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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Sep 8, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 256: Mark Harvey Levine




Mark Harvey Levine

Hometown: Pittsburgh, PA

Current Town: Pasadena, CA

Q: Tell me about "Cabfare For The Common Man"

A: It's kind of like my first "album". I took a bunch of ten minute plays that I had written, and picked out the very best. The last play has the same title as the whole collection -- I really did want it to be like a record album. Er, CD. I mean a collection of mp3s. Anyway, it's an evening of romantic comedies. Some are naturalistic, some more stylized. Not every play is about romance actually -- but they're all about love. It's getting produced in New York this month, by Sweet & Tart Productions. The artistic director is Brad Caswell. He's directed a lot of my plays before. Every time he directs my plays I win awards. And "Cabfare" is also opening this month at Madlab Theatre in Columbus, OH. They're an excellent company. I've been honored to have plays in their "Theatre Roulette" evenings for years. And I'm so glad they're doing the whole evening now. Theatre Unleashed, in Los Angeles, will be producing another evening of slightly different plays, called "La Vie En Route".

Q: What else are you working on?

A: A bunch of different ten minute plays, two musicals and (gasp) maybe a full-length. I want to write a full-length, I really do. I just need to come up with an idea that I feel like I can sustain for an hour and a half. I feel like the cardinal sin of the playwright is to bore the audience.

Q: You are one of the modern masters of the short play. How many 10-15 min plays have you written and what is your current total number of productions?

A: Thanks! Not sure I'm quite at modern master yet, but I'm trying. I've got 40 ten minute plays, plus another dozen monologues and one-minute plays. I'm at 580 productions since the start of 1998!

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 Junior High, we read a play adapted from a Mark Twain short story (The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg). This led me to reading all of Mark Twain's short stories, and then other great American short stories, like those of O. Henry and Ring Lardner. I think my love of short stories has led me to writing short plays.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: For short plays, definitely David Ives. For longer plays, I love Tom Stoppard and Alan Ayckbourn. And for musicals, Stephen Sondheim.

Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A: I love when theater is...well, theatrical! When they don't try to mimic film or television but do things you can only do on stage. I love a clever low-budget device more than lots of overhead projections or expensive sets. Some of the best theater I've seen was done on a nearly bare stage. I like when theater can produce a magical image in your mind, or a lasting impression in your heart.

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

A: Write. A lot. Try to write every day. (If you can get yourself to do this, let me know how). And read a lot of plays, and attend a lot of plays. Join a local theater company and help them out. Try to get your work read to you by actors. I've learned more by hearing my plays read out loud then by most playwriting classes.

Q: Plugs, please:

A: Upcoming productions:

Sep 2010: "CABFARE FOR THE COMMON MAN: An Evening Of Mark Harvey Levine Plays",
Sweet & Tart Productions, New York, NY
Sep 2010: "Surprise" and "The Prodigal Cow", Three Roses Players, Los Angeles, CA
Sep 2010: "Surprise", Minnesota Shorts Play Festival, Mankato, MN
Sep 2010: "Opening Line", Changing Scene Theatre Northwest, Bremerton, WA
Sep 2010: "Whatever I Want" (World Premiere), Claire Donaldson 8 in 48 Festival, Sioux Falls, SD
Sep 2010: "The Loose Ends" (World Premiere), Theatre Out, Santa Ana, CA
Sep 2010: "The Rental" (staged reading), Actors Anonymous, Sydney, AUSTRALIA
Sep 2010: "Drive-Thru" (staged reading), Words & Wine, New York, NY
Sep-Oct 2010: "LA VIE EN ROUTE: An Evening Of Mark Harvey Levine Plays", Theatre Unleashed, Los Angeles, CA
Sep-Oct 2010: "CABFARE FOR THE COMMON MAN: An Evening Of Mark Harvey Levine Plays",
Madlab Theatre, Columbus, OH

Oh, and of course there's my own website:
http://www.markharveylevine.com/

Sep 7, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 255: Lisa Soland




Lisa Soland

Hometown:  I grew up in a small town of only 350 people, but still knew the horses and the woods better than the individuals who lived there – Northern, Illinois.

