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May 11, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 837: Andrew Rincón


Andrew Rincón

Hometown:  Fort Myers, FL.

Current Town:  New York City.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’m juggling between three main projects right now. I’m in a new writer’s group called Wright Club with the Amoralists theatre company and a staged reading/workshop of a new one act of mine will go up with them at the end of May. It’s called I Wanna Fuck like Romeo and Juliet. Cupid and Saint Valentine make a wager on a newly minted relationship between two men. The play is dealing with monogamy, love, fetish and a bit of everything in between. I’m adapting another one act, Inheritance (Blood Memory) into a full length. And I’m finally making the long awaited dive into comic books, working with an incredible illustrator, Micah Milner, on creating a new web-comic series.

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

A:  In a conversation with my brother recently we were discussing some silly family drama, and he said to me “in this family, you have to speak to three different generations to get the full story”. I think that is a perfect statement that shows where I pull from as a writer. I grew up with some incredible stories from my entire family, stories that bleed down from my grandmother, to my mother, to me. When I was a kid, one of my favorite things to do was to dive into my Mother’s photo albums. Starting with the most recent albums filled with my brother and I, I would follow the memories down into the black and white of my mother’s childhood in Cali, Colombia when my grandmother was a young woman herself. I’d get lost in my head with all of that. When I look at what I write now, I feel like I see my whole family stomping their way through the words.

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

A:  Without a doubt, the deficit of opportunities for queer artists, people of color, women, and anyone that doesn’t fit that straight-white male majority.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Tony Kushner, Lucy Thurber, Stephen Adly Guirgis. Taylor Mac. Luis Alfaro’s play Electricdad and Quiara Hudes’s play 26 Miles changed my outlook on theatre completely. They showed me that anyone can take their culture, their singular experience, and put it in their work. Those were also some of the first plays I read that talked about Latinidad is such a way that resonating with me for years after.

I also adore Stefanie Zadravec. Not only is her work brilliant, poetic, and theatrical (it’s like the woman is directly channeling Tennessee Williams’s), but she is and was, one of the most encouraging teachers I have ever had the pleasure to work with. I recommend her workshops and classes to everyone I know.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Messy. The magical. The truly theatrical.

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

A:  I feel like I am still very much at the cusp of my career, so this one is a bit difficult. See all the shows you can (if someone ever offers you a free ticket, take it). Read books like Steal like an Artist. Read plays, plays, plays and see how your favorites do what they do.

Also, trust yourself. I know I constantly fall into a trap of writing 10 pages, then asking 10 people to read it and give me the most explicit feedback (and then invariably becoming overwhelmed by all the different opinions). Just write. Finish the draft. Take some time away. Get laid. Give it to a mentor, or one person you trust. Then tackle that draft again. Breathe. You can do this. You’re better than you think you are.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  I Wanna Fuck like Romeo and Juliet goes up with another piece, LoveHack by the incredible Sander Gusinow on May 25th at The Medicine Show Theatre. It's the 5th Wright Night Event with the Amoralists Theatre Company.


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May 8, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 836: Sander Gusinow


Sander Gusinow

Hometown:
I come from Eugene, Oregon. Which is more-or-less a hippie retirement community. We've also had some Bigfoot sightings, but I don't mean to brag.

Current Town:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMX1sc3eOTE

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Right now I'm rehearsing a play called 'Lovehack,' it's about a couple who discover they fell in love as part of a research experiment.

Q:  How did you get the idea for that?

A:  I took psychotropic drugs for most of my childhood, so I've always been really into the neurology of why we do the things we do. I read about a psychologist names Arthur Aron who showed that love can be created between two strangers if they talk about themselves why maintaining eye-contact. So many people of our generation have this mantra that 'Love is the Answer' and I'm always like, 'No, love is a chemical reaction that can be both manufactured and extinguished.' That's not to say love isn't real, wonderful, and extraordinarily powerful (easily the most powerful emotion of them all), but the idea that we're all going to just wake up one day and 'love' one another, from a chemical standpoint, is pretty ridiculous. The brain can't produce enough Oxytocin to love more than 6-12 people... Without the help of drugs, anyway.

