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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...

Nov 3, 2015

800 PLAYWRIGHT INTERVIEWS



Dear friends,

For about 6 years I've been doing these interviews.  In total, I've probably spent somewhere between 200-400 hours of my life in service of these interviews.  I love that people read and enjoy them.  I'm glad they exist.  But I know I won't be able to keep doing this forever.  If you want to help out, please consider a small donation.



A
Sean Abley
Rob Ackerman
Liz Duffy Adams
Johnna Adams
Tony Adams
David Adjmi
Keith Josef Adkins
Nastaran Ahmadi
Derek Ahonen
Kathleen Akerley
Ayad Akhtar
Rob Askins
Chiara Atik
Forrest Attaway
David Auburn
Hannah Bos
Leslie Bramm
Benjamin Brand
Jami Brandli
Jennifer Fawcett
Joshua Fardon
Caitlin Saylor Stephens
Ariel Stess
Vanessa Claire Stewart
Kate Tarker
Jona Tarlin
Judy Tate
Roland Tec
Cori Thomas
Matthew B. Zrebski 

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I Interview Playwrights Part 800: Jess Foster



Jess Foster

Hometown: Sidney, Maine

Current Town: Canton, MA

Q:  Tell me about Hard and Fast.

A:  Well, here is the synopsis: “Roger, a struggling mechanic, has a real passion for restoring classics. He’s finally found his dream car, “Audra”, a 1958 Austin Healey. When a wealthy lawyer wants the car for his 16-year old son Parker, the offer’s too good for Roger to refuse. He makes one stipulation: Parker must help finish the car’s restoration to understand its true value. When the time comes, will Roger be able to let the car go, or will his strange new feelings for Audra make it too difficult to give her up? Is this a bizarre obsession or something much more?”

For me, though, the play is about the relationships men have with their cars. There’s often something sacred to that relationship and it first develops right when boys are learning to be “men”. I wondered how that experience shaped them as they were coming-of-age and learning about the world. I certainly grew up feeling close to cars as well, naming each one along the way. I was often around car guys and wanted to tell their story, though I wanted to explore the extremes.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m working on a play called Full Term about a woman in her late-30’s who has just gone through a break-up and is left to pick up the pieces with her not-always-helpful sister. Ironically, it’s a 3-hander with women instead of 3 men like Hard and Fast. I swear I don’t only write 3-handers.

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 in the woods of Maine and I love nature and time to sit and meditate about big ideas. My mother likes to tell people that she never worried where I was when I was outside playing because she could always hear me talking to myself. I like to think that those were the beginnings of my first plays; I was always creating stories and new worlds filled with many characters. Not unlike my role as playwright now, I was the voice for all of them.

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

A:  I don’t think this is original, but I wish more workshop processes would be serving eventual productions. You learn so much more about a play when you have it on its feet and have actors, directors and designers asking questions to make it live in space. A lot of theater artists seem to be working on this issue so I hope it will continue to improve.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes? 

A:  Sam Shepherd, Caryl Churchill, Mac Wellman, Martin McDonough, and Charlotte Meehan. They’re all playwrights who push boundaries and also have an element of dark humor that explores life issues in a way that feels real to me. Life can simultaneously be heart-wrenching and funny.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 

A:  I get excited when I see plays that are experimenting with something new, whether it be the way they let the story unfold or a different type of character. I also really appreciate smart, dark humor. To me, plays like this explore life issues in a way that feels real to me. I’m a firm believer that life can simultaneously be heart-wrenching and funny. I really enjoy watching that contradiction play out on stage and making the audience really grapple with what they’re feeling in any given moment.

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

A:  Find the people that inspire you and find ways to get your work done. Don’t worry about writing what you think theaters want to see. Write what you need to write and find the people it resonates with; eventually you’ll look around and notice you have collaborators. Then, figure out how to produce the thing.

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Nov 2, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 799: Margaret Dulaney




Margaret Dulaney

Hometown: Louisville, Kentucky

Current home: Bucks County, Pennsylvania

Q: What are you working on now?