Current Town:  Los Angeles.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Last week the director Charles R. Miller and I cast an evening of works of mine entitled “MEET CUTE,” which is a collection of six short plays on the topic of “boy meets girl” in a unique and cute fashion, and then hopefully falling in love. It opens at Pellissippi State College in Knoxville, Tennessee, October 15 and runs through October 24, 2010. Look for the publication with Samuel French, under the same title.

Also, I have just recently been invited to serve as one of seven playwrights-in-residence at the Tennessee Repertory Theatre in Nashville. Mentored by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright John Patrick Shanley (Doubt), my play The Family Farm will be part of the Tennessee Rep’s Ingram New Plays Festival next May.

Q:  What can a student in your playwriting class expect?

A:  I run a playwright workshop entitled The All Original Workshop. I teach both live workshops in Los Angeles and Eastern Tennessee, and online one-on-one through Ichat and Skype. I work uniquely with each student, regardless of where they are in the process, and what it is they want to achieve. Many of my students have been produced all over the country as well as being published by Samuel French, Eldridge Publishing, Smith & Kraus, JAC Publishing and others. When you work with me, you can expect professionalism, excellence and progress. Check out the website at www.PlaywrightWorkshop.com.

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

A:  I was born sixth out of seven children and I remember thinking when I was very young, that God must have had a reason to place me sixth and that this reason would serve me somehow in what it was I was going to do with my life. I decided that I was supposed to watch and learn from them, both in their successes and in their mistakes; to watch their behavior, so as to save time and heartache with regard to the decisions I would be making in my own life.

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

A:  I think theatre is fine just the way it is. I think as artists, we are meant to strive and work hard and strain to see what is true and real about life. I think great work comes out of this struggling, and as much as we all wish we could make a living more easily at what it is we love to do, that very struggle is molding us into humble, compassionate, hard working playwrights, who have enough of a tiny seed of doubt within us to question even our own inner life. And that doubt is good.

Of course there are things to try to change, there always will be in all places and in all professions, but overall, I think it’s important for people to deal fairly with each other and to follow through on what they say they are going go do. If one is not worth their word, they’re not worth much.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Charles Nelson Reilly. Period. He was my mentor as I worked my way up through the theatre as an actress and he inspired me to eventually become a playwright. A bunch of us Florida people participated in his advance acting class on Wednesdays from 10 am to 2 pm at Chandler Studio in Studio City. Charles loved playwrights and spoke with such admiration of them to us actors, that six of us in his acting class became writers – myself, John D’Aquino, Cynthia Faria, Mark Fauser, Brent Briscoe and Kendall Hailey. Charles called us The Faculty Actor/Playwright Company. He wrote this, “The Wednesday class has amazed me. I’ve only had two other actors who wrote and that was in the late 50’s and early 60’s…they were Lily Tomlin and Robert Ludlum but I don’t know what happened to them. Readers?” He was always, always dropping seeds of hope and success into your mind, sometimes without you even knowing it.

Also, Burt Reynolds, who started The Burt Reynolds Jupiter Theatre in Jupiter, Florida so his friends in Hollywood would have a safe and fun place to recover and play parts they might not normally get to play due to their type-casted lives in the Hollywood film industry.  That same theatre also became home for many of us “up and comers;” a place for us to learn and grow alongside his famous friends. Burt continues to care about turning around and lending a hand to those who are coming up behind him. He did that for me and I will never forget it.

And I have to mention William Luce, my Jelly Bean. I met him when cast in his play “Luce Women,” playing the role of Zelda Fitzgerald with Charles Nelson Reilly directing. Bill has remained a significant role model for the playwright I have strived to become and more importantly, he has continued to be my friend. He is brilliantly talented and a very good man.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Any kind, anywhere, at any level.

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

A:  Make sure you love it and then…make sure you do it. No matter what, no matter who or what is in your path trying to oppose you. You won’t make it and you won’t make it good, if you have no opposers. So bless them and continue to work hard and do what’s right.