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

A:  My little brother is one of the most badass people I know. He's a former cage-fighter and Krav Maga expert, but when he was younger he would sometimes play with Barbie and Ken dolls. There was this one set he really loved because they were wearing wet-suits and he was always fascinated with scuba-diving. (Did I mention he's also a scuba-diver?) Anyway, one day these girls started to tease him for it, saying Barbie was for girls. Being the stalwart older sibling that I was I came to his defense. I got into a physical fight with the girls (I was bigger, sure, but there were two of them!) and I got in major trouble and they didn't because apparently girls were allowed to hit boys but not the other way around. It was like, BAM. A crash-course in gender norms packed into an hour and a half. I'm a diehard feminist now, and it all started that rainy afternoon.

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

A:  Man... This is going to be unpopular, but I wish there wasn't such a stigma against writing plays that could be seen as 'cinematic.' We often conflate 'realism' with 'boring' but boring writing has nothing to do with the style of the play. My soon-to-be wife isn't in the theater industry, and when I take her to see new work, she usually leaves feeling like the play was either inaccessible or trying to make her feel stupid. I know everyone thinks they need to alienate their audience because they read Brecht in college, but we're so alienated when we walk into the theater already... I want to see emotion onstage. I want you to make me give a damn. It's hard to make people give a damn in 2016.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  That would certainly be a long list of Brits and Jews. Deborah Zoe Laufer, Terry Johnson, Wendy Wasserstein, Joe Orton, Richard Greenberg, Martin McDonaugh I could hero-vomit all over this question.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Any time I actually have to think about a play, I'm excited. I like theatre that tells the truth, regardless of how scary or upsetting (or uplifting!) that truth may be. Plays that seep into my brain, and affect my daily life, when I leave the theater an ever-so-slightly different person because of what I saw.... Those are the kind of plays I live for. If I can do that to just one person then my entire writing career has been worth it. Or at least that's what I tell myself when I get rejection letters.

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

A:  It's more important to be yourself than to be original. Lots of early-career writers (myself included) want so badly to be "fresh" that they totally entomb what makes their voices special. Also, don't write a play with Fairies. It shames us all.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Always! Come see our 'Wright Club showcase on May 25th! Medicine Show Theater! 7:30! you can see 'Lovehack' as well as a play by my esteemed colleague Andrew Rincón!

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May 7, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 835: Emily Schmitt



Emily Schmitt

Hometown: Cincinnati, OH

Current Town: New York, specifically Bay Ridge, Brooklyn

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Several things, but what I'm most excited about is a play called "Under Further Review," which is very loosely based on something that happened when I was in college. A young woman committed suicide after accusing a football player of sexual assault. This lead to an investigation into the university's sexual assault policy and a great deal of turmoil on campus. My play is about a former star athlete who must confront his alma mater after his daughter's rape on campus. In doing do, he faces some disturbing truths about himself and the institution he most loves. The play is currently being developed with the help of The CRY HAVOC Company.

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

A:  When I was in fifth grade, I had a gym teacher I really detested. Looking back, I'm not sure if I detested him, or if it was just the humiliation of gym class that made me feel a great injustice was being done in my life. Either way, I decided that he needed to be fired. I had some legitimate reasons, such as the way he talked down to the girls in the class and one uncomfortable moment when he shouted into the dressing room. My best (only) friend, Katie, and I decided to write a petition to get him fired. We walked around at recess asking the girls in our class to sign it. All but one put their signature on that piece of paper, which Katie then slid under the door to the principle's office one fateful Wednesday evening.

