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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 17, 2006

pulitzer part 3

I'm changing my name to "No Winner" and putting this year's pulitzer on my resume. or do they name the play. I could write a play called "No Winner."

and the winner is

No One!

http://www.pulitzer.org/

Double P

Today they announce the Pulitzer. Normally I wouldn't know this but it's taking place in the building in which I work as an indentured photocopier/mail merger.

I am excited to find out who won and also at the same time entirely jaded about it. I imagine it will go to a naturalistic domestic drama type play about an important topic that is touched on in an unimportant way.

Not to say that recent winners aren't good plays--because they are...it's just that they're all a certain kind of play...a certain kind of play I can't really get excited about.

I don't know who is up for the award and can't think of a play that should get it. Who do you think should get it? (Of course by the time you comment, everyone will know who won.)

postcard to print and tape to your forehead

Apr 14, 2006

everything is burnable at a high enough temperature

from an email I received

I'm passing along a belated announcement about Youngblood's TRUE LIFE STORY OF [YOUR NAME HERE] - we're currently holding on auction on eBay, the winner of which will have their life story written up by the Youngblood playwrights, to be performed at the Brick Theater's $ELLOUT FESTIVAL this June. The auction ends on Monday at 9:00am and the bidding is already up to $260. If you know anyone with disposable income and a burning desire to see their life played out on stage, please pass it along! http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=6620300570

A quiet friday in new york

Apr 13, 2006

I'm working under these assumptions

It's about continuing, isn't it, this playwriting thing. Not stopping and persevering and keeping on and not stopping and sending out and talking up and hiring pr and writing and writing and writing.

And then eventually stuff works out, right? not necessarily the stuff you think will work out or the stuff you want really badly but stuff all the same and sometimes if you keep it up you get somewhere you've been wanting to get, right?

Apr 12, 2006

It's not too early to buy tickets to Nerve. Packawallop Productions presents the world premiere of NERVE, a new play by Adam Szymkowicz. Directed by Scott Ebersold, the production stars Susan O'Connor and Travis York. Previews begin May 16th at Urban Stages with opening night scheduled for Sunday, May 21st. NERVE is a dark romantic comedy about falling into a relationship on the first date. Elliot has never had an online date before... at least one that showed up. Susan has had plenty but would prefer not to discuss them. When they meet in a bar one night, all their neuroses come out. So do a puppet, some modern dance and surprising twist or two. The production features sets by Nicholas Vaughn (winner, Best Set Design FringeNYC 2005), costumes by Jessica Watters, lighting by Josh Bradford, sound by Brian Hallas and choreography by Wendy Seyb. NERVE runs May 16 - June 3, Tuesdays at 8pm, Saturdays at 3pm and Sundays at 4pm with an added show Weds June 24 at 8pm. Urban Stages is located at 259 West 30th Street (between 7th and 8th Aves., accessible from the #1 train at 28th Street). Tickets are $15, available at 212-868-4444 or www.smarttix.com.

Apr 11, 2006

from Nerve photo shoot photographer Greg Emetaz

My play Nerve coming in May. Hope to see you there.

first draft of a new scene for tuesday

(Bedroom. Night. JAKE snores in bed. ELISE is partially dressed.)

ELISE I could stay. I could stay. Oh, but the light and the heat and the smell, oh the smell. But I could stay. He has smells. He has heat. He has other fine attributes.

The light. The sound of a scraping match. Acetone. Gasoline. Kerosene. The dripping. The pain in the eyes. The light. The heat. The billows of smoke. We have too many buildings, don’t you think? Too many construction sites, empty warehouses, all so much fuel. It’s a service to take away these extra dangerous buildings. They are in the way, they are dry and cracked and falling down and they need a good match, a good flame a cleansing of the palate, a cleansing of the city.

But I could stay and climb into his arms and breathe his foul comfort of a breath. I could cling to his beliefs in right and wrong and the law. I could warm myself on his broad back, lick the back of his neck, put my small hand around his trigger finger.

But there’s the light. There’s the heat. There is love and there is love and there are things that I need. And I . . .