Aug 31, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 254: Sigrid Gilmer


Sigrid Gilmer

Hometown:  Pittsburg, California.

Current Town:  Pasadena, California

Q:  Tell me about your show with Cornerstone.

A:  It’s All Bueno was written for Cornerstone’s 7th Summer Institute that was stationed in Pacoima, California. The Institute is a program where theatre makers, social activist and students come, hang out, learn the Cornerstone methodology and help make a play. Based on Candide, It’s All Bueno was inspired by the two diametrically opposed ideas that I kept running into when I was gathering stories in Pacoima. On one side I would hear that Pacoima is dangerous, violent and full of poverty. On the other I would hear that Pacoima is a great place to live and filled with folks who are active in the community and participate in organizations that enriched the neighborhood. The story of the play is about a family, who has abandoned the Pacoima and because of the fears both real and imagined they have locked themselves and their two daughters behind the iron gate of their home. When their house is erroneously foreclosed the family sets off on a mad-cap adventure through Pacoima and comes to terms with the community they have forsaken. The play is a broad farce with lots of slapstick, chases and dance numbers (Yay! Ken Roht). There are dueling car washes, a gang of clowns, a street vendor with magic elotes. It was 90 minutes of goofy and silly, performed by the community members and Institute participants in the beautiful Project Youth Green community garden at Jessup Park. It was a great show and theatre making experience. The level of commitment, bravery and generosity of the community members-many who had never performed before-was amazing. In four weeks, these folks along with Institute participants and under the innovative and brilliant direction of Julliette Carrillo embraced the spirit of the play and created a beautiful show more rollicking, joyous and heart opening than I could have ever envisioned.

Q:  What else are you up to?

A:  I am beginning a new play called Frilly. Filled with Girl Group tunes, the story takes place at the turn of the 20th century and is about how a minister’s wife and daughter’s sexual awakenings leads to the invention of the ice cream sundae. I see ladies in big Sunday hats and high-necked dresses with cinched waists crooning the Chantels or the Bobbettes. It’s fresh. As in new, I am just tinkering with characters and research, which I love and fresh as in super awesome.

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

A:  I was a latch key kid, so I spent the majority of my afternoons and summers home alone with the TV. When my favorite shows were over I would be so bummed that I would create extensions of the episodes I had just watched. I‘d make up new story lines and characters, embellish minor ones, give main ones different traits, take the show to a new location. I would perform these pieces-I played all the roles-for my dog Fluffy in the proscenium of arch of our living room. My favorite shows were Fame and Little House on the Prairie. Fame was the best because I would add dance numbers.

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

A:  A living wage for playwrights.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theatre with balls and brains.

Theatre that challenges assumptions about structure and storytelling.

Theatre by and about people whose stories don’t get told.

Theatre that titillates & entertains.

Theatre with a sense of history and humor.

Theatre that is socially and politically aware.

Theatre that is messy, filled with music, fearless and kicks ass.

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

A:  Write. Write. Write.

Persistence is the key.

Trust your own tastes and proclivities.

Don’t listen to anyone. No one really knows what’s going on. Especially me.

Write. Write. Write.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Brian Bauman. His plays are fearless, poetic ruthless beauties. If you are in NYC track him down!

In LA, Sibyl O’Malley is creating hysterical, intelligent and biting plays with tender centers.

In Austin, Alana Libertad Macias’ Zero Libertad! Revolutionary. Ritual. Fierce beats.

Aug 30, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 253: Anthony Weigh



Anthony Weigh

Hometown: Brisbane, Australia.

Current Town: New York.

Q: What are you working on now?

A: New commissions for The National Theatre, the Sydney Theatre Company, the Melbourne Theatre Company and Malthouse Theatre. Hopefully they won't all end up as one big really awful play.

Q: What was it like being in residence at the National?

A: Absolutely terrific. I was writer in residence at the NT for a year. I learnt a huge amount. Part of the position requires that you sit on the associates panel which aides and advises on repertoire etc. Wonderful to see how such a huge and important company operates from the insides.