The next day was probably the most traumatic of my educational experience. Everyone who signed the petition was rounded up into a classroom, where this gym teacher was openly weeping on a stool facing the students. The parish priest, an even higher position than the principal, informed us that we had committed the Cardinal Sin of slander and, if we did not ask for forgiveness, were going to Hell. (I cannot make this stuff up.) We were then asked, one my one, to apologize to this weeping adult man and explain to him what had possessed us to do such a thing to him. Naturally, most of the fifth grade girls were terrified and pointed their fingers at Katie and I. We, apparently, had threatened to beat them up if they didn't sign. We had lied to them and said the form was about Girl Scouts. We had even forged signatures. One by one, my classmates were dismissed as their false claims of my misdeeds were accepted. Finally, the only ones left in the room were myself, the priest, this gym teacher, and Katie. I still remember the moment I looked down and realized we were holding hands.

That pretty much sums up my feelings about justice, faith, and friendship.

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

A:  I find the theatrical community to be pretty philosophically homogeneous, which is dangerous if we really want to connect with our audiences. I once had a director tell me to stop writing about Catholicism because its not relevant in modern society. I think he spent too much time around theater folk.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Arthur Miller is my guiding light. Death of a Salesman may very well be a perfect play. I have yet to find a flaw in it.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I actually just stood up and spent about ten minutes pacing my apartment trying to think of something to say other than "Hamilton is the greatest!" I wish I had some cool, edgy, thing that no one's heard of. But that would be dishonest. Hamilton is by far the most exciting thing I've seen in the past year, and here is why: it's a true epic. Plays stopped wanting to be epic for a little while and just got really small. We wanted to write very small plays about middle-class couples having difficult break-up conversations in their living rooms. I'm not sure why that happened. Shakespeare wrote about kings. I'm not saying every play needs to be about powerful people or great historical events, but the emotions should be that big. And the stakes should be that high. (See why I love Arthur Miller....)

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

A:  If you're writing a play to make a statement or to teach your audience something, take a step back. You are not morally or intellectually superior to your audience. Start with with a question and try to scare yourself a little.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My play "Whatchamacallit: A Play About Jesus" is running for one more weekend at the Secret Theater. People say it's pretty funny.
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I Interview Playwrights Part 834: Annette Storckman


Annette Storckman

Hometown: Woodbury, NY (You know, where the Woodbury Commons are)

Current Town: New York, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I'm wrapping up rehearsals for my play BONESETTER with Spicy Witch Productions. I'm also doing research for two new plays, one of which is about a small ska revival that happened around 2007 in the Hudson Valley, and the mythology that surrounded the scene.

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

A:  I knew I wanted to be a writer at a pretty early age. Around four years old I wrote my first story, "Snow White and the Bears," which as a title, is a theme that has held pretty true to this day. 1) I still think bears are hilarious, 2) I like incorporating elements of horror into comedy.

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

A:  I would love for those of us who write straight plays to remember the entertainment value of theatre. I feel like we get so bogged down with sounding literary that we keep creating a collection of boring plays. I would love for people to bend genre more, and have joy beam out of their text-- no matter what the story is. I'm not saying you have to write something loud and spectacular to write something entertaining, just to treasure the story you are telling, and remember who you're giving it to.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I love Martin McDonagh and Tom Stoppard. Presently, however, I love people like Sarah Ruhl, Anne Washburn and Madeleine George.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  This sounds vague, but anything with a new perspective. I love the diversity of stories.

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

A:  Take all the jobs. Work the light board, hang out after the show, go to people's readings. Keep talking to people until you meet someone you really want to work with. Then make a play. And have a really good time.


Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Come see Spicy Witch Productions' Tragislasher season: BONESETTER: A TRAGISLASHER in rep with its source material THE REVENGER'S TRAGEDY by Thomas Middleton. Bonesetter discusses the correlations between Jacobean tragedies and modern horror by adapting Middleton's satirical tragedy as a campy 80's slasher movie. It's also a comedy! It's also super feminist! And there's a lot of blood!
Tickets here: https://www.artful.ly/spicy-witch-productions

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May 6, 2016

A couple cool theater related websites (Interviews)

In case you're not already going to these places:

50 Playwrights Project
"The 50 Playwrights Project is a digital resource dedicated to contemporary Latin@ playwrights and other teatro allies created by Dr. Trevor Boffone."
https://50playwrights.org/about-2/
https://50playwrights.org/interviews/

People You Should Know
Zack Calhoun's interviews of New York theater makers.
http://zackcalhoon.blogspot.com/?view=classic

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I Interview Playwrights Part 833: Jessica Huang


Jessica Huang

Hometown/Current Town: Minneapolis, MN

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  A couple commissions - a ghost story about a Chinese immigrant during the Exclusion era and an mixed-race epic about the eco-crisis, as well as curating/producing/weaving together an experimental adaptation of Lorca's Blood Wedding called the Palabras Project. I'm super excited about this, as it's the first piece of a new production company - Other Tiger Productions - that I co-founded with my husband Ricardo Vazquez. We've commissioned new work from six local Latino celebrities and will partner with a local theater - Park Square - to put this extravaganza up in July of this year.

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

A:  This is a tough one so I outsourced it to my younger brother; he reminded me of this story, which sort of (?) answers the question. When we were kids we had chores that we had to do every Sunday - clean our rooms, clean the bathroom, take out the trash, etc. To make it fun, I used to pretend that I was called away to a fairy kingdom and the fairies sent someone back who looked just like me to take my place and do the chores. I would tell my brother these elaborate stories every Sunday about what "Jessica" was doing in the fairy kingdom, as well as the life story of this fairy replacement, who of course was different every week - sometimes a servant, sometimes a pilot, sometimes a warrior. One Sunday, the fairy kingdom was under some kind of threat, so "Jessica," of course, had to run off and help, but the situation was so serious that they sent the daughter of the fairy king himself to take her place. At one point things got so bad that I had to report to my brother that "Jessica" had perished, and this fairy princess would be his sister now. And somehow - probably because he was 5 years old - he believed me and started hysterically crying. So... I try to reveal the beauty in the mundane, and make real life fun through the fantastic, but it still gets really serious sometimes...?

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

A:  I wish more people were able to have the powerful experience of recognizing themselves onstage - which of course means that I wish there were more authentic and virtuosic stories onstage about people of color, women, people with disabilities, people who identify outside gender binaries, immigrants, queer people, indigenous people, trans people, mixed-race people, etc. etc. etc. And I wish these stories were told in exciting, innovative, dangerous ways. This sounds like two answers, but I really think it's one - I'm pretty sure that in order to tell these stories authentically, we need to break open the form itself and let in other ways of telling, of thinking, of expressing.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Usually my collaborators - so right now Mei Ann Teo, Jeremy Tiang, Joel Sass, Wu Chen Khoo, Katherine Horowitz, Trever Bowen, Abbee Warmboe, Megan Kreidler, Song Kim, Audrey Park, Taous Khazem, Eric Sharp, and of course, always, Ricardo Vazquez.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love theatrical experiences that harness imagination to provoke mass empathy and incite riots.

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

A:  Be rigorous and settle for nothing less than the truth of each moment. And listen, listen so carefully to your characters and to your community.

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May 5, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 832: Paz Pardo


Paz Pardo

Hometown:  Palo Alto, CA

Current Town: Austin, TX

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  A Christmas comedy where everyone dies called Pioneers of the Future. We'll see how that goes...My partner and I are also starting a translation project called Grande/Bravo, which aims to put US plays into dialogue with plays from Latin America. We're translating Kirk Lynn's Fixing King John into Spanish and organizing a reading of it as part of the Brujula al sur international festival in Cali, Colombia in October. We're also translating Mosca by Fabio Rubiano and Otelo sobre la mesa by Jaime Chabaud into English and setting up readings of them here in Austin in the spring of 2017. All three plays are irreverent adaptations of Shakespeare, and we're working on getting a round table together with all three playwrights.

