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1100 Playwright Interviews

1100 Playwright Interviews A Sean Abley Rob Ackerman E.E. Adams Johnna Adams Liz Duffy Adams Tony Adams David Adjmi Keith Josef Adkins Nicc...

Sep 30, 2017

1000 PLAYWRIGHT INTERVIEWS



Update June 24, 2021--  Go here for 100 more interviews.  





1000 Playwright Interviews

The first interview I posted was on June 3, 2009.  It was Jimmy Comtois.  I decided I would start interviewing some of my playwright friends.  It was fun and I had a blog and wanted to do something different and people like getting interviewed.  So I started doing this.  I thought I would stop after 50.  I thought I would stop after 100.  And now I'm at 1000 and I think I'm done for real.  I'm just tired.  It's inspirational but also sometimes it's a lot of work.

This is in no way a definitive list.  There are so many people I didn't interview and some of them I don't know.  And some don't want to do it and some I meant to ask and forgot.  Or I did ask and they forgot.  Or I never asked but I should have.  I'm also really disorganized.  I don't know how this all happened.  This is all to say there are lots of amazing playwrights not on this list.  In fact, there are probably 15-20K playwrights writing in the US today.  Here are 1000 of them.

9/30/17


A
Sean Abley
Rob Ackerman
Liz Duffy Adams
Johnna Adams
Tony Adams
David Adjmi
Keith Josef Adkins
Niccolo Aeed
Nastaran Ahmadi
Derek Ahonen
Kathleen Akerley
W.M. Akers
Ayad Akhtar
Rob Askins
Chiara Atik
Forrest Attaway
David Auburn
Jon Robin Baitz
Hannah Bos
Andy Bragen
Leslie Bramm
Benjamin Brand
Jami Brandli
November Christine
Jennifer Fawcett
Joshua Fardon
Basil Kreimendahl
Carson Kreitzer
Gregg Kreutz
Caitlin Saylor Stephens
Ariel Stess
Vanessa Claire Stewart
Nelle Tankus
Kate Tarker
Jona Tarlin
Judy Tate
Roland Tec
Lucy Teitler
Marina Tempelsman
Cori Thomas




playwrights, playwriting, playwrite, playright, writing plays, write, amwriting, writers, writing, play wright, plays, theatre, theater, the stage, stageworthy, words, page, interview, process, how, advice, 

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I Interview Playwrights Part 1000: C. Denby Swanson



C. Denby Swanson

Hometown: Austin, TX

Current Town: Austin, TX

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  A Sloan/EST science-play commission called NUTSHELL, a one-woman show about Frances Glessner Lee, who is considered the “mother of forensic science.” She built the Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death, these precise miniatures of crime scenes, which are housed at the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore and still, as Frances intended, used to train homicide detectives. I’m also writing a memoir and TV pilot about my first year as a foster parent. I fostered for five years and adopted my son in 2014.

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 a kid, like 6 or something, I was visiting my maternal grandparent’s house in East Texas, and a family friend came over. She was an opera singer. I thought she was quite glamorous. She asked me what I wanted to do when I grew up and I wanted to impress her so I said that I wanted to be an actor. My grandmother got angry and told me I was NOT going to be an actor, I was going to be a journalist. And I thought, Oohhh, if I grow up to be an actor it will make her mad! THAT IS SO COOL. Now I MUST be an actor. I went to HSPVA, the arts magnet high school in Houston. Then I was a theater major in college. My intention was to be an actor. My grandmother died my senior year. That’s when I found out that she had toured East Texas doing productions of Shakespeare. When she married, she gave it up and never spoke about it again. And I am actually a writer.

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

A:  More yes.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Caryl Churchill, Irene Fornes, Adrienne Kennedy. And then Suzan-Lori Parks 365 Days/365 Plays. What kind of theater excites you? Small, intimate, unexpected, physical, impossible theater. The company I worked for in the 90’s, Frontera@HydePark Theater, did a production of Naomi Iizuka’s POLAROID STORIES, and I felt spiritually renewed every time I saw it.