But, the best bit was, I had my own office there for a year. Provided me the physical and psychological space to work. I will never work from home again!

Q: How would you characterise English theater?

A: Well, for a start, they spell it differently.

Secondly, English theater can tend to be preoccupied by a kind of politically topical social realism. John Osbourne casts a long shadow in England. There are exceptions to the rule, but they are rare. Churchill is NOT the norm. Quite a lot of plays set in living rooms on housing estates about two young lads smoking drugs, while one of their sisters comes of age, and another of their sisters struggles with obesity, and an uncle who's a bit of a paedo, a father trying in vain to get a job and/or come out of the closet, and a Mother who's battling the bottle and attempting to save the planet from global warming while breeding fighting dogs.

Also, the staged landscape is often benign. It's not for nothing that Pinters' plays happen in kitchens and living rooms and attics. The English natural environment is soft, toothless. There is nothing dangerous about place in England as there can be in Scotland or Russia or Canada or Australia. This is reflected in the writing. As a result you will almost always encounter a sofa in a room somewhere in an English play. One of the best English plays of the last few years was Jez Butterworths' Jerusalem and that was remarkable because he took the sofa and put it outside! Still a sofa though.

Having said all that, the English have a wonderful ear for the unsaid. Drama as a kind of dance of longing and unfulfilled hopes. The excruciating pain of the fumbled encounter. The badly handled joke. The silently cooling cup of tea placed on the kitchen table. The half remembered slight that led to the death of a child. No one does that better.

Finally, the nature of the funding structure there means that if you've written a half decent play it'll get on somewhere. That's pretty amazing.

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 told my next door neighbour that if he didn't let me kiss him he'd get pregnant. He agreed and to my knowledge has not fallen pregnant.

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

A: Attendance would guarantee you had a lot of really great sex? Would certainly boost box office.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: Christoph Martaler, John Adams, Erik Ehn, Ontroerend Goed, Caryl Churchill, David Harrower, Bertolt Brecht, Kleist, Chekov.

Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A: Sadly, most theatre. I'm a slut to it. Even the bad stuff.

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

A: Think about keeping that MFA thesis play in the bottom drawer.

Do not allow anyone to have input into your work until they have agreed to produce it.
A reading is not a production.

Ask yourself; "What is theatre?", then "Is this thing I've written theatre?", then "Why does this have to be performed by bodies in space to other bodies in space?"

Q: Plugs, please:

A:
http://www.faber.co.uk/work/like-fishbone/9780571269754/
http://www.faber.co.uk/work/2000-feet-away/9780571242610/

I Interview Playwrights Part 252: Maria Alexandria Beech


Maria Alexandria Beech

Hometown:  Anaco, Venezuela

Current Town:  Manhattan

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I'm writing a commissioned play for Primary Stages and Theatre Masters based on the Aspen Ideas Festival which I attended last summer. I'm also working Little Monsters which will be co-produced (with Primary) at Brandeis Theatre Company next February. Little Monsters is also part of Octoberfest at Ensemble Studio Theatre in September so I'm trying to get the play in shape for that. I'm also starting the NYU Musical Theatre Writing Program. For my day job, I'm co-authoring a case study on the film industry and writing an article about the Ford Foundation.

Q:  Tell me about the The Dorothy Strelsin New American Writers Group at Primary Stages and the The Hispanic Playwright's Lab at Intar.

A:  Primary Stages has been really supportive. I was asked to join the writers group as grad school ended and that was a great transition into professional theater. I've had a home to write plays, (I write best under deadline and they require ten-twelve pages a week). I've also had a chance to work with fabulous directors and actors during our spring reading series, and I cannot say enough how amazing it feels when a theater treats you with respect and professionalism. They approached actors like Frances Sternhagen, Maria Tucci, and Laila Robbins for my readings, and working with those iconic actors was a great boost for my confidence as a writer. The greatest component of the writers group is that you get feedback from your colleagues who are some of the most talented and accomplished playwrights in the American theater today. Over the years, I've been in the group with playwrights like you, Julia Jordan, Katori Hall, Cusi Cram, Neena Berber, Courtney Baron (who is a fucking amazing dramaturg), Tommy Smith, Bekah Brunstetter, David Caudle...listening to colleagues has made me a much better (and thicker-skinned!) playwright.

