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1100 Playwright Interviews
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Oct 3, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 65: Sam Forman
Hometown: Brookline, Massachusetts
Current Town: New York City
Q: Tell me about your musical F#@KING UP EVERYTHING coming up in the NYMF.
A: The show's composer / lyricist, Eric Davis (who has been in a bunch of rock bands in the city for many years) had written a first draft of the book for the show as well -- but since Eric comes from a rock background and not so much a theatre background, he wanted a playwright to come onboard with the project and help him restructure the story. I got set up with Eric by our mutual friend -- the lovely and talented director Evan Cabnet -- and also the good folks over at Ars Nova -- and now we've been working together on the show for the last year and we're excited for people to see what we've come up with. It's a hard rocking, heartfelt comedy about young people in Wiliamsburg Brooklyn falling in and out of love with each other. We were shooting for a tone kind of like Say Anything and Pretty In Pink...but it's set in contemporary times and it's got a catchy indie-rock score. Like in most of my plays, this one features a neurotic / self deprecating Jewish protagonist, a gorgeous and amazing girl who he thinks is totally out of his league and a narcissistic, classically handsome Waspy male friend who deliberately attempts to destroy the main character's life...but this one has a much more upbeat conclusion than some of the my other stuff.
Q: You wrote the book for this but you often write lyrics as well. How is writing a straight play different than writing the book or the songs to a musical? Is it a completely different thing?
A: I think it really does feel different, yeah. The book for a musical actually has a lot more in common with writing a screenplay or a tv script than it does with writing a straight play. With straight plays -- particularly when I'm writing the first draft -- I feel like I have much more freedom to take the story in whatever direction I choose. My scenes are longer, there are more tangents, I don't really have to adhere to any kind of outline -- the whole thing just feels generally more indulgent and looser structurally. When I'm hired to write a book for a musical I think of myself more as a technician who is basically trying to quickly get from Point A to Point B in as truthful and funny a way as I possibly can. Book writing so far in my experience has mostly been about structure: Making sure to get to the next song every few pages, writing some laugh lines and getting in all the exposition and background stuff that the composer has left out. I think writing a straight play can be much more personal and much more about expressing your own thoughts and feelings about the world we live in. But they're both rewarding in different ways. Writing song lyrics (at least the kinds of lyrics that I usually write -- which are rhyming and often have to scan perfectly to instrumental music that has already been written by the composer) is a whole other thing as well. It can often take me twelve hours to write the lyrics for a three minute song...but once I get to the end, I don't usually go back and change much. I might make a couple little tweaks and change a word here and there...but usually the song that ends up in the show is pretty similar to the first draft -- because with lyrics, you're basically doing twenty drafts each time you sit down to write a song. I'll usually use up ten pages of a legal pad crossing out lines before I come up with the right one.
Q: What else are you working on?
A: I wrote the lyrics for a show called Season Preview that I've been developing with Alex Timbers, Sean Cunningham and Eli Bolin -- it's about an insane, theatre loving, Finnish billionaire who decides to buy every Broadway theatre and produce every show as well. We get to see little snippets from all his bizarre ideas (Blinded By Love: The Tragedy of Gay Oedipus, The Who's Miracle Worker, Hello Dalai!, Hindenberg: The Musical, etc) We're doing a reading on October 16th at 3pm at Ars Nova. I'm also writing the lyrics for a musical adaptation of Rob Ackerman's terrific play Volleygirls, which is about a high school girl's volleyball team in Ohio.
Q: You studied theater at Northwestern for undergrad. How was that? Who else was there while you were there?
A: I really loved Northwestern -- maybe not the actual classes so much, although some of them were totally interesting -- but the general theatre culture there is very strong and it seems to attract some very talented, unique people. I guess we just had a really good time is what I'm trying to say. And I still work often with a bunch of actors, writers and directors that I met there -- Austin Lysy, Armando Riesco, Billy Eichner, Eli Bolin and Jamie Salka to name a few -- and I think we share a shorthand from having grown up together that makes the process of creating theatre so much easier. When I send one of my plays to Austin Lysy for example -- he just knows exactly how it should sound...and when he does a reading, it's exactly how I meant it to be. You can only really find that kind of connection I think with someone you've known for a long time.
Q: You and Beau Willimon cowrote a pilot which you sold to AMC a few years back. Can you talk about how that came about and developed and what that process was like?
A: I got the meeting with AMC through my agent Chris Till (who is now also Beau's agent) It was before they had done Mad Men, actually it was before they had done any original programming at all. And they told me over lunch that they wanted to develop a "period spy drama" --- so I contacted Beau, because he was the only person I knew at the time who I was sure would definitely have an idea for a period spy drama. And he came up with the basic premise of our pilot, HICKORY HILL, which is about a black factory worker in the North during the Civil War who is sent down to South Carolina to pose as a slave (and butler to the "Karl Rove of the Confederacy") and become a spy for the Union Army. We sold the premise to AMC and worked on the script for a year with the development people there and ultimately they decided not to shoot the pilot (mostly because they realized it was just too expensive)...but we got paid well for our time, we got in the WGA and it opened a lot of doors for both of us.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: I think the most important thing is just finding a way to hear your stuff out loud in front of some kind of audience -- even if it's just about getting your friends together and reading the play around a
table. Apply to a writers group or start your own. I've been in Youngblood at the Ensemble Studio Theatre and Play Group at Ars Nova and many of the people I met there have become my best friends and most valued colleagues over the years. Encourage each other and find a community of people that inspire you. Even if you're doing readings in your living room -- just keep creating stuff -- because it doesn't ultimately matter where you do it. You just have to keep doing it.
Q: What kind of theatre excites you?
I'm a big cheerleader for my friends and I like to talk about their work and encourage people to seek it out: Annie Baker's new play Circle Mirror Transformation is fantastic...she also wrote one that I think is incredibly good called Nocturama and it's very confusing to me why it hasn't been produced yet. There was a reading of it a while ago at Playwrights Horizons that was one of the best things I've seen in years -- and this was just a reading. I just read Beau Willimon's new play Spirit Control the other day and I thought it was really excellent and totally different from anything I had read of his in the past. Anna Kerrigan's new play Paradigm From California is really superb, chilling and stayed with me for weeks after reading it. I think Amy Herzog and Carly Mensch are also going to be putting up smart, funny, moving plays for the next fifty years or so. Also Liz Meriwether's play Oliver is wonderful and I think it's being up this spring at this great company StageFarm. Some of the slightly older folks who I was inspired by when I first moved here -- Adam Rapp, Christopher Shinn, Lucy Thurber, Melissa James Gibson, Stephen Belber, Julia Jordan, Adam Guettel and Jason Robert Brown -- are still writing terrific plays and musicals and I'm excited to see what they've got coming up this season. Also that Adam Szymkowicz fella is pretty great too.
Oct 1, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 64: Erin Courtney
Hometown: Hermosa Beach, California
Current Town: Brooklyn, NY
Q: Tell me about what you're presenting at the Prelude festival.
A: I am presenting a reading of a new play called A MAP OF VIRTUE. Ken Rus Schmoll is directing. A Map of Virtue is a symmetrical play in which a bird statue guides us through a story of coincidence, tragedy and friendship. Part interview, part comedy, part strange middle of the night horror, a group of friends encounter evil and dissect their own responses to it. We have a great cast - Maria Striar, Matthew Dellapina, Birgit Huppoch, Matt Maher, Benton Greene, Matt Korahais and Normandy Sherwood.
Q: What else are you working on?
A: I will have a ten minute play in the Fall at the Flea Theater. The collection of short plays is called THE GREAT RECESSION. My piece is called "severed" and I am a big fan of all the other writers in the project - Thomas Bradshaw, Sheila Callaghan. Will Eno, Itamar Moses and Adam Rapp.