(ELISE starts to leave, stops, kisses him on the forehead.)

ELISE Good night.

(JAKE stops snoring. ELISE exits.)

JAKE Elise?

Apr 10, 2006

How theatre should be

This is from my fellow playwright and pal, Larry Kunofsky

PLAYWRIGHTS IN BIZZARRO-WORLD a dialogue from the obscure and cultually irrelevant Adam Szymkowicz and Larry Kunofsky

-Szymkowicz, dear boy, I read the first four of the six plays you've written this week and I'll produce two of them. Will read the others after my nine shows close.

-I do believe you're cracking wise again, Kunofsky, old man. Your shows will NEVER close. Just like mine. Pavers of the new theatrical rennaissance that we are. So. How goes it?

-Spielberg keeps calling about that screenplay he's begging me for. But why take the pay cut? The masses are begging for more plays.

-How tiresome! Supposedly I've been nominated by someone named "Oscar?" for some award by some academy for some film I wrote as a kind of charity thing. It was almost pro-bono, relatively speaking. I can't take time away from my work for any award unless it's another one of those Obies we keep winning.

-L.A. is bad for one's health anyway. Not that it matters, since we both have health insurance, of course.

-Oh speaking of work, wait: Let me go fill out my time sheet. Oh, wait yet again, I don't have to, since I MAKE A LIVING AS A PLAYWRIGHT hahahahaha!!! Say hello to Natalie Portman for me.

-I will. She's in the hot tub, waiting for me right now. Cheerio. l

A question

I am having a couple plays coming up--plays that will be reviewed. I have had few reviews of my plays thus far and I'm both looking forward to being reviewed and also dreading it.

Some writers and actors have told me they don't read their reviews. I don't know if I can control my curiousity enough to do that but in the end I think it might be better for my sanity.

At the same time, I know there are review writers out there trying to help playwrights not make the same mistakes over and over. So maybe it would be good to read some reviews.

But not if they make me freeze up and dread writing.

I don't know. Do you read your reviews?

Apr 7, 2006

From The Onion

From The Onion

Friends Always On Best Behavior Around Neil LaBute March 23, 2005 | Issue 41•12

FORT WAYNE, IN—Personal acquaintances of acclaimed playwright and filmmaker Neil LaBute reported Tuesday that they keep their behavior in check when around him. "You get in one stupid argument with your wife in front of the guy, and the next thing you know, you're an emotionally abusive misogynist in theaters nationwide," said Terrence Wydell, one of LaBute's former classmates. "With Neil, it's best to limit the conversation to the weather and current events." LaBute is reportedly at work on The Act Of Lending, a play about a character named Terrence who borrows DVDs through intimidation and verbal cruelty, with no intention of ever returning them.

Apr 6, 2006

I have to put in my two cents about Cataract

You should go see it. It is not by any means perfect but it is well worth your time. I think what Lisa and Katie are doing is exciting and that all theatre should not necessarily be an off broadway version of TV.

Especially if you are a theatre person, you should go see it. Because Lisa has a worthwhile and exciting voice that should be heard and the actors are incredible and it's theatrical and different and good.

I'm not even writing real words anymore

Becuse w gnows fhg in dreamsy org Lief ye fryg fhg japst oh gjorey er godd le plapple undre scorry Tudey is Thrusdey and E em tiiired

Apr 5, 2006

I fashioned a heart from the blunt end of my knife. i fashioned a cord from the lost fkdsglksvn blah

I am tired and cold and overcome with not being overcome at all. it is fashionable and deadly and I am off to work for moments and seconds and a day of gray time and photocopying.

Am I wasting my time on this earth doing the wrong thing.? I wonder this. am I not writing right or am I supposed to be doing something else or this but better?