A: I am juggling two projects now: I have a play running off Broadway at the Theater at St. Clements on west 46 Street called The Hummingbird’s Tour. It will run until November 22. And I also have my ongoing spoken word work with the Website LISTENWELL.ORG, which has offered one professionally recorded essay a month to a growing audience since 2010.

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 was raised by a group of women who were quite magical. My work reflects their mystical stories and quirky southern personalities. The Hummingbird’s Tour is inspired by my grandmother, who was a follower of the writings of the mystic Rudolf Steiner. She had a near-death experience when she was in her thirties and raised us to believe in a world beyond this one. I still believe.

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

A: I imagine the theater is developing at the same slow drip as humanity. My hope is that the theater will lift people, however that might be accomplished. Lift us into laughter, into a broader view, into understanding.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: I like my theater to be transcendent. Back to the lifting idea… I love the great classic writers: Shakespeare, Shaw, and Chekov.

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

A: I would tell a young playwright to practice very careful listening. Listen quietly and with such expectancy that you will not miss the voices of your characters as they unfold their story to you.

Q: Plugs, please.

A: The Hummingbird’s Tour is being acted by such a talented group of veteran actors. I hope everyone will try and make it to the show.

My website Listenwell.org is free!



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Oct 15, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 798: David Ian Lee



David Ian Lee

Hometown: Newport, California.

Current Town: Nashville, Tennessee.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I was away from writing for a few years while I pursued an MFA in Directing from Illinois State University; in what spare time I had, I puttered with small projects and gave slow polishes to my plays The Curing Room and mass. In recent months, however, I have – to borrow a word from Mac Rogers – “unbottled” with a vengeance, diving deep into a new project; I’m interested in a story about a schoolteacher who becomes a national hero after she uses a concealed weapon to neutralize a gunman who attacks her elementary school. The last few months have been about research and incubation; in the last few weeks there have been pages.

I’ve newly Nashvillian and adjusting comfortably to the stomping grounds. I’ve joined the Nashville Repertory Theatre as its Associate Artist in Education, which follows a month that saw me simultaneously performing at the Rep in Gina Gionfriddo’s Rapture, Blister, Burn and co-directing (with Jessika Malone, my friend and a brilliant peer from ISU) your play Hearts Like Fists for Actors Bridge Ensemble. I prefer the moniker “theatremaker” to describe what I do – I write, I act, I teach, I direct – because the word best encapsulates my love for the theatre; any day spent making magic is better than a day not.

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

A:  I visited New York when I was six years old. At that time my uncle was the Production Stage Manager for Cats at the Winter Garden. I sat by his elbow in the booth – I called a cue! – and later went backstage, met the company, and discovered how magic got made; I remember a private ride on the flying tire... It’s ironic, perhaps, that for all my love of Shakespeare and Miller and Ruhl that Andrew Lloyd Webber’s kittens likely play a great part in my affection for theatre that embraces the spectacular; I love plays that wrestle with big ideas and that provide great palates for actors, but I do prefer if there’s a little flash-and-gasp along the way.

Quickly, about me as a person (as opposed to me as a writer, since we all know that writers aren’t people): When I was a toddler I’d run head-long into the ocean. My mother tells me I was fearless. I imagine that’s an ingrained quality that helped me move to New York with a suitcase and a few hundred bucks when I was fresh out of college, or that five years later provoked the way I came to write my first play: I rented a playing space before I’d hit a single keystroke, knowing that it would force me to have something ready in a month’s time.

I worry that I’ve lost some of that fearlessness. Becoming a parent will do that, I suppose, and I’ve also recently lost a parent and survived brushes with illness and graduate school. But I do still love running into the ocean.

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

A:  I wish there were greater opportunities for artists to find theatrical homes. So many theatremakers bounce job-to-job, with very little agency about the trajectory of their own creative expression. I recognize that the “old” repertory system mightn’t seem viable in all markets, but oh, to find a cove in a storm! To be able to create with and for a company!

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Oh, man... Can I just list names?

I’ve had incredibly influential teachers. Terry Knickerbocker, Bill Esper, Jerry Carlson, Deb Alley, and Samantha Wyer go high on that list – as would some folk I learned from outside of the classroom or the studio, including Sean Daniels, Ellen McLaughlin, and Jeff Lee.