Ken Rus Schmoll and I are looking for a producer or a space to do a run of Black Cat Lost, which is a sort of an "entertainment" about mourning.
Q: Like me, you're married to another playwright. (The wonderful Scott Adkins) Would you suggest playwrights marry playwrights?
A: All playwrights should marry playwrights, but if you can't find a suitable playwright to marry then you should marry a very patient, generous and creative soul who appreciates your need to compulsively go see theater and write at odd hours and spend many hours at rehearsals.
Q: Can you tell me about teaching at Brooklyn College?
A: Teaching at Brooklyn College is something I am extremely grateful for. The genius of Mac Wellman continues to inspire me every day. He is a great mentor as a teacher and a playwright. Also, Mac chooses amazing grad students who are incredibly smart and courageous in their quest for finding new ways to make theater. So, it's a great job because I am continually learning and I never, ever take for granted that there is only way one to think about and make theater. It is an astounding community of artists.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: Write, Dream, Write down your dream when you wake up, go see great and bad and good theater, be nice to other playwrights and actors and directors, listen to good ideas, let yourself fall in love with your own plays, support your friends.
Link to Prelude: www.prelude.nyc.org
Sep 30, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 63: Gary Winter
Gary Winter
Hometown: Sheepshead Bay NY (Home Town of Vince Lombardi)
Current Town: Clinton Hill, NY
Q: What are you working on now?
A: My aunt was an aerospace engineer through the Mid-1950’s through the early 90’s, so this piece has started out to be about a woman working in the aerospace industry (in L.A.) in the 50’s, but we’ll see what it turns out to be. When you read about the early days of rocket science it’s kind of incredible to find out how seat-of-the-pants the experimentation was. Like, in order to test fuel mixtures these guys would literally go out to the desert, light a rocket’s fuse then dive behind sandbags. I don’t think the play is going to be about that, but the research is fascinating.
Q: Can you talk about the Pataphysics workshops? I've done three: with Paula Vogel, Lee Breuer and Chuck Mee and I learned a ton each time. Can you talk about what they are and who is up next?
A: Anne Washburn founded Pataphysics in 2001 and the Flea has hosted and supported the program, which is run at cost. The goal is to give theater artists an opportunity to sit down with master playwrights whom they ordinarily wouldn’t have access to. I’d say the main thing for me has been to understand the intellectual groundwork of playwrights whose work I had known (like Mac Wellman), or was just getting to know (like Jeff Jones or Erik Ehn). So understanding their ideas, literary and philosophical influences, and the rigor and curiosity with which they approach playwriting has been an eye-opening, expansive and joyful education. It also helps to hear how people talk about their work, and realize that’s something we need to get good at. I suck at it but that’s no excuse.
Jeff Jones teaches a workshop about “building assemblies” at the end of November.
Q: Can you describe the Erich Ehn Pataphysics retreat you were just on?
A: It’s a silent playwriting retreat in the Catskills. One thing about being silent for three straight days is that your mind and body take on a whole new rhythm; that is, you have the time and space to sustain the writing by finding a steady rhythm, which of course is difficult to do in our day-to-day lives. Because I remained focused inwardly without having to think about social niceties or anything like that, I was surprised how much stamina I had. Erik meets with us as a group about 3 times a day and does physical as well as writing exercises, and then talks about what we might process for the next writing period.
Q: For years you were the Lit Mgr at the Flea. How was that? What did you learn from that experience?
A: Lit Manager at the Flea: A fabulous ten years. When I interned at the Flea I was just completing NYU, and the Artistic Director, Jim Simpson, said he wanted a playwright as Lit Manager (a volunteer position). Naturally I was terrified but excited to be part of a really cool theater. Also I didn’t have a theater background, so I was really keen to learn the nuts and bolts of how theater is made. I kind of love process, and being able to sit in on rehearsals and production and design meetings has been invaluable. I’ve met people who have become colleagues and friends-not to mention getting to know an army of talented actors who’ve come through the Flea.
Once you’re in the mix of things-getting to know writers and their work-I think the best thing you can do is be in a position to put that person on the theater’s radar. (and I’m only referring to my experiences at the Flea; I’m sure lit manager’s jobs and influence vary widely). I’d be nuts to think the Flea should produce every play I’m in love with, and that’s the way it should be. But you can call attention to writers, and at least by providing access (ie-readings) you might be able to get other theaters interested in the writer. Of course it’s exciting when all the pieces fall into place. When Joe Goodrich sent me SMOKE and MIRRORS, I loved the play, we did a reading and the Flea produced it. Score! At the same time I didn’t understand Alice Tuan’s AJAX, but Jim did and it became one of our most successful shows. That was sort of a humbling experience, and I realized I will be dead wrong at times, and I won’t always “get” a play by reading it. Also talking to the writer about his/her work is often necessary, particularly if you feel there’s something drawing you in, but you’re still not clear about the writer’s intentions. I had a few such conversations with Tom Bradshaw a few years ago because I didn’t understand why he started one narrative thread and seemed to drop it midway through. His answers were really concise and it’s helped me appreciate what he’s up to ever since.
Q: Tell me a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a person or as a writer.
A: My uncle was a fishing boat captain, so we went fishing a ton and I spent a lot of time staring at the horizon, daydreaming, and what else is writing but daydreaming?
Q: What kind of theater excites you?
A: I love stumbling upon plays like you might a new and strange kind of animal. Then I’m like, oh wow, I didn’t know you could do this in theater. In recent years that’s happened with TR Warszawa’s KRUM (at BAM). It was 2:45 of talk and un-flashy but fabulous staging, totally engaging. Irene Fornes MUD (the production she directed at Intar in the mid-90’s) was also like nothing I’ve ever seen before. I didn’t really understand it, but fortunately Irene was teaching at NYU at the time, so the class had a good discussion with her about the play. One thing she said, which I’ll never forget, is that when people tell her they didn’t understand MUD but they had a powerful experience, she responds that it is this “experience” that’s important.
Other performances were Mac Wellman’s FNU LNU at SOHO Rep (I’m still singing the song from that show: “Why the Q in Q-tip”), Susan-Lori Parks’ AMERICAN PLAY and VENUS (The Public), and Len Jenkin’s DARK RIDE (SOHO Rep). I think it’s as much about where I am in life, as anything else that defines what I’ve responded to. I would also add that I admire plays that find an elegant image or gesture that ripples with meaning, such as Ionesco’s RHINOCEROS or Frish’s FIREBUGS, both about fascism of course. I thought Susan-Lori’s AMERICAN PLAY did that wonderfully.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: No secret: Have a fucked up childhood and call me in the morning.
Q: Any plugs?
A: It would be a conflict of interest to plug my play COOLER at the Chocolate Factory in April, or Julia Jarcho’s (13P #9) play AMERICAN TREASURE at the Paradise Theater in November, so I’ll recuse myself from plugging them. But I would like to plug Heidi Schreck’s CREATURE in October and Emily Devoti’s MILK next spring.
Sep 29, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 62: J. Holtham
Hometown: Leonia, NJ*
Current Town: New York, NY
Q: Tell me about the play you're having read at EST.
A: Household Name is a big, old-fashioned comedy. For a long while now, I’ve been fascinated by the work of Philip Barry (The Philadelphia Story, and especially Holiday) and I wanted to write a comedy like that. Lots of characters, something about class friction and manners, but with a modern sheen to it. Around the same time, I became similarly fascinated with Martha Stewart. I know, I know. But it’s not like a “Martha Stewart” play. It’s really about her daughter and what it’s like to have a mother who has re-invented herself. I thought it was interesting that Martha Stewart and Hillary Clinton are neighbors in Westchester County and somehow it just came to me. I finished a two-act draft of it last year, but it was missing something. So this version will be three-acts, with a new love interest. And more jokes and slapstick.