The Hispanic Playwright's Lab at Intar was a great experience. I wrote with Matthew Paul Olmos, Andrea Thome, Cyn Canel-Rossi, Mando Alvarado, and other talented playwrights and some of them are my best friends today. I also became invested in the community of actors and directors associated with Intar, and they feel like an extended family to me.

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 had a really lonely childhood in Venezuela. I grew up in an oil city as the kid of a mainly absent American Father and therefore despondent Venezuelan Mother, and I didn't fit in anywhere. I spent long afternoons eating green mangos in my treehouse, or wandering around the oil camps looking for friends. (I don't blame my parents for anything...they were two incredible people who tried to love each other and us...but it was a challenging situation.) There were tons of secrets at home, and nothing was ever answered. Painful as it was, it truly forced me to live in my imagination, and writing became a creative way of approaching all those secrets.

Q:  In your life as a reporter, what was it like interviewing Latin American presidents?

A:  President Serengeti of Uruguay had the longest eyebrows I had ever seen on a non-camel, and it was difficult to focus on his eyes. My interview with President Ortega of Nicaragua was surreal because his handler wouldn't let me do the interview if I didn't lend Ortega my facial powder. I kept pretending that the request wasn't on the table but every approach for the interview was met with: "only if you have powder for his face." I was visiting Venezuela and the only "powder" I had was my own Clinique, and his face ended up caked with it. It was strange to see that vanity and insecurity in a revolutionary who years earlier had dressed in camouflage. Interviewing President Carlos Andres Perez of Venezuela was like interviewing a wax figure. His answers were wooden and stale. He had just brokered talks between Palestine and Israel and I asked him about that. He was in the middle of a lengthy answer when his phone rang and he answered it. Nothing like losing a key moment in an interview. I met with President Chavez when I was at Lehman Brothers. He was shorter and more feminine than I expected. For some reason, he plays a very macho character during the hours (and hours) he spends on Venezuelan television but he has zero mojo in person. President Fidel Castro was a huge flirt. At first he was angry because I asked him about the poverty and recession in Cuba, and then he softened when I told him that I was frustrated that the US Federal Reserve had bailed out all those millionaires (longterm capital management) who had invested their money unwisely. President Toledo of Peru was tiny and perfectly lovely. I met with him when he was still a candidate, and I told him I didn't think Fujimori would ever let him win which is exactly what happened. President Menem of Argentina was running for office again so everything around us had his logo: Menem 2003, even the sugar packets that were served with our coffee. When I had to go to the bathroom, he insisted on accompanying me himself, so I was mortified to make any noise thinking he was waiting for me outside. President Fox was pragmatic saying, "I may sound like a populist but I have an election to win." Wouldn't it be refreshing if all candidates were as honest?

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Playwrights were originally called poets, and I love theater that feels like poetry. Words that are carefully chosen for their meaning, and strung together for their subtext. I love to feel that the playwright labored for just the right sentences. I love when the writing feels meticulous...Susan Lori Parks is a good example. I love work that feels real, and also that takes me on a strange journey like your pirates play or Courtney's play about heart break. I love intelligent humor, and also learning about other cultures...but it has to feel real. I think that what is incubating at the Public with the emerging writers group is VERY exciting - we need artistic diversity if we're going to survive as a culture - and I can't wait to see what comes out that project. I'm also into some musicals and experimental opera. Tod Machover and I are talking about writing an opera together, and to me, Tod is a glorious composer. Not only does he invent instruments but he envisions likely but non-existing worlds such as a future where we can download our brains into chandeliers. I also love simple writing that turns around and smacks you in the face - Matt Olmos or Andrea Thome come to mind. I love smart writers who forgo pretension like Chris Shinn. A favorite right now is Tanya Saracho in Chicago who writes these wonderful, ambitious plays sprinkled with Spanish. Last summer, I read over seven hundred scripts for two panels and a theater, so I could go on and on about the theater that excites me...your plays excite me, Adam. I'm really, really excited about the experimental theater movement in Mexico. (My essay on it for the Lark is here: http://larktheatre.blogspot.com/2009/12/december-2009-maria-alexandria-beech.html)

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

A:  This question is the reason it's taken me months to get back to you with this interview. So much to say.