There are so many people who came up in New York’s “Indie Theatre” that I first consider friends, but whose work I also deeply, deeply admire: Mac Rogers, Nat Cassidy, Crystal Skillman, Lauren Ferebee, Bill McMahon, James Comtois, August Schulenberg, you – hell, let’s just say anyone involved with Flux Ensemble, Manhattan Theatre Source, or the Playwright’s Continuum over at The Players Club. These are folks that I worked and played with who made me want to be better at what I try to do.

And anyone who knows me knows that this list must also include George Lucas.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Stories well-told, with actors behaving truthfully under imaginary circumstances and an embrace of the dynamic intersection of semiotics, spectacle, and design.

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

A:  Two things: Read everything you can about how stuff works. Learn about how people think, about how humans receive and process information. Learn about emotions, about dreams, about faith and the absence of it. And, please, learn about story structure; learn how narratives work. Never stop learning. And be ready to abandon all of it should inspiration strike, because the other thing is this: Tell the story you need to tell, not the story you might necessarily want to tell, because nothing else matters.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  I don’t really care for them, to be honest; I think their scrunchy noses look kinda gross, like someone hit a real dog with a shovel. Oh, and my play The Curing Room is being translated into Afrikaans, French, and at least one of the languages spoken in Norway in anticipation of upcoming international productions.

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Oct 12, 2015

NEXT UP

Reading:

Marian Smouldering or The True Tale of Robin Hood
Flux Theater Ensemble (Commission)
Theaterlab
355-357 W 36th St, New York, New York 10018
October 19, 2015, 7:30 pm

A gender-bending take on greed, love, and greedy love, full of archery, disguises, plots, and song. Through this gender-remixed version of the classic tale, Adam explores what we give up for the greater good, and what we find when we abandon our disguises. The reading will be directed by Kelly O’Donnell, and feature Ryan Andes, Jessica Angleskhan, Becky Byers, Nat Cassidy, Kevin R. Free, Renata Friedman, Nandita Shenoy, Alisha Spielmann, and Matthew Trumbull, with more actors to be announced soon!

Productions:

Hearts Like Fists

Production #18 of Hearts Like Fists
Tomah High School
Tomah, WI
Opens October 23, 2015

Production #19 of Hearts Like Fists
Ridgewater College
Willmar, MN
Opens November 5, 2015

Production #20 of Hearts Like Fists
Kent School
Kent, CT
Opens November 6, 2015

Production #21 of Hearts Like Fists
Damonte Ranch High School
Reno, NV
Opens November 11, 2015

Production #22 of Hearts Like Fists
Centenary College of Louisiana
Centenary, LA
Opens November 19, 2015

Production #23 of Hearts Like Fists
St. Francis High School
St. Francis, MN
Opens January 29, 2016

Production #24 of Hearts Like Fists
La Feria High School
La Feria, TX
Opens March 10, 2016

Production #25 of Hearts Like Fists
University of Findlay
Findlay, OH
Opens April 13, 2016

Production #26 of Hearts Like Fists
Shadow Horse Theater
Minneapolis, MN
Opens May 27, 2016

Clown Bar

Production #8 of Clown Bar
Theatre on Fire
Charlestown Working Theater
Charlestown, MA
Opens October 2, 2015

Production #9 of Clown Bar
Good Luck MacBeth
Reno, NV
Opens October 2, 2015

Production #10 of Clown Bar
Idiom Theater
Bellingham, WA
Opens October 15, 2015

Production #11 of Clown Bar
The NOLA Project
New Orleans, LA
Opens October 22, 2015

Production #12 of Clown Bar
Defiance College
Defiance, OH
Opens November 5, 2015.

Production #13 of Clown Bar
Springs Ensemble Theatre
Colorado Springs, CO
Opens May 13, 2016


Production #10 of Pretty Theft
Dark Matter Productions
NYC, NY
Opens November 5, 2015

Production #11 of Pretty Theft
James Madison University
Harrisonburg, VA
Opens April 26, 2016


7 Ways to Say I Love You 
(a night of my short plays)
Matoaca High School
Chesterfield, VA
Opens November 12, 2015


PUBLISHED PLAYS



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Oct 10, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 797: Sofya Weitz




Sofya Weitz

Hometown: Los Angeles, California

Current Town: Brooklyn, New York

Q:  Tell me about LADY.