Q: This is a gigantic reading series. Can you tell me about it and how it came about?
A: Octoberfest is actually one of my favorite events of the theatrical year. It’s been a staple of EST’s season for more than 20 years (I believe). Basically, for one month, the theatre throws open its doors and lets the membership run roughshod over the staff. There are nearly 100 projects, on two stages for three or four weeks, all member-generated and not curated at all, just scheduled. If you’re a member of EST and get your form in on time, you’ve got a slot, two performances for whatever you want to do. I’ve always used it as a challenge, a deadline to hit. Most of my plays have been finished specifically for an Octoberfest reading.
Q: What else are you working on?
A: I’m still in the midst of a big writing jag. I’ve written about it a bit at my blog, http://jholtham.blogspot.com, though the summer slipped away from me. I’m trying to write four new plays this year. I’ve finished two and really want to finish two more by the end of the year. The next play in the hopper, which I’ve started, but gotten stuck on, is called Anarchists: A Comedy. It’s about a widowed suburban woman who invites a bunch of radicals into her home ahead of a G20-type meeting. Then hilarity ensues. I’m determined to finish it this November, once the Octoberfest dust settles.
Q: You've been affiliated with EST for a while. Can you talk about how they have supported you (or you them)?
A: EST has been my artistic home basically as long as I’ve been in New York. It was the first place I worked, the first place that said to me, “We like you, we like your work, here are the keys, do what you want.” They took chances on me, coming to New York from a less than first tier college (SUNY New Paltz in the house! Go Hawks!), and treated me like a full-fledged artist. Youngblood, their emerging playwrights program, was the first place I was in the company of other writers and felt like I belonged. Most of everything I’ve learned about professional theatre, good or bad, I learned there.
They also took a chance on me, even though I was a playwright, as an administrator. Those jobs usually go to directors, but working with the EST/Sloan Project for five years and running Youngblood for two years gave me insights into the development process and the inner workings of a theatre that more people, and especially more playwrights, should get. While it was sometimes frustrating, regularly exhausting and more than occasionally utterly insane, it was never boring and almost always fun.
Q: Are you still working in the lit office at NY Stage and Film? What's that like?
A: I worked for New York Stage and Film for two great summers on the Vassar campus. If EST was the crucible where I was molded as a young theatre professional, SAF was where they dunk you in the cold water and you toughen up or shatter. The work was incredibly intense in a short period of time (the whole season there is about eight weeks) and just plain staggering. But the most amazing things happened there. It slides under the radar, I think, overshadowed by places like the O’Neill as a developmental program and Williamstown as a producing theatre, but it does both things exceptionally well. I watched plays come in, get taken apart and then put back together. The basic philosophy of SAF is so much about the needs of the project that they really put the artists in the driver’s seat and allow them all kinds of latitude. One project we brought up when I was there was a big musical. The creators got together a few days before the cast came up and realized they needed to take the story in a different direction. Now, we’d spent a month casting this thing, brought all of these high-wattage Broadway people up to Poughkeepsie, set up this whole workshop that was being sold to the public as a big deal, but when the creators said we need a couple of days, we sent everyone away, let the writers hole up in a studio with a piano and do what they needed to do. There aren’t a lot of places that take those kind of chance.
Q: Tell me a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a person or as a writer.
A: When I think about my childhood and how I got started on the path of writing, I think about this old Buck Rogers comic book I had. It came out around the time of the old series with Gil Gerard and Erin Gray (one of my first crushes, natch). One Saturday, I was left to my own devices in my dad’s apartment, with only the comic book to amuse me. I’d read it a million times and loved it, but I wanted more from it. So I took my safety scissors and cut out the pictures I liked from the comic book (the fanboy inside of me dies a little bit at the desecration). My dad had this big old Persian rug, and I arranged the pictures on the design on the rug, in a new order, telling a different story. I like to think that way about writing. We all know the old saw: there are only seven stories in the world. We’re all taking bits and pieces of things we love and re-arranging them in some new fashion.
Q: What kind of theater excites you?
A: I’m a structure junkie. Really, I’m a sucker for it. You give me a gun in the first act and then some clever way for it go off in the third and I’m happy. It doesn’t all need to wrap up in a tight little bow, but if the ending feels inevitable and shocking at the same time, that’s the holy grail for me. I’m also a sucker for a good joke, well told. I like “actors” plays: a good speech or two, some physical comedy, a well-earned “aw” moment, a good fight, and a lot of drinking. That’s the recipe for a good play, if you ask me.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: Two things:
1) Write, a lot, while you still have the energy. Don’t worry about making it perfect. Get it down, get it done and, most importantly, get it up. Find like-minded souls and do shows, productions of first drafts, if you can.
2) Do things other than theatre. It’s really easy, especially now that there are so many undergrad and grad training programs, to do nothing but theatre for most of your adult life. Resist that temptation. Take dull day jobs. Cultivate hobbies and weird friends. Collect stories from outside of our little world. And then bring those stories to the stage. We need more real life in our make-believe.
Q: Link please for your reading at EST:
A: http://www.ensemblestudiotheatre.org/schedule_by_date.html
PS- I actually forgot! I’m doing a new one-act play as part of Octoberfest After Dark, a mini-festival within the festival put together by Lynn Rosen. It’ll be boozy and fun!
Any other plugs?
Check out my blog! I like it when people read and comment!
http://jholtham.blogspot.com
*Technically, I was born in Brooklyn. I moved to Leonia when I was ten, and my parents have long since moved out, but it still feels like my hometown.
J. on playscripts. http://www.playscripts.com/author.php3?authorid=76
Sep 27, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 61: Caridad Svich
Caridad Svich
Hometown: Philadelphia, PA
Current Towns: New York City and Los Angeles
Q: What are you working on now?
A: new play commission from NYU's Graduate Acting Program and Mark Wing-Davey (Chair) entitled RIFT. The piece goes up Dec 2-6, 2009 at Tisch Shubert Theatre directed by Seret Scott. Performances are open to the public and tix will be sold on smarttix.com RIFT is an epic story about lives torn by war and its aftermath, by abuse and damage, profit and trade, and the intimate search for beauty and grace. Gender, border, and culturally crossed, RIFT explores the fate of the human animal in a dislocated world and asks the question: how can a body that is torn find a way to heal itself and transform, and thus resist the tyranny of power? It's a violent, erotic, dream-like fable.
Q: Can you tell me a little about No Passport?
A: NoPassport is a Pan-American theatre/performance/media alliance and press, which I founded in 2003. The alliance is devoted to action, advocacy and change toward the fostering of cross-cultural diversity and difference in the arts with an emphasis on the embrace of the hemispheric spirit in US Latina/o and Latin-American theatre-making. NoPassport exists a virtual and live forum for the exchange of work and dreams, a live network between theatres and the academy, and a mobile band of playwrights, directors, actors, producers and musicians. The mentoring of younger artists is also a key component of NOPE's (as we playfully call ourselves) mission. NoPassport Press is a division of NoPassport that aims to bring new, challenging playscripts, translations, essays and theatre criticism to the field. Among the works we've published so far: collections from John Jesurun, Amparo Garcia-Crow, Anne Garcia-Romero, Matthew Maguire, Oliver Mayer, Alejandro Morales, single edition text of Antigone Project by Lynn Nottage, Karen Hartman, Tanya Barfield, Chiori Miyagawa and myself. The texts are published print-on-demand and are available from amazon.com and the like. For queries: NoPassportPress@aol.com
Q: Can you tell me about your translating work? What sort of challenges are inherent in translating someone else's work?