Apr 4, 2006

today, tomorrow and all week

My time is parceled out. 7 1/2 hours to sleep. 2 hours to wake up, shower, get dressed, write a scene, drink some tea, eat some toast and leave. one hour to commute to my job. 15 minutes to email before starting to work. one hour of lunch. Leave work early? Have to make up for it another day. Run to rehearse reading at Juilliard. An hour to rehearse a 90 minute play. Well, less than an hour because someone will be late and they need time before the reading starts. 40 minutes to rehearse. 25 minutes to be nervous before the reading. 90 minutes to watch the reading. 30 or so minutes to talk about the reading with the people who have stayed. By then it's 9 or 9:30. time for a drink? not If I want 7 1/2 hours of sleep. maybe just one. well, maybe another one too. I'll just set my alarm to a later time. and I won't write tomorrow. and I will be half awake for work. I will sleep on my lunch break. I will sleep through the play I will see tomorrow. I will sleep through dinner. i will not sleep. i will write.

Apr 2, 2006

ist draft of new scene--plot, plot, plot

LIZ I’m sure you know that our drop site was compromised last night. GARY No, I didn’t know. LIZ You didn’t know that the building in which you hid the documents for me to find burned down last night? GARY It did? LIZ You didn’t know this. GARY No, I didn’t. LIZ We find that hard to believe. GARY It’s true. LIZ It just so happens that you’re late getting us some information and then it so happens that when you do drop it off, the place burns down? GARY Odd, isn’t it? LIZ I don’t suppose you have a copy of this information we’re waiting on. GARY No, of course not. It could be traced back to me. Destroy any evidence you said—make only one copy. LIZ I know what I said. GARY It will take a while for me to get information like that again. LIZ You know what we think? We think you’re trying to sever ties with us. GARY No. No. LIZ You know you can’t do that, right? We sever ties with you, not the other way around. GARY I understand. LIZ And you don’t want us to sever ties with you if you catch my meaning. GARY What do you mean? LIZ Never mind what I mean. GARY But. LIZ You know what I mean. GARY Yes. But I didn’t start the fire. I swear. LIZ We find that hard to believe. GARY I’m going to find out who started that fire and then you’ll see. LIZ You are, are you? GARY Yes. LIZ OK, I’ll give you a couple days. Bring this arsonist to us and if we believe you we’ll go easy on you. But in the meantime, get that long overdue information to us. GARY I’ll try. LIZ You do that. And if I don’t see results early next week, I’m going to send someone to come find you. You don’t want that. GARY You won’t have to do that. LIZ Good. I’m glad we understand one another. It was good to meet you in Austria and good to see you again this evening. GARY Yes, I so enjoyed the orchestra and reacquainting myself with you. (Exit GARY.)

Mar 31, 2006

From SF production of High Noon

I snatched this from Pan Theater's site. Unless there is another play in which a cowgirl is tied up, I'm pretty sure this is from my show.

upcoming shows

Barhoppers in Los Angeles will do my 10 min play America At War April 24.

Dragonfly will do my 10 min play Snow in Boston in May.

Packawallop (NYC) will do full length Nerve directed by Scott Ebersold starring Susan O'Connor* and Travis York* 4 weeks in May in the Urban Stages Space.

Sanctuary Playwrights Theatre (NYC) will do my spanking new full length play Food For Fish in the Kraine Space 4 weekends in July. to be directed by Alexis Poledouris.

Madcap Players (DC) will do a production of full length Pretty Theft for 5 nights in July in the brand new Capitol City Fringe. Chris Snipe directs.

details on some of these things will follow

Mar 30, 2006

sat

Hi all, 10 min plays being read this weekend.

A1 First Annual April Fool's Ten-Minute Playwriting Festival

Saturday April 1, 2:00p-3:45p Room 305 FREE

featuring short plays by Juilliard playwrights Zina Camblin, Kara Corthron, Bathsheba Doran, Jessica Provenz, Tommy Smith, Ben Snyder, Adam Szymkowicz & Brian Tucker

read by a smorgasbord of Juilliard actors including Noel Allain, Stephen Bel Davies, Amari Cheatom, Gina Crandell, Maxwell de Paula, Ravenna Fahey, Stephen King, Jessica Love, Erica Newhouse, Jared Nathan, Anna O'Donoghue, Johnny Ramey, Ben Rappaport, Joy Suprano, Jasmine Tavarez & Rob Thompson