- First, it's important to know that if you feel like you're a playwright, you probably are. It's an unsexy and unrewarding life for a long time...so you have to stick with your conviction that you're a playwright no matter what a million people tell you...your parents, people who give you tepid feedback...that feeling you have inside that you're a playwright is an avocado seed that takes years and years to grow into a tree. At first, you may be the only one who truly knows you're a playwright but if you stick with it, eventually you'll start to convince others because your work will get better.

- If you're thinking about grad school, go but try to get scholarships. Grad school forces you to write...and that's what you need to become a better playwright. You'll get feedback from other theater artists, and you might make friends. You'll also see your work staged and if you're fortunate enough to work with people like Anne Bogart or Kelly Stuart, you might learn a few things. If you can't go, don't worry. Public libraries and drama book shops will give you everything you need. All you really need is writing tools.

- Intern at a theater. I worked at the Cherry Lane for two years and it was a very important experience. Most theater appreciate the free labor, so just call up and offer your services.

- Take a production course. Often, playwrights are scared of numbers but it's important to know the "business" of theater. The idea that you can produce yourself will console you when there's no production on the horizon. Understanding how the "business" works gives you the option of producing smaller-scale projects that will keep you occupied and improve your work.

- Join or form a writers group. Writing with colleagues is cool as shit. Again, it forces you to write.

- Don't worry about getting an agent. A lot of people think that an agent validates them as artists but I've formed relationships with theaters (by submitting) and negotiated multi-thousand dollar contracts alone. More than once, I've been told that an agent will appear when my career is ready...and that's been my path. The deal is to become the best playwright possible so agents want you.

- If you're writing from your personal experience, you can protect your privacy. When people ask, "did that happen to you," you can say, "it's not really appropriate to ask an artist that question. I don't think Frida stood around a gallery and explained that the babies hanging from umbilical cords in her paintings were hers."

- The theater is small. I try to avoid gossip and mean-spirited conversation though venting is sometimes necessary. I've decided over time that I won't work with people who gossip a lot because gossips can ruin a reputation. I've seen it happen, and it's pretty sad when it does.

- If it's one of your first projects, understand what a director wants to do with your play. Also try to know whether he or she will listen to your input when you don't agree with their choices. I lost a wonderful friend once because I didn't understand at the start that he didn't want any input from the playwright, and that he wouldn't change important things I didn't like. Conversations are a must.

- Nurture relationships with mentors. That doesn't mean weekly meetings. It means having relationships with more experienced playwrights (and other theater professionals) who can guide you through a confusing situation when the time comes up. Sometimes, that means an email every few weeks or even months.

- I'm a naturally shy dork and I'm socially awkward around uber cool people. Since there's a hegemony of cool people in the theater right now, you may sometimes feel like an outsider. YOU'RE NOT. Just be yourself and eventually other dorks will find you. And some of the cool people may even eventually talk to you...but even if they don't, theater isn't high school. It's not a popularity contest. It's a place where people come together to create worlds and people that have never existed, and as such, our purpose is greater than liking each other.

- I remember every single compliment I've ever gotten over my work. If you like someone's work, tell them. It's a huge boost in a path rife with rejection.

- Rejection will become your best friend. Rejection letters, etc. (Don't save them.) Get used to it and also, get over it and move on to your next submission.

- Read tons and tons of plays (Drama Book Shop and public libraries let you read them without buying them) and also watch past productions at the 4th floor of the New York Public Library of Performing Arts. Don't let the people there intimidate you. When they ask what your purpose is for being there, say, "I'm writing a play and I need to watch this production for research."

- If you feel at home in the theater, you are. Take off your shoes and stay awhile. Don't wait for permission or a production. The most successful people in the theater often say they just stuck around long enough.