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

A:  For my 11th birthday, I decided to make a movie. So all my friends—all girls—came over for a slumber party, and everybody said what they wanted to be and we came up with a plot and set to work. The cast list featured a philandering wife, an assassin, a witch, and I think a cat? Nobody wanted to play the husband—the movie was called "Femme Fatale Forever." It had no problem passing the Bechdel test. We put my little sister in the oven for one of the scenes. My mother was not happy when she saw the video.

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

A:  I would get more funding more equitably distributed across the country. I'd also love to see American Theater be more in dialogue with theater from around the world–not just the theater that tours the international festival circuit—theater all over talking to theater from all over. That would be fun.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I'm eclectically excitable. A lot of what grabs me is in dance—Faye Driscoll comes to mind, as well as a dance-theater ensemble called Grupo Krapp from Argentina. The way that choreographers create structure without relying on narrative fascinates me. One of the most important things for me is seeing performers have fun on stage. There's something about the energy of someone loving what they're doing or cracking themselves up that I find endlessly exciting. I recently saw the Rude Mech's Field Guide out here in Austin, and the utter delight of the performers in certain moments made the experience transcendent for me. And then there are plays that can grab me even from the page (which is rare, I'm a terrible play-reader)—Steven Dietz's Lonely Planet and Enrique Lozano's Los difusos finales de las cosas come to mind.

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

A:  My mother is a playwright, and she met Tony Kushner in like 1990 and asked him what advice he had for budding playwrights. He said "Self produce." He seems like a good person to listen to. The way that your writing changes after having to listen to your words over and over and over again is great training. Also, my path into playwriting was to not know I was a playwright, and I think it's served me well. My early-career training was as a director and an actor—and boy, have those things influenced how I'm able to write. As an actor, there are things that get so embedded in you through performance that you're able to intuit the internal logic of a scene. That's deeply helpful when you're writing. And the practice of thinking beyond the text that comes with directing is very helpful if you want to move into realms of more expansive theatricality.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My play RubberMatch is running in NYC, May 5-21. More info at http://www.redcaravanco.com/ If you come, say hi!

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May 2, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 831: Katie Bender

Katie Bender

Hometown:  I was born in Houston Texas and moved around a lot growing up. New York, Texas and California feel like home.

Current Town: Austin, Texas

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Right now I’m working on a two-hander for a magician and his assistant titled One Night Only. Based on the life of Harry Houdini, this play has lot’s of space for me to play with magic and theatricality while exploring questions of ambition and escapism.

With Underbelly I co-create immersive journey plays that invite audiences into the unperformed spaces in the theatre. With a commission from ZACH theater and a residency with The New Victory Playlabs we’ve created an adaptation of Alice in Wonderland that has been running at ZACH for the last three months. We are currently re-imagining the play for a workshop with New Victory in New York. www.underbellytheatre.com.

Starting in July I’ll be in Minneapolis as a Jerome Fellow at The Playwright’s Center. This last year I’ve been jumping non-stop from one project to the next. I am so excited to spend the summer in Minneapolis reading and dreaming and finding new inspiration and in the fall diving into a big old historical play about Susanna Dickinson, Santa Anna and The Alamo.

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

A:  A few memories here:

When I was little we lived in Seattle in a neighborhood filled with huge trees and eccentric victorian houses. If I could climb a tree and get on one roof I could sneak from roof to roof looking in at other people’s lives. I loved the physical rigor of balancing in the trees, I loved the danger of getting caught, most of all I loved looking in on other people from an unexpected angle.