A: I've translated nearly all of Federico Garcia Lorca's plays and some of his poems as well as works by Julio Cortazar, Calderon de la Barca, Lope de Vega, Maria Zayas Sotomayor and contemporary plays from Mexico, Cuba, and Spain. I've also adapted for US English a Serbian play entitled Huddersfield. Translation is a parallel career and a huge part of my creative life. There are many, many challenges to the art and craft of translation, chief among them the kind of intense cross-cultural work involved linguistically and theatrically. Translations are also temporal acts. You translate it for the audience of today, but who knows how the audience of 50 years from now will respond? It's always a gamble and each decision about word choice is fraught with myriad possibilities. Ultimately you are as respectful and as in the moment with the work as you can be, but it's really a neverending process, if you let it be!
Q: You also are a frequent editor of books and journals. How did you get drawn to this type of work?
A: I've edited Divine Fire: Eight Contemporary Plays Inspired by the Greeks (BackStage Books) and Trans-Global Readings: Crossing Theatrical Boundaries (Manchester University Press). I've co-edited Out of the Fringe: Contemporary Latina/o Theatre and Performance (TCG), Theatre in Crisis? (Manchester University Press), Conducting a Life: Reflections on the Theatre of Maria Irene Fornes (Smith & Kraus), and Popular Forms for a Radical Theatre (special issue of Contemporary Theatre Review, Routledge, UK). I'm contributing editor of the international journal TheatreForum, associate editor of Contemporary Theatre Review, and founding editor of NoPassport Press. Right now I'm in midst of editing the collection Out of Silence for Manchester University Press, which should be in print late 2010, if all goes well. I was drawn to this type of work because it allows me to sustain a different kind of creative conversation with scholars and practitioners; it also allows me to advocate for the works of emerging scholars and the publication of not as well represented voices for theatre and performance in a very pro-active way. I love words in print and I love critical exchange, and my work as editor really lets me move between the arts and the academy in a manner that is spiritually rewarding. It also is the kind of work that really makes me focus on the layout of text, how pages are marked and makes me think about language and form in a way that I find vital and challenging.
Q: Can you tell me a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a writer or as a person?
A: Hmmm...well, my mom has saved all the tracings I used to do as a child. I loved books and stories so much that I'd actually the illustrations (of children's books) onto paper and then invent my new stories to these illustrations and write them down! Even when I was five years old, I was re-making texts!
Q: Many of your plays have songs in them. Chuck Mee said, and I hope I'm getting it right, that if you don't have a song in the first half hour of a play, you can't have a songs in that play. In other words you should let the audience know early on that there will be music in the play or otherwise it will be jarring. I recently ignored this when writing a play, perhaps to my own detriment. Do you have any rules self-imposed or otherwise about how you put songs into your plays?
A: I love songs, and how they can function in a text - as commentary, window into an emotional moment, setting a scene, etc. I love the human voice lifted in time and space. When I write I always leave the possibility of song open in the work. If a song appears, I let it. If it doesn't, then I know it's going to be the kind of play and play-world that doesn't allow for that kind of 'lift.' Sometimes I start with song forms in mind when I write. Alchemy of Desire/Dead-Man's Blues began as a play where I wanted to work with the blues form. Fugitive Pieces and Thrush both began with my interest in folk songs and alt-country. 12 Ophelias began in part with my love of bluegrass and the high lonesome sound. Iphigenia...a rave fable began with my interest in techno, trance and house music and sampling. Lulu Ascending deals in part with cabaret and torch song genre. Prodigal Kiss was written with the Cuban bolero a and guaguanco in mind. The Booth Variations was written in part to work with the symphonic form. There are so many ways to work with songs in the theatre, esp in plays with songs. In The House of the Spirits, I knew pretty early on that songs connected to ceremony would be part of the play (wedding, harvest time) but also lullabies the women in the play sing to their children. In terms of rules, I think letting the audience know early on that there will be live music or at very least live vocalization is important, even if it's through the sound-scape of the play. But I've sometimes broken the earlier is better rule, and decided to surprise the audience with a song late in the play. Ultimately I think what's important is the songs feel organic to the overall vocabulary of the play you're making!
Q: What kind of theater excites you?
A: Work that surprises me, that re-awakens me to form and/or content, that challenges expectations of all kinds. My taste is pretty eclectic and egalitarian. I don't privilege uptown over downtown or vice versa. I hate categories. For me, witnessing a piece of theatre/live performance is about deep human engagement - whether it be intellectual, emotional, spiritual or all three. I'm always looking for work that will make me see things differently.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out.
A: Write, write, and write, and then rewrite, and rewrite. Plays are strange beasts. Writing for the theatre is a humbling profession. The work is always being tested and judged. Every night. Don't settle. Stay true to your vision. But also listen, deeply, to the world around you and to what the people you trust have to say. Be open to the beauty of an invitation to make work.
Q: Any plugs?
A: The House of the Spirits, based on the novel by Isabel Allende, continues at Main Street Theater in Houston, Texas until October 11, 2009 (www.mainstreettheater.com); it also continues in open run repertory in its Spanish-language version at Repertorio Espanol/Spanish Repertory in New York City under Jose Zayas' direction through the 2009-2010 season (www.repertorio.org). 12 Ophelias (a play with broken songs) continues at Trap Door Theatre in Chicago, Illinois until October 31st, 2009(www.trapdoortheatre.com). My new play Rift runs December 2-9, 2009 at Tisch School of the Arts Grad Acting, 5th Floor. (www.smarttix.com) The next NoPassport theatre conference is February 26-27, 2010 at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe and related venues. Save the dates! In print: "American Playwrights on Language and War in Iraq: A NoPassport (theatre alliance) Virtual Roundtable" with David Adjmi, Christine Evans, Charlotte Meehan, Lisa Schlesinger, Christopher Shinn, and Naomi Wallace, Moderated by Caridad Svich in Theater Vol. 39, No. 3, published by Yale School of Drama/Yale Repertory Theatre.
Sep 25, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 60: Samuel Brett Williams
Samuel Brett Williams
Hometown:
I was born and raised in Hot Springs, Arkansas. At eighteen, I moved to Arkadelphia, Arkansas, and lived there until I moved to the New York City area just over four years ago at the age of twenty-three.
Current Location:
Hoboken, New Jersey
Q: Tell me about this reading you have coming up at Ars Nova. What's the play about?
A: I’ve wanted to write about corporations and fraternities for a while, but I couldn't find a story to support either topic. Then, I was in Italy last summer -- literally on the steps of the Coliseum, wishing it was run more like a corporate enterprise. No joke, I was in a long line with my uncle (who is from Sicily) and I was thinking a corporation would make the process a little more efficient. They would have specific windows for tours and specific windows for walk-throughs. They would have some process that moved us along a little faster -- I mean, Disney World kind of sucks, but they do keep the lines moving! Anyhow, long story long, once I could take the corporate side -- argue for and against big business -- then I knew I could start. I didn't want the play to be a one dimensional diatribe against Wall Street -- we have blogs for that. That's part of the reason I set it in a Frat House. I see those places as kind of breeding grounds for the big swinging dicks, or vaginas, on Wall Street. I read somewhere that every CEO from the financial district who was fired during the whole meltdown was a former Frat Boy. Also, there is something exciting and disgusting about fraternities -- two prerequisites I always need to write!
Q: Isn't Ars Nova great!?
A: Right out of grad school I went to the O'Neill with my play THE WOODPECKER. That was the first time I felt the theatre community saying, "Welcome." Emily Shooltz was my dramaturg there and when I saw the application for Play Group online, I knew I wanted to be involved. I have been overwhelmed with how nurturing and supportive they have been. They in a sense have welcomed me into New York theatre.
Q: Can you talk a little about your Playwright in Residence status in New Jersey last year?