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

A:  My 7th grade science teacher, Mr. Cole, urged us to observe 10 things a day. Which I still do. Other than that, I heard someone ask Suzan-Lori Parks how to start a play and her answer was just, you know, “Start.” Start. Do it. Say yes.

Q:  When not writing on a computer, what's your go-to paper and writing utensil?

A:  I like the Miquelrius journals with graph paper and a fine-tipped blue ink pen. I doodle a lot and draw lots of arrows. 

Q:  When on computer, what's your font? 

A:  I used to experiment with fonts but then I became a parent and now don’t have the time or energy to mess with anything other than Times New Roman.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My “killer comedy” THE NORWEGIANS is available through Dramatists Play Service. And I have several plays for young people available through Playscripts. I just finished a workshop of a new play I’ve been working on with Stephen Bittrich and David Marantz, a one-man holiday-themed dark comedy called I AM MY OWN SANTA, which received Seed Support from ScriptWorks, the Austin playwright services organization. We’re working on some production options. My new one-act for young actors, THE SUBSTITUTE TEACHER’S TALE, is being produced this fall in Dallas. I wrote the play for the students of a former student of mine about my high school English teacher, Mrs. Catley, and her love of the Canterbury Tales. I like the legacy of writing about an important teacher for a student who is now a teacher with students of his own.

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Sep 29, 2017

Jack and Jill Plays - Part 44 - Dusty



another short play.  All right reserved-- don't produce or reproduce without my permission.

Dusty
by Adam Szymkowicz

(JACK and JILL facing each other, not quite seeing each other)

JACK
The wind kicks up and I can barely see through the dust.  I know she's there, but the dust.  The dust!

JILL
There's a buried city in my head.  So many stories, memories, worries, wishes, hopes, anger, disappointment, joy, loss, so much drama all enacting but one click and it's all over.

JACK
I'm a cowboy and I pull up my kerchief over my nose and I put on the goggles so I can see.  She's there.  I know she's there.  One day the dust will settle and I'll find her again.  I just have to keep going.

JILL
Jack?

JACK
Jill, I hear you.  Where are you?

JILL
Somewhere you can't follow.

JACK
Jill!

JILL
Jack! ... Jack!

JACK
Jill!

JILL
nn.

JACK
But she's gone.

JILL
One click and it's over.  The electric impulses die.  Life was... whatever life was.  It continues for others.  But for me.

JACK
The dust and the dust and the dust and the dust.

JILL
And then the rain.

JACK
But nothing gets washed away.

JILL
You'll remember me, won't you?

JACK
I still have teeth marks on my arm.

JILL
Remember me.

JACK
I'll try.

JILL
And then the wind blows once more and I'm gone.


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I Interview Playwrights Part 999: Melissa Ross



Melissa Ross

Hometown: All over Massachusetts

Current Town: NYC

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  A few plays that are hard to write and so I keep trying to write them and then I don't write them and then I talk a lot about writing them and then I write a little more and then I think about them and read books that are thematically relevant and talk about writer's block and then I try to write a few more pages and around I go again. Lately writing has felt a little three steps forward two steps back. Moving in the right direction - but painstakingly slow.

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 about six or seven I wrote a short story that I thought was very intense and serious. And I remember all of the adults reading it and laughing and talking about how it was so great because it was so funny. And I was totally confused. And frustrated. And a little bit disappointed. Because in my head very dramatic high stakes things were happening in this short story. I don't think too much about what is funny when I'm writing. Whenever I try to write a joke it usually fails horribly. Because regular people don't often speak in well crafted jokes - and so I think the writing immediately shows itself. I often find that the parts of my plays that people find the funniest - are the moments of heightened anger or frustration or almost unbearable awkwardness.

