathleen Warnock Drunken! Careening! Writers! is a reading series dedicated to the proposition that readings should be: excellent, well-read pieces that have at least one thing in them that makes people laugh (nervous laughter counts), and don't run more than 15 minutes each. For more information, or to be added to the mailing list, email CareeningWriters at aol.com.
Apr 11, 2008
Apr 9, 2008
Apr 4, 2008
Apr 3, 2008
Apr 2, 2008
What I'm doing
Working late every day this week and much of the weekend at the day job. It's that time of year again where I have to work twelve hour days for three days in a row.
Then I'm taking a plane to LA where I will spend a week and a half meeting with TV people and sleeping on couches. Somewhere in there, I hope to get some writing in too.
Apr 1, 2008
Mar 31, 2008
money for somebody
Good news for one playwright every year
200,000 for a mid career in Sept
50,000 for an emerging a year later
and so on every year.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=a9BsRxLL0Qgc&refer=muse
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/theatre/story/2008/03/29/playwright-prize.html
NYTR 08
New York Theater Review 2008
at Drama Book Shop
Friday, April 11, 6-8pm
Free Readings and Reception
The third edition of the New York Theater Review continues its celebration of downtown New York theater with the official release of the 2008 edition at Manhattan's Drama Book Shop Friday, April 11 from 6-8pm.
Drawing from among the best and the brightest in contemporary NYC alt-theater, NYTR's 2008 edition contains three new plays, three original commissioned essays, an extended roundtable chat with six leading NYC theater and performance bloggers, and a sit-down give and take with that singular sonic performance onslaught also known as Reggie Watts.
NYTR's evening at the Drama Book Shop will feature excerpts from the 2008 collection of new plays and essays.
In plays, Taylor Mac's funny, deeply personal and visually stunning The Young Ladies Of ... seeks out the macho, Texas farm-boy father he never really knew; 2008 P73 Playwriting Fellow Tommy Smith's explosively visceral White Hot rips the calm exterior off a bourgeois couple's seemingly placid existence to expose the despairing core festering beneath; six Asian-Americans from widely different backgrounds share their stories of immigration, migration and cultural identity in Ping Chong & Sara Michelle Zatz' Undesirable Elements.
In essays specifically commissioned for the 2008 edition, Victoria Linchong of NYC's Direct Arts, Zachary R. Mannheimer of Brooklyn's Subjective Theatre Co., and Marya Sea Kaminski of Seattle's Washington Ensemble Theatre contribute fresh takes on the NYC alt-theater of today, and a look back fifty years to where it all began.
A reception will follow.
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