A: The National New Play Network is amazing. Every young playwright should find a way to get involved. In 2007-2008 they gave me a residency at Playwrights Theatre of New Jersey -- that coupled with some other money from writing allowed me to live off of theatre for a year or two, which was not something I thought I was going to be able to do right out of grad school. The NNPN also sent me to the Kennedy Center to workshop my play THE REVIVAL (which Project Y will produce in the city this summer, hopefully at 59e59). And, I'm currently just finishing a commission they gave me to adapt the New Testament book of Revelation into a play.
Q: Can you talk a little about the Helen Merrill Award you won last year?
A: I was in rehearsals for THE WOODPECKER -- more specifically I was at a bar across the street from Cherry Lane -- when I received a call from a woman, who began explaining the Helen Merrill Award to me. I thought she was asking for money, so I almost hung up, but then she got to the point where I was getting twenty thousand dollars. I will never receive a call like that again. I cried. I mean, three years earlier I was working in a bookstore in Arkadelphia, Arkansas. I could only work thirty-nine and a half hours a week, because they didn't want to give me benefits. I bet I didn't make twenty grand that entire year. I went to the Algonquin where Chris Durang talked about my writing and gave me an award. I guarantee I will never have a happier moment in my life.
Q: You write a lot about where you grew up. I'm someone who can never really write about a place. Places just don't stick with me in the way they stick with some people. Can you describe what it is about that place that keeps you writing about it?
A: I write a lot about where I'm from, because I'm still trying to figure a lot of things out. I went to a Methodist Church, I was enrolled in a Southern Baptist school from kindergarten to my senior year, then I went to a Southern Baptist University for undergrad. My family is VERY religious. I remember going Soul Saving with my friends after basketball practice just because it was the thing to do at the time. I wouldn't trade my childhood for anything -- it made me who I am -- but, I am still trying to understand it, and that certainly comes out in my writing.
Q: Tell me a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a person or as a writer.
A: When I was in junior high I first started writing, really writing, and it confused me. I didn't know where the words were coming from or why I was doing it. The work wasn't any good, but it was honest and violent and pretty disturbing for a twelve year old. I would hide my notebooks under my bed, like they were pornography, because I was scared I was going to hell for what I was doing.
Q: What kind of theater excites you?
A: I love pointed irreverence, like McDonagh or Mamet.
I love the experience of Fornes.
And my king of kings is Kushner. I love, absolutely love, to experience the power of his mind. Sometimes I just pick up his plays and sit inside them, if that makes any sense.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: I don't buy into the whole magical aspect of writing. Like anything truly rewarding, it's hard work. You can not control whether other people will like what you have written or not. You can only control the words (in LA you can't even control that). Do it every day, and do it well -- respect the integrity of the story, and do not write just to get produced. Admit that if you don't know what your play is about, you might not have anything to say.
Q: Details about your reading with Ars Nova, please:
October 5 at 7pm. The brilliant Sam Gold will be directing. Come and have a beer with us!
Sep 24, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 59: Trista Baldwin
Trista Baldwin
Hometown: Seattle, WA & Brooklyn, NY
Current Town: Minneapolis, MN
Q: Tell me about your play DOE 2.0 that you presented at the Playwrights Center. How did this collaboration come about?
A: DOE was in the 2006 Tokyo International Festival through an artist exchange between Japan and the U.S. My play was translated into Japanese and the director for the project was Shirotama Hitsujiya, who is known for creating her performance work with her company Yubiwa Hotel. I arrived in Tokyo a week before the Festival presentation and Shirotama had been rehearsing already. When I arrived she had basically 'written' a new beginning and ending for my play. I had heard that Japanese directors take some liberties with scripts, so I expected there could be some interesting choices, but these new scenes did change the meaning of the script. I wasn't mad, I was provoked. I wondered how the translation itself may have altered the meaning. How were these Japanese artists interpreting my script in a language I don't speak? Shirotama's bold epilogue and prologue allowed me to find out how she was interpreting my play. I absolutely loved this process, and I really connected with Shirotama. She and I work with similar questions about life and death, sexuality and female experience.
Many Japanese in the audience of DOE told me that they did not feel that it was a foreign play. They felt like it could have been Japanese. I was really intrigued by this, especially by the implications of a shared female experience, across cultures that seem very different, especially in gender and sexual expression.
I went back the U.S. hankering to work with Shirotama again, and desiring to explore what might be "Japanese" about my work. I've never felt Japanese. But this experience made me wonder about cutural intersections.
In 2008 she was in New York on a fellowship and that allowed us to develop the idea of creating a NEW piece together, based on the existing piece, written by me. We're springing off the play we connected on, collaborating with both Japanese and American actors, who perform on stage at the same time in a kind of parallel life - there is an American Jan and a Japanese Jan, speaking English and Japanese, with the shared language being physical. DOE 2.0 is the working title for this collaboration, which we are developing over three years, between our countries.
Q: How long have you been working on this show?
A: We've been collaborating on the outline of this new DOE for a little less than a year. We'll be working in the room together for just two weeks., with a bi-lingual cast, beginning work on this new script together.
Q: You are one of those people who went to Minneapolis for a Jerome and stayed. It's such a beautiful city. How did it lure you in?
A: Money. Crickets. Really, it's been the fellowship and grants that have kept me here, and now I have a lovely teaching position. I've also had a child here, and this is a good place to have one of those, a good place to take your kid to the park after a writing session in a cafe. I kind of feel like the place kidnapped me. I don't necessarily feel like it is home here, but there is a good life here. I've never imagined myself in this part of the world - I'm a coastal person - but there are lakes, there are crickets, trees, co-ops, tattoos, great coffee shops, bike trails like you wouldn't believe, a strong community of writers and theatre artists...and a means to make a living as a playwright.
Q: The first thing I saw in MN was a play of yours. Later that year, I saw a much different play of yours. Both wonderful but very different kinds of plays. What is the common thread that you see in your work? What makes a play a Trista Baldwin play?
A: I'm interested in different means to tell different stories, with form following content and all that, so I do write different kinds of plays. Though... I think I'm doing that thing where I'm telling the same story, in different bodies from different angles. The story that I'm telling has to do with loss of innocence; with the place where innocence meets experience. By innocence I mean authentic self. I suppose I'm obsessed with corruption of authentic self.
Formally, the majority of my work might fall into the category of surrealism. I used to think I wrote some American version of absurdism, (if I have to put labels on it) but as I teach more literature, it seems to me I'm some kind of textual surrealist; the simple and recognizable suddenly bends, transforms into something heightened, spiritual. The place where our world meets the Other world…where base humanity meets the humane. The place where there is a terrible, beautiful ache for more. That’s the place that I write from, and that’s what I hope a “Trista Baldwin play” is.
Q: What are you working on next?
A: DOE 2.0 will continue in Tokyo in December, and then in New York in the summer. I’m also reworking American Sexy and I've started on a piece called The Surrogate, which pays tribute to Amiri Baraka’s Dutchman, one of my favorite plays.
Q: What kind of theater excites you?
A: Theatre that scares the piss out of me. Like seeing a Van Gogh painting in the flesh - that scares the piss out of me. Anything where I can feel the great need of the creator behind the creation.
And sweat. I get excited by sweat. I like to see physical endurance as well as a fighting spirit in the script. Skill and exertion, that excites me.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: Well. First thing: if you don’t need to be a playwright, for goodness sakes don’t do it. It’s a ridiculous thing to do. But if it’s something you need to do then say what you need to say and keep saying it, saying it, saying it. America is very “short term gain.” But playwriting is like a very long distance race. It’s not speed but endurance. Many others in the race will get tired and they will stop and they won’t be a playwright. If you keep going, you will.
And as you’re doing that, you should also produce your own work, or let friends produce it; find a way to get your scripts moving in front of an audience, don’t let them rot in your drawer, and keep writing through rehearsal and after opening night. That’s my ten cents.