A:  LADY is a play loosely based on Countess Elizabeth Bathory, a powerful woman in the 1500s in Hungary who allegedly killed over 600 young girls and bathed in their blood to preserve her youth, making her the most prolific serial killer in history. My play takes an anachronistic approach, looking at her last days with her two remaining servants. It's a power play, exploring the lengths we go to for beauty, sex and power, and really revolves around these three characters and the way they destroy and rebuild each other, with some blood in there of course.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I am helping my boyfriend (Will Arbery, who is the director of LADY) produce his short film, Your Resources, which is really exciting. I recently started a new play about women who have been executed in the U.S. I'm also working hard on revisions for my play The Gleaming which I developed with Steep Theatre in Chicago. Finally, I'm developing a television series that deals with a Jewish American family living in modern day Berlin and explores the mounting anti-Semitism in Western Europe.

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

A:  What immediately came to mind is that between the ages of 8-10 or so, if my family had our friends over for a holiday or dinner or party, I would spend the whole afternoon previous planning a performance for all the kids who would be attending. One year, I remember I wrote a short play, cast every kid I knew was coming, made separate binders for each of them with their scripts, designed costumes and the set from what I could find around the house, basically forced them to rehearse and learn their lines when they arrived, directed and blocked them, and ultimately performed for all the parents. I'm pretty sure the play was about a writer who wasn't spending time with her friends and they devised ways to try to get her to come outside and hang out with them. Oh, and I played the writer.

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

A:  The main things I want are in some ways a contradiction. I want theatre to be able to be accessed by everyone. I really want to contribute to diversifying audiences, in many different ways. I want non "theatre" people to see and love theatre; I want everyone to be able to afford to see the shows they want to see and have access both tangibly and ideologically (by offering up varied viewpoints). And on the other end, I want people who care about contributing to the theatrical world to be able to be paid for what they do, to afford to make art, and to be able to make that a large part of their livelihood.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My professors from my grad program at Northwestern University that I finished this past June with my MFA really inspire me. Rebecca Gilman, Zayd Dohrn, Thomas Bradshaw, Brett Neveu. They're all continuing to contribute so vastly to the theatrical world all the time, but remain inspiring teachers and mentors. I am drawn to that authenticity; they are all doing what they do not only incredibly well, but they are doing it unapologetically, consistently, pairing hard work with unique talent and passing those skills and that advice to us. I also have been completely obsessed with Charles Mee's plays (especially his Greek adaptations) for many years, and I love the work Beth Henley does (I wrote my first play for her class at my undergrad, Loyola Marymount University.)

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love theatre that feels immediate, that takes risks and assumes the intelligence of its audience and characters. I love rawness and a feeling of pressing importance, which doesn't always mean a contemporary show. For instance, I saw Luis Alfaro's adaptation of Medea in LA last month and was so inspired by the fresh blood he pumped into that story, which I already loved on its own. Alternately, I just saw The Flick and am consistently impressed with Annie Baker's ability to challenge her audience's attention spans and make this magnificently beautiful piece of theatre in a collection of small but incredibly tragic moments. I crave authenticity when I see plays and I love theatre that uses all its elements to pull me out of my own paradigm and experience for a couple hours.

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

A:  Make your own work. Put it up yourself, however you do it, do it as best you can, and get people there. People are always more excited about coming to see something than reading pages. But more importantly, it will keep you excited about the work you're doing and keep the momentum moving forward. It's so easy to get burnt out with rejection, but as long as you always have something you're working on, it doesn't feel as crushing. And if you're making it yourself, it feels more real, and that's even better.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Come see my new full-length play LADY at the American Theatre of Actors running from October 28th-November 1st as part of the 2015 Araca Project! Sex, beauty, violence, blood, power play, existential questions. All the good stuff. You can get tickets at https://www.artful.ly/lady.

 
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