stage directions provided by Anthony Wofford

bring a friend. love, A1

Mar 29, 2006

and this about fires

It was never looked at, as maybe I just loved fires. I did just love fires. It was a seemingly simple problem that many people have tried to make into a complex puzzle.” There is love in this narrative, but in this case, as in too many others, the love object is fire itself — supporting the belief that some female firesetters are passionate paramours of flame. In his famous pop music recording, Robert Palmer told us that we might as well admit that we’re “Addicted to Love.” Significant numbers of women are addicted to fire. The combined power, heat, vibrancy, sight, sound, smell, taste and feel of fire is as thrilling as sexual intimacy. Suzette, another patient of the author, stated, “It’s like doing drugs. I feel high and spaced out... euphoric, I guess would be the word. After, I feel so good.”

some dramaturgy/research

Personal Accounts: Memoirs of a Compulsive Firesetter some excerpts: Each summer I look forward to the beginning of fire season as well as the fall—the dry and windy season. I set my fires alone. I am also very impulsive, which makes my behavior unpredictable. I exhibit paranoid characteristics when I am alone, always looking around me to see if someone is following me. I picture everything burnable around me on fire. I watch the local news broadcasts for fires that have been set each day and read the local newspapers in search of articles dealing with suspicious fires. I read literature about fires, firesetters, pyromania, pyromaniacs, arson, and arsonists. I contact government agencies about fire information and keep up-to-date on the arson detection methods investigators use. I watch movies and listen to music about fires. My dreams are about fires that I have set, want to set, or wish I had set. I like to investigate fires that are not my own, and I may call to confess to fires that I did not set. I love to drive back and forth in front of fire stations, and I have the desire to pull every fire alarm I see. I am self-critical and defensive, I fear failure, and I sometimes behave suicidally. During the fire. Watching the fire from a perfect vantage point is important to me. I want to see the chaos as well as the destruction that I or others have caused. Talking to authorities on the phone or in person while the action is going on can be part of the thrill. I enjoy hearing about the fire on the radio or watching it on television, learning about all the possible motives and theories that officials have about why and how the fire started. After the fire is out. At this time I feel sadness and anguish and a desire to set another fire. Overall it seems that the fire has created a temporary solution to a permanent problem. Several days after the fire. I revel in the notoriety of the unknown firesetter, even if I did not set the fire. I also return again to see the damage and note areas of destruction on an area map.

Mar 28, 2006

scene for the blog--incendiary

(Back at the bar, Jake and Elise are getting drunk. Tom, Stu and jane are doing shots.)

STU I was never what you would call lucky in love.

JANE I’ve been divorced more times than the circus has come to this town.

TOM I had sex with a clown once.

(They all do shots in unison.)

JAKE I like when you look at me like that.

ELISE Like what?

JAKE Your eyes. There’s fire in them

ELISE I know. It’s part of the job.

JAKE It’s beautiful

ELISE Thank you. You’re not so hard to look at yourself. It’s disarming.

JAKE It’s supposed to be.

ELISE I’ll be right back

(Exit ELISE) TOM I like big butts. You know, really big butts? Like your wife’s butt, Stu.

STU When no one’s home I like to smoke cloves and masturbate to internet photos of exotic-looking women.

JANE I like to date men who I know if it ever came down to it, in a bare-knuckled fight I could kick his ass.

(They down shots)

(ELISE returns. She hands JAKE her underwear.)

JAKE What’s this?

ELISE It’s my underwear.

JAKE What do I do with it?

ELISE It’s supposed to be sexy. You’re supposed to like it.

JAKE Oh, I do.

ELISE Never mind.

JAKE It’s sexy.

ELISE Just give it back to me.

JAKE No, I get it. It’s sexy. I’ll hold onto them if that’s OK.

ELISE OK.

JAKE But I could give them back later, if you want them back, after the moment has passed.

ELISE That’s thoughtful.

JAKE Thanks.

ELISE Maybe you should kiss me now.

(They kiss.)

JANE Whoa.

STU Hey!

TOM Ho.

JANE I’ve never been kissed like that.

(They do shots.)