Sep 22, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 58: Mat Smart
Hometown: Naperville, Illinois. Southwest suburb of Chicago. Where I developed an incurable disease called being a Cubs fan.
Current Town: Minneapolis.
Q: You just had a reading at Ars Nova. Tell me about this new play.
A: It's called A BED THE SIZE OF PORTUGAL. It's one of the craziest full-length plays I've written -- full of impossible stage directions and natural disasters. It's about newlyweds who are beautiful and in love, but she snores so bad he can't sleep and he's losing his mind.
Q: You're in Minneapolis for another year for a Jerome Fellowship. What projects are you planning for the long winter?
A: I just finished my first two-person play, so I think I'm going to try writing a ten-actor historical piece about a short-lived glass manufacturing company in Iowa City in 1880. I'm also going to read a few of the books that I've been meaning to read, and then burn them for warmth. It's a different kind of cold here.
Q: You went to grad school at UCSD. How was that?
A: I loved it. UCSD only has one or two playwrights per year and does a full production of each writer each of the three years -- then brings in ten theatre professionals from around the country to the see the work each year. It's the perfect way to get three polished scripts and get introduced to the "real" world. The other departments are fantastic -- great actors, directors, designers, stage managers -- and they all work on your show each spring. On top of that, the weather is perfect. And the kettle corn at Petco Park is the best in the major leagues.
Q: Why do you like sports so much?
A: I like that in a three-hour baseball game only one or two split-second events determine who wins and who loses. I like watching Carlos Zambrano pitch against Prince Fielder and know that I'm watching two of the best in the world try to beat each other. I like not knowing what's going to happen. I like that any at bat or any game could, technically, last forever.
Q: What is it like to date a dramaturg?
A: It's hot. H-O-T. A great dramaturg can save you time and help you become a better writer. A great girlfriend can make everyday feel like a gift. Sarah Slight is both a great dramaturg and a great girlfriend and so that makes me very, very lucky.
Q: Tell me a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a person or as a writer.
A: My dad worked for thirty-five years at Fermilab -- a particle physics lab outside Chicago. When I was a kid, I used to go into work with him on Saturdays. I'd see these big machines that were smashing atoms and trying to figure out if the universe was going to keep expanding, stop, or collapse back in on itself... I think it got me interested in big questions.
Q: What is the purpose of theater?
A: To ask big questions in visceral, dramatic, visual, funny and weird ways.
Q: What kind of theater excites you?
A: The kind that makes people yell, gasp, cry, sigh, laugh -- things that any Cubs game at Wrigley does.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: Don't use courier font. Don't keep rewriting your first play over and over. Drink coffee in the mornings, Red Bull at night and don't sleep until you get it out.
Q: Any plugs?
A: Look out for my play THE FOLLY OF CROWDS in NYC at Slant Theatre Project in November. And also THE 13th OF PARIS at Seattle Public Theatre and The Warehouse Theatre in Greenville, South Carolina in the spring.
Sep 20, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 57: Bathsheba Doran
Hometown: London, England
Current Town: New York City, USA
Q: You have a children's play going up at South Coast Rep this season. Can you tell me a little bit about it and how you came to write it?
A: It's called Ben and the Magic Paintbrush and it's based on a Chinese myth about an orphan who finds a paintbrush that brings whatever it paints to life. It was a story read to me when I was very young, and I remembered it because the image of a painting developing an independent life and leaving the canvas always stayed with me for obvious reasons. In my hands it becomes a story about two little kids who find this magic paintbrush and have to escape the unbelievably evil clutches of one Mrs. Crawly who wants to trap them in a dungeon and paint gold. It was extremely liberating to write - you can be so extreme in the form - truly evil characters, truly good, disguises always work, sleeping pills make you pass out, language can be so playful - it's a totally different sort of storytelling. It taught me a lot. In particular, it was excellent to be forced to be plot driven and to be very clear about what the story is. There's lots of jokes for grown-ups in there too. I even managed to slip in a portrait of a difficult marriage (my speciality, I've decided). I wrote it because they commissioned me - after they saw my adaptation of Great Expectations for kids.
Q: Your play Parent's Evening is going up at the Flea soon. Can you tell me about that play?
A: It's a portrait of a difficult marriage...It's about a deeply narcissistic but very endearing couple the night of a parent-teacher conference. The first half is before the conference. The second half is after. Suffice to say - things do not go well at the school.
Q: What else are you working on? Lucy Smith was raving about a new play of yours. You want to tell me a little bit about that?
A: I just finished the first draft of a new play - I've been working on it for just about a year on and off - and I am also excited about it. Whenever I write a play I send bits to Lucy. From her reaction, I can pretty much tell if I am on the track I want to be on or if I need to swerve.
Q: What are the differences between American and British theater?
A: I'm not sure that there are fundamental differences - although both the British and the Americans often seem to like the idea that British theater is inherently "better." I do think that England has a 500 year old canon to congratulate itself upon. America doesn't have that - and I think that a consequence is that Americans are more obviously invested in "new writing" and "new American voices" which I find interesting - there's a certain nationalistic streak caught up in the concept of production. The British actors I have worked with are more comfortable approaching a text cerebrally, but I haven't worked there enough to make a confident generalization in that department. It was an impression I got. But generally speaking I have seen dreadful and wonderful theatre in both places and about the same amount of each in each.
Q: Like me, you studied playwriting at both Columbia and Juilliard. You want to tell me a little about your experiences there?
A: Columbia was an incredible experience for me - Eduardo Machado who taught playwriting there at the time became and still is a mentor to me. He was the first person who made me feel like I really might be able to write and he has an incredible ability to read a play and say something like "you went off on page 56, and it doesn't come back until page 86". In my experience, he's always right. I have tremendous respect for him. He's unorthodox and if you are paying eighty grand for an education (which I wasn't, I had a scholarship) then you might get frustrated, you might want specifics, it dirties the whole process really. But for me - working with him was a miracle. I also somehow got Columbia to commission me to write an adaptation of Peer Gynt for the graduating acting class of my year and Andrei Serban directed it. Someone asked me recently what the best production I've had is - and I realized that for me it was that one. And being in rehearsal with Andrei was such an education and a joy. At one point he dressed the actor playing "the boy" in a gorilla suit, watched the scene, and whispered to me "I don't know what it means, but it's primal, yes?" Right there was one of the most succinct lessons in theatre-making I've ever had. Because who cares what it means? But of course, generally people are like "but why, but why, explain." I'm not sure that truths have an explanation. Truths speak for themselves. We recognize them instinctually. That's what makes them true. And the class I took with Anne Bogart - the collaboration class - learned a huge amount. And generally speaking it was a wonderful time for me - I had just left England, I had committed to playwriting properly, and experimentation was encouraged. It was fantastic.
Juilliard was also wonderful but in a totally different way. It provided such access. Access to great actors, to readings, to people in the profession. There was an emphasis on the practical working environment I could expect to encounter. It was very important to me in that way. And it opened doors for me that Columbia just didn't. Chris and Marsha were incredibly nurturing, and supportive, and funny and wise and honest. I had a great time, I wrote a great deal. It was all much more grown up.
Q: Tell me a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a person or as a writer.
A: When I was little I got to go and see a production of Peter Pan staring Lulu and John Nettles. Someone we knew was involved and I got taken backstage afterwards which was unbelievably exciting. I looked in a drawer on the set, and I found Peter Pan's shadow. It was made of pantyhose. That impacted me greatly.
Q: What kind of theater excites you?