Driving back from a camping trip with my dad and sisters in a tense car with my dad’s desire to make a great vacation as palpable as his knowledge that we couldn’t afford the great vacation, I started puppeting my sister’s hair clip. I created for the hair clip a persona that was foul and gruff and could get everyone in the car laughing. I played that hair clip character so much it started to feel like a trance I could drop into, where all the tense weird gross shit I wouldn’t usually say could come out. Mostly, I was just trying to keep everyone laughing.

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

A:  I wish there was greater gender parity in all areas of the theatre. I wish more theatres produced more new plays, and more kinds of plays by more kinds of people.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Oh man, so many. Naomi Wallace, Pina Bausch, Sam Shepard, Kazuo Ohno, Paula Vogel, Lisa D’Amour, Ivan Van Hove, The Rude Mechs, My teachers, Kirk Lynn, Steven Dietz, Suzan Zeder and Liz Engelman. My incredible collaborators Gabrielle Reisman, Abe Koogler, Stephanie Busing, Mercedes O’bannion, Kristian Piña, Kelsey Oliver and Peter Stopschinski.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love theatre that is consciously crafted to lead the audience into an experience of the unknown.

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

A:  For me, writing is a physical act, often I need to write several drafts before I know what the play is about. So I would say write as a muscle you are building that leads you to your own voice and then listen, listen to the play, listen to your collaborators, listen for outside inspiration...the play lies at the intersection between the act of doing and the ability to sit back and listen.

Find your people and make your own shit.

Don’t get caught up in the idea of gatekeepers; write the plays that excite you, see if some other people are excited by them and get them up.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  If you’re in Texas come see our production of Alice in Wonderland at ZACH Theatre.
http://www.zachtheatre.org/content/2015-16-family-shows

Also Liz Doss’s Poor Herman with Paper Chairs
http://paperchairs.com/upcoming-events/

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I Interview Playwrights Part 830: Benjamin Benne



Benjamin Benne

Hometown: Hacienda Heights, CA. It's part of the seemingly endless sprawl of Los Angeles County.

Current Town: Seattle, WA. But soon to be Minneapolis, MN.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  At this moment, my focus is on a brand new play that I wrote in the span of a month. I got that challenge from your blog actually! Previously, the fastest I've completed a first draft was three months; so your recommendation that the first draft of a play should take 3-4 weeks to write was an intriguing notion. The play I ended up writing was fueled by my overwhelming anger surrounding how certain individuals running for political office are portraying immigrants. Out of this rage was born a play with the working title TRUMP'D. Actually, my very first play CAPTIVITY was also about immigration and fueled by a similar feeling of rage. I guess it's just a subject that gets me fired up! TRUMP'D is being developed for a workshop production with Parley, a Seattle-based playwright group.

I've also got my very first mainstage production of a play called TERRA INCOGNITA coming up at Annex Theatre this summer. Annex is a well-known theater on the Seattle fringe circuit that places emphasis on producing new work by local artists. Since moving to Seattle, I've been wanting to work with them because they value risk and experimentation over a polished, commercial product. My dear friend and collaborator Pilar O'Connell is directing. We're about to head into workshop mode now; the show has been cast and I can't wait to hear my brand new draft with the actual actors who will be playing these roles!

I also recently completed the first draft of a play called LAS MARIPOSAS Y LOS MUERTOS. This play is my first commission and the first play that I'm writing that will feature musical numbers. I'm preparing to dive into a revision of the play and begin collaborating with the musicians who will be writing the original music.

Finally, I have a play called AT THE VERY BOTTOM OF A BODY OF WATER that's been in development with Umbrella Project, a Seattle-based new work advocacy group, for about 6 months now. It's gotten a series of readings and tireless dramaturgical support from the wonderful Gavin Reub. It's finally ready to have a showcase reading and I'm pumped about getting to share this beautiful baby with an audience!

So all that is happening before I leave Seattle to begin my year-long residency at The Playwrights' Center as a Many Voices Fellow.