- Submit and submit. Join The Loop and Facebook playwrights groups that send you submission calendars. Rogelio Martinez once said, "you never know when someone out there is going to read your play and become your fan. Even if your play doesn't get produced, that person may eventually have a position of influence that allows them to re-visit your work." I've actually seen it happen.

- Have fun. Remember. This isn't an emergency room. We're not saving lives. We're storytellers, and in the best of circumstances, mirrors of what is and what could be.

Q:  Plugs:

A:
Little Monsters, Ensemble Studio Theatre, Saturday, September 25th at 4:30 pm
Little Monsters, Brandeis Theatre Company, February 17-21, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 251: Catherine Filloux


photo by Vandy Rattana

Catherine Filloux

Hometown: San Diego, California. (Not far from the border with Mexico.)

Current Town: New York City. (Not far from the Hudson River.)

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  An epic play about gender-based violence. It may be two parts. It involves an uber human rights attorney, Guatemala, a Native American Tribe, Haiti, an oil executive in the Hague and a boy with cerebral palsy.

Q:  You write about human rights issues. What challenges do you face when trying to stage political plays and how do you address these challenges?

A:  I have been fortunate to work with a talented director, Jean Randich, who stages my work with imagination and poetry. She helped turn a bundle of fabric that wrapped a baby in the Rwandan genocide into the scarf that Raphael Lemkin’s mother wore in the Holocaust. My director Robert McQueen created the Cambodian countryside on stage with our Khmer performers in Where Elephants Weep behind a scrim; as their silhouettes looked up, you could see the bombs falling. Director Kay Matschullat and her set designer found this amazing plastic (a shower curtain) that actor Eunice Wong danced behind in Eyes of the Heart and that became a blind woman’s memory of her lost daughter. Director David Esbjornson and actor Nike Imoru helped create my character “Water” in Hurricane Katrina, in all her terror, seduction and beauty.

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

A:  There’s a quote from the sculptor-artist Hans Arp: “C’est en écrivant qu’on devient écrevisse.” Literally translated in English it means, “It’s by writing that you become a freshwater crayfish.” But in French it would mean: “It’s by writing that you become a “writeress” (a female writer),” which happens to also mean crayfish. Okay, that’s the story from my childhood—living between languages. “Passes ton ass” means “pass your plate” in Franglish, and my siblings and I just love that. When Hans Arp spoke in German he referred to himself as "Hans", and when he spoke in French he referred to himself as "Jean". Many people believe that he was born Hans and later changed his name to Jean, but that is not the case. My name is a train wreck. Filloux (pronounced Fee-you) means a little mischievous boy. Even in France they don’t necessarily know how to say it. In English people call me Cat.

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

A:  That one stays in the dark quite a lot.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Currently Jeanne Moreau and Sami Frey. My aunt gave me an audio of Quartett by Heiner Müller. Have you ever heard them do this? And I recently saw Sami Frey perform Beckett’s Premier Amour. There are so many theatrical heroines and I’m not talking about the drug :-) If I write some then I’ve left others out. Long ago I was in the founding writer’s lab at the Women’s Project, organized by Julia Miles.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I just finished reading a new play by Joyce Van Dyke, Deported/a dream play. I found it extraordinary. It is epic, though it can be done with 7 actors. Large in scope, but the story is economically told; poetic, muscular and I find the third act to be structurally surprising and dramatic. It’s about the Armenian genocide; about Joyce’s own history, but it’s much bigger than just that. I immediately thought that her play needs to be done in Washington D.C.

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

A:  I worked with a dramaturg, Lue Douthit, at Bay Area Playwrights Festival, who helped me a lot on my play Eyes of the Heart. (Talk about a development period, I started the play in the late 80s and it was produced at NAATCO in 2004.) I found Lue to be hilarious in her comments--and she could walk and read at the same time. That would be my advice. Humor goes a long way.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  I am currently looking for a 75 foot VGA cable for this event: http://www.theatrewithoutborders.com/node/1244