A: Anything where the theatrical experience is organic - music, design, acting, direction, text. Which means, irritatingly for me as a playwright, the work I have responded to most recently is devised by companies. Gatz just blew my mind. And The War Horse, which is coming to Broadway I think, was just unbelievable. I also love things that feel truly actor driven - Steppenwolf's work for example. The play, even a great play, is the beginning. Everyone else should take it further. I also like to draw a distinction between contemporary plays, and political plays. I am a fan of the former, not the latter. With very few exceptions (The Normal Heart, being one) I can not stand theater designed to articulate outrage at political event. They lack complexity, and I have noticed that audiences tend to leave the theatre practically congratulating themselves for having attended - as though going to the theater were a political act. Going to the theater is only a political act if the play you are seeing has been banned. Susan Sontag said “So far as we feel sympathy we feel we are not accomplices to what caused the suffering. Our sympathy proclaims our innocence as well as our impotence. To that extent it can be (for all our good intentions) an impertinent – if not an inappropriate – response. To set aside the sympathy we extend to others beset by war and murderous politics for a reflection on how our privileges are located on the same map of their suffering, and may – in ways we might prefer not to imagine – be linked to their suffering, as the wealth of some may imply the destitution of others, is a task for which the painful, stirring images supply only an initial spark.” I find this to be such a brilliant and important observation that I learned it by heart to hiss at people who don't agree with me.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: Flashback scenes seldom work out.
Sep 18, 2009
Sep 17, 2009
the playwright interviews so far
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/jame-comtois-interview-one.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-2-anna.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-3-matthew.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-4-dominic.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-5-david.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-6-daniel.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-7-sheila.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-8.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-9-zayd.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-10-kara.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-11-jessica.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-12-malachy.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-13.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-14-qui.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-15-deborah.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-16-callie.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-17-ken.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/hometown-wilmette-il-current-town.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-19-dan.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-20-jason.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-21.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-22-rachel.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-23-tim.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-24-kim.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-25-sarah.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-26-andrea.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-27-megan.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-28-michael.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/07/i-interview-playwrights-part-29-cusi.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-30-mac.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-31-bekah.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-32-em.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-33-itamar.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-34-heidi.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-35-daniel.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-36-blair.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-37-crystal.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-38-annie.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-39-erin.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-40-steve.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-41-laura.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-42-rachel.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-43.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-44-kyle.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-45-joshua.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/08/i-interview-playwrights-part-46-julia.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-47-brooke.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-48-george.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-49-lucy.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-50-mark.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-51-dan.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-52-david.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-53-peter.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-54-rehana.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-55-jeff.html
http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/09/i-interview-playwrights-part-56-august.htmlI Interview Playwrights Part 56: August Schulenburg
August SchulenburgHometown: Barnstable, Massachusetts
Current Town: Astoria, New York
Q: Tell me about the play you have coming up, The Lesser Seductions of History. This was written for your company, right?
A: Right. The Lesser Seductions of History follows 11 characters through each of the 1960's. The idea started about a year ago. Obama was running for President and Yes We Could and I wanted to write about that; that shared sense of purpose; that hope our actions really could make the world better. I wanted to write about the intoxicating clarity of a cause; the beauty of belonging to something bigger. And I wanted to write how absolutely dangerous that is; the sacrifice that is inevitably required; the great loss that becomes less important than the greater good. So the 60's were perfect, because they epitomize that double edge; and they were distant enough that I could write about now without being crowded by the present. As I started researching and writing, I realized I didn't want to focus on the Wax Museum of the 1960's, all those icons casting their long shadows: King, Kennedy, Hair, Nixon. I wanted to write about the people who are like I am now; hopeful and afraid, bewildered and determined, certain some great change is at work but probably wrong about what it is and what to do about it. As I've spent more time with the play and the decade, I've come to feel there is some essential thing unfinished from the 60's, something that my generation, the children of the flower children, need to move forward. Something about the arc of moral justice, something about the necessity of compassion, something about history and the work of our own hands. And all the time I have to fight those bigger ideas off and make sure the play stays little and human and silly and sad and dirty and fast and interesting.
Q: Are you excited to be working with Heather Cohn on this?
A: Yes. Working with Heather on Other Bodies was an extraordinary experience. She is relentless and won't rest until every mote shines. She understands how to make complex things simple and heavy things light. She has the fire and the hunger, you know? She can hold the ugly/beauty and wrestle the sad/happy and keep the trains running on time. There are only a few people you can really make a stand with and I'm undeservedly lucky to be standing beside her. And yes, I'm in love with her, and yes, we live together, and yes, it is good. Conflict of interest? Well, I wish theatre felt a lot more like love a lot more often.
Q: Can you tell me a little bit about Flux Theater? How did it come about? Have you nailed down your core values/mission?
A: Flux was founded out of the experience of producing my play Rue. A theatre had given us a little money and great space and said we could do what we wanted, and well, things slalomed right quick after that. Adversity and bullshit beset that production in ways that still fire my blood. I felt like I'd brought people I'd respected to a dark place, but they kept moving forward, and the gratitude and love I felt (and feel) were the catalyst of Flux. Three and a half years later and nine shows in, we're just beginning to really clarify our core and aesthetic values. A few weeks ago we held our annual retreat at Little Pond, and banged out some really valuable raw material we hope to smooth over the next half year. With an Ensemble made up of so many strong wills, it would be good to get there soon.
Q: You're a very prolific playwright. What else are you working on right now?
A: A play about a physicist falling apart called Dark Matter that will also be turned into an opera. A play called Stepping about a brother and sister growing up in Harlem with the power to step into alternate worlds. How To Go, about a Hunter Thompson type who holds a contest among his loved ones to design the most spectacular way to kill himself. Angel Juice, about a female Vermont senator taken over by the soul of Napoleon, and her daughter's love affair with the witch that did it. Far Distant Classes, the prequel to my play Good Hope, about the astonishing history of Xhosa people in South Africa. Denny and Lila, a play about two con-artists whose love affair is broken by an encounter with a painting prodigy. The Sea Concerto, a play about a family that disintegrates from greed and grief after their child drowns. I also want to transform the essence, style and bones of To The Lighthouse and Mrs. Dalloway into some kind of play but I haven't started writing those yet.
Q: What is the purpose of theater?
A: Well, I guess I'll talk about the purpose of theatre by talking about the purpose of sex, because I think they're related. Sex is how we make life, and from evolutionary pressures, sex has become increasingly pleasurable for obvious reasons: if it feels this good, we'll keep doing it, and so life will endure because of the pleasures of sex. Story is to meaning as sex is to life. The brief hard lives of early Homo Sapiens were filled with knowledge essential to pass on to their children. Much of this knowledge needed to be experienced, not simply explained. Story evolved to make sure that experience endured. And the more beautiful and immediate a story was, the more likely the meaning endured. And the more likely the people telling those stories endured. So we evolved to take increasing pleasure in the beauty of stories. So much so that, much like sex, we can enjoy beautiful stories that have no connection to their original purpose of bearing knowledge. These days we can have sex and beauty without bearing babies and meaning and I think that's a good thing. (Sometimes I wonder if music isn't the most evolved form of our genetic drive towards beauty; we can enjoy music that carries no meaning whatsoever but its own beauty). Still, there is a purpose to theatre that goes beyond pure entertainment. Theatre is communal; we are social animals, more so all the time; and as such, theatre is the ideal bearer of the knowledge on how to live together. We do plays so the essential experience of what it means to be human together endures. So hark ye, all theatre artists! Make your plays sex-potent! After all, the fate of our human race lies in your hands! Yeah, I get carried away. I guess that's why you asked that.
Q: Tell me a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a person or a writer.
A: Summers I grew up in a perfect place called Sandy Neck; miles and miles of nothing but dunes and ocean and twenty or so houses propped up against the tide; no electricity, well water, and salt in every cranny of you. My brother and sister and I playing flashlight tag, and roasting marshmallows a perfect golden brown. Well, of course, we lost it, we can't go there anymore, hard things happened. I think a certain kind of exile is good for playwrights. It teaches us longing, which is butter on toast for writing. The feeling that you can't get back to the world you were promised is good training for a life of writing plays.