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

A:  When I was 6, my father bought me multiple volumes of National Geographic on VHS. I would watch them obsessively. I recall the thrill of watching a cheetah chase a gazelle across the African savanna. That was drama. If the cheetah caught the gazelle that was satisfying but tragic. If the gazelle escaped the cheetah's grasp, it was satisfying and a relief...but still tragic.

Around that same time, we had a little dog named Blanca. One day, a couple of my uncles were doing some work in our backyard and left the gate open. A couple of neighborhood dogs, who were on the loose, got into our backyard and attacked Blanca. My final image of that little dog was my uncle removing her from under a bush where she was hiding. Her white fur was stained with bright red blood. Even now that I'm an adult, my uncle still apologizes almost every time I see him for the incident.

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

A:  The majority of productions would be new plays that are accessible and appealing to a more varied audience. I would like to see theater audiences that are truly reflective of the range of demographics that make up our community. I'm tired of being so aware of the fact that I am in the minority (in age, economically, and racially) when I look at the other patrons attending the theater.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My mentors are my heroes. Seriously, I am so grateful for every teacher who has invested their time, experience, and knowledge in me.
Rod Menzies.
Patrick Pearson.
Caridad Svich.
Elizabeth Heffron.
My current playwriting mentor Rebecca Tourino Collinsworth is a paragon of grace and tenacity. She is the busiest person I know and yet she always finds time for me. She creates a safe environment that promotes risk-taking and ensures that each piece is deeply personal. I've written seven full-length plays with her mentorship over the last three years.

And then, of course, my first playwriting teacher, Susan Merson is one of my greatest theatrical heroes. I wouldn't be writing plays if it weren't for her. She encouraged me to apply to New York Theatre Intensives for their six-week summer conservatory in 2011; I was awarded a full scholarship for tuition and housing. While in New York doing the program, one night we got to have dinner with friends featuring Donald Margulies. Susan calls him "Donny." There was a small group of us sitting around him in Susan's apartment. There were two things in particular that he said that have stayed with me to this day. First, he said NOT to obsessively rewrite your plays on your own; either someone will respond to the bones of your play and want to develop it with you or it's time for you to write the next play. Second, he said that even after DINNER WITH FRIENDS won the Pulitzer, that there are adjustments he would want to make to the play now.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theater that reflects what is happening right now.
Theater that offer a new lens to view the world through.
Theater that engages me emotionally and/or spiritually.
Theater that pushes the limits of what humans are capable of. (I love watching the work of choreographer Crystal Pite for that reason. Human bodies take forms that are organic but that still look unnatural. It's awe-inspiring stuff.)
Theater that is elegant and poetic but also jarring and dares to get ugly.
Theater like Sarah Ruhl's THE CLEAN HOUSE and PASSION PLAY.
Theater like Sarah Kane's CLEANSED.
Theater like Maria Irene Fornes' MUD.

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

A:  Well, I can tell you what I've done as a young playwright:
1) I carry my Moleskine with me everywhere. When inspiration comes, I scribble it down. It might be an image, a character, a line of dialogue. I have to get that stuff down right away or risk having it just float away.
2) I prioritize writing the story I NEED to tell rather than something I just WANT to tell.
3) I've consistently taken playwriting classes with different instructors. The more perspectives and tools that I'm exposed to, the more exciting my writing process becomes and the more surprising the resulting work is.
4) I seek opportunities to collaborate with other artists that feel an affinity with the type of art I want to create (and vise versa). These collaborators are a community of playwrights, actors, dramaturgs, and directors who inspire and support my vision -- and, hopefully, they'd say that I do the same for them.
5) I read plays then go see them in action.
6) I read Jose Rivera's 36 ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT WRITING PLAYS over and over again.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Parley is presenting the workshop production of my newest play TRUMP'D at West of Lenin on May 17th:  http://www.parleyproductions.com/

The world premiere of TERRA INCOGNITA will run from July 29-Aug 20 at Annex Theatre:
http://www.annextheatre.org/2016-season/main-stage/terra-incognita/

Forward Flux Productions will present a staged reading of LAS MARIPOSAS Y LOS MUERTOS on October 25th: http://www.forwardflux.com/

Finally, AT THE VERY BOTTOM OF A BODY OF WATER is in development with Umbrella Project:http://www.umbrellaprojectnw.org/

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May 1, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 829: Anthony P. Pennino



Anthony P. Pennino

Hometown:  Princeton, NJ

Current Town:  Princeton, NJ (I have circled back here after living in NYC, London, and — for a brief stint — Istanbul.)