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

A:  The ability to have more inclusive audiences. I go to see theater and it's often the same mix of subscribers and theater industry people. I was working in a nursing home once and I kept thinking. Wouldn't it be so great to bring pieces of currently running plays to the elderly since a lot of them never get out anymore. I also used to teach teens and I tried to bring them to plays with me as much as I could. Theater is such a wonderful thing. And there should be more ways to make it accessible to more people.

Q:  What are some of your favorite theatrical moments or performances?

A:  The final scene between John Ortiz and Ron Cephas Jones in Jesus Hopped the A Train. Kristine Nielsen's phone monologue in Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike. Cherry Jones's last moment in Doubt. A Juilliard workshop of a play called The Last Pair of Earlies by Josh Allen. Philip Seymour Hoffman in Jack Goes Boating. Elizabeth Rodriguez's Saint Monica monologue in The Last Days of Judas Iscariot. Amy Morton's "I'm running things now!" in August Osage County. Ian Rickson's The Seagull. Katrina Lenk singing Omar Sharif in The Band's Visit. Carrie Coon in Mary Jane. Every single second of The Humans.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love plays where the writer is risking something personal to tell the story. That doesn't necessarily mean autobiographical. I think the plays that writers want to hide away from view are the plays that desperately need to be seen. Sometimes the more personal something gets it eventually turns a corner into being universal. People talk a lot about actors leaving their hearts on the stage - but I think writers do it too. When a writer leaves their heart on the stage - the feeling in the theater is palpable. It's the most beautiful thing to be in the audience when that happens.

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

A:  Oh gosh read everything. Read so many plays. Read anything you can find at the library. Ask lots of different people what their ten favorite plays are and then read as many of those as you can. Read plays by writers who don't write the kinds of plays you think you like. Get together with your friends and read plays out loud because it's the best. Try to see plays produced that you've read so you can see what was on the page and what wasn't. Get your friends together and put up a play in whatever space you can. If you've never been an actor before - take an acting class so you understand the process of learning lines and making active choices. If you are going to write for actors I think it's so important to experience first hand what it means to bring text to life. And to have empathy and appreciation for what actors do.

Q:  When not writing on a computer, what's your go-to paper and writing utensil? When on computer, what's your font?

A:  I actually write all of my plays longhand. I eventually get to a computer but the first draft is all pen and paper. I used to love classic black and white composition books. When I got older I graduated to the faux leather moleskin with the elastic placekeeper. I like all pens. I switch it up. Sometimes I like a ball point. Sometimes I like a roller ball. Sometimes I like a razor felt tip. I also have a weird and random collection of pens from hotels that wasn't intentional but now it's definitely a thing.

My go-to font is Bookman Old Style. I am also possibly the only playwright who writes in Word. People always say "But if you write in Final Draft you don't have to keep writing the character's name and centering it!" But I guess I like typing the character's name. And centering it.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  This winter - Nice Girl will be at The Raven Theatre in Chicago directed by Lauren Shouse. And then in the spring my play An Entomologist's Love Story will be at San Francisco Playhouse directed by Giovanna Sardelli.

Oh and go see the ESPA Drills readings next week!
http://primarystages.org/espa/espa-programs/espa-drills

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Sep 28, 2017

I Interview Playwrights Part 998: Rae Binstock





Rae Binstock

Hometown: Cambridge, MA

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  My latest project is a Top Girls-inspired play about American women from a massive range of experience (including different time periods) arguing about Hillary Clinton, and then suddenly it’s about the Nazi riots in Charlottesville. On deck to write next are a play that takes a transgender angle of Twelfth Night and a play about the second coming of a Great Flood. And then I’m writing a cluster of pilots for development. (I haven’t learned how to sleep yet.)

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 about three years old, my babysitter Sarah took her boyfriend and myself to the green in front of MIT. It was a beautiful day for a picnic, and we spread our blanket in the middle of dozens of college students, professors, and other family groups enjoying the weather. After a little while, I started walking around to other people’s blankets. Sarah knew I was a very outgoing kid, so she let me explore, keeping a watchful eye for trouble. I seemed to be making friends everywhere I went, and Sarah relaxed.