Q: What kind of theater excites you?
A: I really am crazy about all of it, even the stuff that's kind of lame. Something about bodies moving through time, space and story, I just can't get enough. But to answer your question, Tom, I read recently that the desire part of our brain is more powerful than the pleasure part, so that we are hardwired to prefer desire to fulfillment. We are always seeking. It can never be satisfied, the mind, never. So I like plays that prefer desire to fulfillment. I like plays that seek.
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: Be grateful. We live in an astonishing age for theatre. Many people will tell you it's otherwise, but that's because they only see what we're missing. In the past year, I have experienced plays like Sans Merci, Our Town, Ajax in Iraq, Universal Robots, Ruined, Pretty Theft, Rattlers, Lydia, and Viral; 9 extraordinary plays; many more very good plays; and work like this is happening all across our country. Whatever the world makes of your work, be grateful (as I am) to be alive at a time when so many extraordinary artists are making theatre. Don't believe me? Just keep reading these playwright interviews and go see their plays!
Sep 15, 2009
I Interview Playwrights Part 55: Jeff Lewonczyk
Jeff LewonczykHometown: Newington, CT
Current Town: Brooklyn, NY
Q: How did you start writing plays?
A: I think I wrote my first play in eighth grade. It was about a group of wacky characters in an insane asylum, and it turned out that (SPOILER ALERT) the guy who was about to get released was the one who planted the bomb. I had been stagestruck for a few years at that point, and I realized that writing was even more awesome than acting, since then you could take credit for ALL the jokes in the play, not just the ones that stemmed from your work onstage. In either event, there’s nothing sweeter than the sound of laughter inspired by something you made up.
Q: Tell me please about The Brick Theater and what you do there.
A: The Brick is a performance space in Brooklyn that I’ve called my creative home for the past seven or so years. It was founded by my good friends Michael Gardner and Robert Honeywell, with whom I worked many times on many different projects both before and after its founding. After a couple years of doing stuff at the space, my wife and partner Hope Cartelli (with whom I run our production company, Piper McKenzie) and I came on as Associate Directors. The role is fairly fluid – we all contribute to various decisions involving programming and vision and marketing and development and festival planning and overall strategy, and we all step in and do whatever we can whenever someone is out of commission for a show or some other kind of project. There’s a lot of floor-sweeping and heavy lifting and standing behind the box office counter being polite. The Brick focuses on new work, both from within the group of us that run the place and through co-productions with other artists and companies whose we work we love. We’re most known for our festivals, such as our yearly themed summer festival (the most recent edition of which was June’s Antidepressant Festival), the annual New York Clown Theatre Festival (a condensed version of which is running right now under the title Amuse Bouche), and the upcoming Fight Festival, which is devoted to new works showcasing stage combat.
Q: Tell me about your show coming up in the Fringe Encore Series.
A: It’s called Willy Nilly: A Musical Exploitation of the Most Far-Out Cult Murders of the Psychedelic Era, and it’s a tasteless rock’n’roll spoof inspired by the Manson Family, written and composed by the inimitable author, impresario and performer Trav S.D. I’m in the director’s seat on this one, but Trav’s been a great collaborator, and I take as much pride in it as if I’d written it myself. It’s like Helter Skelter viewed through the filter of Laugh-In, taking the horrifying real-life events of the Tate-LaBianca murders (which took place 40 years ago last month) and turning them on their head for a satirical look at the Sixties and the media culture that allows us to be more fascinated by the homicide of a marginally talented B-movie actress than the more widespread violence wrought by our own government and way of life. But that’s all subtext – on the surface, it’s boobies, garage punk and low comedy as far as the eye can see.
Q: You knew Tom Perry (who was in the year above me in high school) when you were in high school. He was a legend in his own right in my school. What was the program you were both in?
A: We met at Center for Creative Youth (CCY), a summer arts program that took place at Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT. It was the first time most of us artsy geeks had ever spent a significant amount of time away from home, which made it a kind of paradisiacal enclave in which we were spent four weeks gushing, “Good God, there are other people like me out there!” In the days before the Internet, this was the only way most of us were able to make this amazing discovery. (Of course, now we’ve all been finding each other again on Facebook, bringing it all full circle.) Tom and I were both in the writing program, which was quite possibly the most bohemian experience in my life to date – we’d all get up in the morning and spend most of the day sitting around in cafes or outdoors writing, walking around, gossiping, and talking about towering intellectual ideas we barely understood. I didn’t even smoke or drink or anything, but, boy, it was great. Tom and I have hung out a few times recently, after fifteen years out of contact, and we were able to pick up right where we left off without missing a beat – which has also been the case with the other CCY friends I’ve encountered over the past couple of years. It was a pivotal experience for all of us.
Q: Tell me a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a person or as a playwright.
A: Well, the joke version of this answer, which is also probably the most accurate one, is that when I was eight or so a reckless Rube Goldberg situation of my own devising – involving an improvised, tablecloth-based “fort” on the deck behind my house – led to a brick falling square on my head from several feet in the air. My family rushed me to the hospital and, instead of giving me stitches, the doctor had to staple my head shut with a giant medical stapler. A few weeks later, I had to go back and get it removed with a giant medical staple remover. This incident explains my fascination with complicated slapstick, my fierce love of George Herriman’s Krazy Kat, the kismet behind the theater I eventually ended up working for, and the probable (if minor) brain damage that contributes to my writing, sense of humor and general outlook.
Q: What kind of theater excites you?
A: The kind that: • Combines an unexpected but effective confluence of elements • Strikes an artful balance between rude energy and sophisticated precision • Makes you forget the world outside of the room • Employs its own distinct style • Has a sense of humor (however subtly deployed) • Is impossible to put into a single pre-existing bucket
Q: What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: Don’t wait for someone to do it for you – do it yourself. You may well be as brilliant as you think you are, but the world’s probably going to need a lot of convincing. And learn how to direct – even if you discover that you’re terrible at directing your own plays, it’ll give you a greater sensitivity to every aspect of the theatrical process and to different voices and styles – all of which can only improve your writing, not to mention your eventual relationship with other directors.
Q: Link please for the show and any other plugs:
All the info for Willy Nilly can be found at http://www.facebook.com/l/d28d2;www.pipermckenzie.com/willynilly and our blog, The Piperline, at http://www.facebook.com/l/d28d2;pipermckenzie.blogspot.com. A couple of other plugs: I’m one of the playwrights participating in the Vampire Cowboys’ Saturday Night Saloon series – http://www.facebook.com/l/d28d2;www.vampirecowboys.com/events.htm. We’re doing “season two” of a serial we performed two years ago, entitled Lady Cryptozoologist, which is a rough-and-tumble globe-trotting sci-fi adventure romance comedy featuring yetis and chupacabras and scientists carrying on in a humorous fashion. The Saloon is an incredible and unique theatrical event – with six different mixed-genre serials running over five months, it’s an amazing crucible of creative energy, and I’m thrilled and proud to be a part of it. Also, Piper McKenzie’s next show will be debuting at The Brick’s Fight Festival in December – Craven Monkey and the Mountain of Fury. It’s a Darwinian martial-arts fairy tale about an outcast monkey whose quest for revenge leads to a series of violent confrontations with Mother Nature and her grotesque minions. (Yes, I have a thing for monsters and other creatures.) It will be a primarily movement-based piece (like our 2007 show Macbeth Without Words), with storyteller voice-over, bizarre costumes, and insane animal fight choreography by another playwright you’ve profiled, Vampire Cowboys’ Qui Nguyen.