Q:  Tell me about your upcoming shows.

A:  First up is Iron Tongue of Midnight, which will have its opening night at The Neighborhood Playhouse on May 6. The work is being performed by approximately a third of the graduating class (the other two-thirds are split performing in Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead or Stephen Adly Guirgis’s The Last Days of Judas Iscariot). The play is about a theatre company in Moscow in 1939 trying to mount a production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Company members keeping getting purged, so they plug in actual workers to play the Rude Mechanicals. Second up is Drones, which will have its premiere at The 2016 Planet Connections Festivity on June 18. This piece is a very loose adaptation of an incident in The Iliad. The work concerns our seeming inability not to be at war and posits a world where The Trojan War essentially never ended (complete with modern military technology). Third up is a revival of my long one-act Misty Phantoms, which enters into a conversation with William Faulkner over genocide of Native Americans. This work will be a part of the Thespis Theatre Festival in July. Finally, my play Chokehold will be returning on September 15 at the 14th Street Y. This is its second run. It originally premiered in the 2015 Planet Connections Festivity. This piece addresses police violence in African-American communities and concerns five friends who make a very radical choice to call attention to the problem.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I am part of a theatre company — Core Creative Productions — and we are planning on developing a piece about Nelson Mandela’s time on Robben Island. He and the prisoners there had access to the complete works of William Shakespeare, and it served as a lifeline for them.

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

A:  Not quite from childhood, but when I was in college, James Shapiro (The Year of Lear, Shakespeare and the Jews) was my Shakespeare professor. Rather than placing The Bard up on a pedestal, Shapiro dived into the world of Shakespeare’s London, what a production in The Rose or The Globe would have been like, how the plays would have been received and what meaning they would have for the audience. His approach was to strip away the myth, but it made the plays and the man behind them so much more alive and vital. I wanted to be a part of something that entered into the bloodstream of a national culture conversation, reported on but also defined what in a sense was a city that was reconceiving itself in a global context. I wanted to be a part of an art form that could do all of that.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  John Patrick Shanley — I am in awe of his ability to delve into the realm of belief and moral conscience. I still have a clear vision of Cherry Jones at the end of Doubt wracked with doubt. Suzan-Lori Parks — I thought her Father Comes Home from the Wars was audacious and brilliant, truly an American Homeric epic. Tony Kushner — the clarity and urgency of his voice with Angels in America is inspiring. Stephen Adly Guirgis — for his unerring ability to marry dialogue to character. And, of course, August Wilson — he did what Shakespeare did: made theatre national history.  I am still trying to wrap my head around the enormity of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s contribution. Among actors: Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jeffrey Wright, Cherry Jones, Mark Rylance, Audra McDonald, and Ben Whislaw.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  You know, I really do just love the theater, and I am pretty much prepared to see anything as long as it gets the juices flowing. I love new work and reinterpretations of the classics. I really want to hear the writer’s voice, but also that of the actors and director. For my day job, I am a literature professor, and I frequently teach Shakespeare. What I do not like is someone who presents a “museum” production of Shakespeare (or Moliere or Ibsen or Chekhov or whatever). I want the director, the actors, the designers to engage with the text, wrestle it the ground, and find a way to elide their voices with the original. I hate to see productions that play it safe — what Peter Brook described as deadly theatre.

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

A:  The first audience you have to please is yourself.

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