Finally, one of my new friends got up and came over to our blanket. He asked if I belonged to her and she confirmed I did; with this assurance, he held out Sarah’s boyfriend’s wallet and said “Your toddler tried to give this to me. She’s been trying to give it to a bunch of people out here. I thought you should know.”

And that is the story of how, at the tender age of three, I stole a wallet and tried to hawk it on the street. Nobody knows if I was driven by sweet childhood innocence or by a darker, more cunning force. But making people guessing has kind of become my Thing.

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

A:  I would have the theater made mandatory in every state and every country on Earth. There is much that desperately needs changing in the theater—more diversity on- and off-stage, more stories from oppressed and silenced communities, more production of new work—but those problems can be fixed, in time, by dedicated individuals from within the theater world. Theater in its most imperfect form is still invaluable, because it inspires empathy in practitioners and audience alike. Actors have to inhabit characters, audience members have to listen to those characters speak, writers and directors and designers have to create an unreal world with the heavy tools of reality. Theater forces a person to examine a perspective outside of their own, and our failure to do exactly that is killing our country. Bigotry and prejudice are so much harder to truly believe in when you have taken even a tiny step outside of your own world and seen things a different way, through another’s eyes; the effort to do so alone stretches your soul out of its factory-issue shape. The theater may not be able to cure the world’s ills, but it sure as hell can make us more inclined to do it ourselves.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  David Henry Hwang and Ellen McLaughlin are my heroes for many reasons, only one of which is the brilliance of both their work. David has shown me generosity, kindness, and support beyond anything I could expect from someone with their own legendary career to manage; Ellen was my first great playwriting teacher, whose passion for writing, quiet respect for an overeager student, and warm friendship continues to serve as an inspiration to me. Ellen and David’s guidance as mentors and friends have changed my life, but their most valuable gift to me, however, is the faith they have shown in me and my work. That means more than I can ever say—and moreover, it’s taught me how essential that kind of faith and encouragement are in the theater world. Wherever I go and whatever I do, I will always be trying to honor David and Ellen, and their extraordinary capacity to give more than they have to, over and over again.

(And then of course Tony Kushner, the author of Angels in America, which beat a sixteen-year-old me over the head with the utter miracles of which playwriting is capable. I’m really into that play. I got a tattoo.)

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Innovative theater. Honestly, nothing is more boring than a play made up of recycled ideas. Do whatever you want as long as it’s exploring something new. We’re at a point where literally putting people of color onstage and including their narratives is innovative, so I think that should be requisite for new and exciting work, but there’s so much more as well! The weirdest things are the most exciting, because who knows how they’re going to turn out?

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

A:  Dig in. Because at any given moment, there are a thousand and six things trying to convince you not to be a playwright, and your only defense against them is pure force of will. Bury yourself in your work and refuse to let rejections and bad reviews and professional indifference tear you away. Be sure of yourself past the point of reason, removed from any other aspects of self-confidence, even when you feel the most invisible. Be sure that this is who you are.

And write as much as you possibly can. If you aren’t at your most alive when you’re writing, then figure out why or consider a career with more dignity and a better health plan.

Q:  When not writing on a computer, what's your go-to paper and writing utensil? When on computer, what's your font?

A:  I hate writing on paper because my handwriting looks like a lot of drunk letters and punctuation fighting each other. When I have to do it, my preferred method is lined notebook paper and a black pen. I feel pencil writing lacks a certain gravitas and elegance; also, it smudges.

On my computer, I write in Times New Roman. I once went maverick and used Garamond. Recovery has been difficult.

Q:  Plugs, please:
A:  Upcoming reading of my play Watch Me Burn with Crashbox Theater Company on November 27th! I’m also a member of The Lark’s 2017-18 Rita Goldberg Playwrights Workshop, so come see our readings in May and ask me about readings/workshops I’ll be doing at The Lark in the meantime.


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