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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Mar 20, 2020

I Interview Playwrights Part 1081: James Odin Wade




James Odin Wade


Hometown: Calgary, Alberta

Current Town: Brooklyn, New York

Q:  Tell me about In Tongues.


A:  In Tongues is about the death of a true crime author and her husband and little sister trying to understand what, if anything, the case she was investigating had to do with her death. More broadly, it's about grief and how we move on when we don't have the answers that could give us closure. What if we don't actually want the answers we're looking for? Also, why are we seemingly all obsessed with true crime these days? These are some of the things the play is dealing with. But it's funny too, I swear.

The play was supposed to open on March 17, at the University of Lethbridge, in Alberta. It's been understandably postponed due to COVID-19. but there are plans to remount in the fall.


Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I'm working on a one-woman comedy about the inconvenience of falling in love while preparing for the end of the world. I'm also developing a play about how friendships fall apart because of the way we internalize class and status. I have a few drafts, but it remains mostly a fuzzy-but-urgent-mess in my head. Janelle Monae says, in one of her songs, "everything is just sex, except sex, which is power" and that has something to do with it, too. Oh, and the devil! Working on a creepy, fun show about the devil.


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 isn't exactly a story, but it's an observation that I think relates to who I am. I was a fairly sensitive, introverted kid and I was always, always drawing. It was something I could obsess over, and pretty quickly I learned that it had enormous social benefits. People would want to be friends with me if I was good at drawing, which was a pretty good reason to keep doing it. I still struggle to relate to people, and sublimate many of my deeper feelings through my writing, which is problematic in some ways, I'm sure, but makes it all the more meaningful when others see something of themselves in the work.

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

A:  I'm gonna cheat and say two things.
1. I want to see more theaters produce more new work by a more diverse array of writers.
2. I want federally-imposed limits on how much Shakespeare is produced. Like, every municipality gets two a year, ideally both in a park.


Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Tony Kushner is the first name that jumps to mind. Every time I read Angels in America, the play changes, like it's a living thing. It got me invested in what playwriting can do. It's full of big moral arguments, yet at the same time is so achingly human. I still marvel that it exists. I love the work of Lynn Nottage, Tracey Letts, Annie Baker and Judith Thompson. Shout out to my Canadian playwriting heroes who have helped me and inspired me personally: Clem Martini, Sharon Pollock and Daniel MacIvor.


Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  That kind of theater that is not resolved: where the creators are struggling with the essential problems associated with being people and trying to figure it out *in the work*. When you do that, the theater becomes a place of communion and that's when it's most powerful.


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

A:  Two things: write a lot and find your people. Writing is the best teacher, so do it a bunch and then show it to your people. Showing your work to others is a difficult thing to do, and a delicate relationship in the early stages. Find the people who inspire you show them your work. Collaborate. And some very specific advice: do some acting. I'm not an actor, but getting on stage every so often really helps me when I'm writing dialogue.


Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  If you're a New Play Exchange user, you can read my work at https://newplayexchange.org/users/7107/james-odin-wade

Otherwise, see what I'm up to at jamesodinwade.com or on Twitter at @jamesodinwade. I fancy myself funny, but it is a contested claim.

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Mar 17, 2020

I Interview Playwrights Part 1078: Amy Berryman




Amy Berryman

Hometown: Mostly Seattle, WA - but also spent some years of early childhood in Abilene, TX

Current Town: New York City

Q:  Tell me about The New Galileos.

A:  The New Galileos is a play about three female climate scientists being held hostage by the government. The play follows Nora Travers, a young marine biologist who published a children's book on climate change, as she finds herself locked in a cell with two renowned climate scientists, glaciologist Elaine Tuck and activist/author Beth Whitney. There is fourth actor along with these characters, who plays important people in each of their lives via flashbacks, as well as a government interrogator later in the play. It explores censorship, the intersection of science and capitalism, and, of course, climate change.

It was originally a short play written for AMiOS Theatre's SHOTZ - a monthly pressure cooker theatrical event that takes place every month at the Kraine Theatre downtown. A writer and director are paired with actors, given a theme and a set of "conditions" that the play must adhere to. I had already been obsessed with climate change and the question "What are we going to do when it's too late?" (which I also explore in my play WALDEN). This SHOTZ was a dystopian themed SHOTZ and the three actors I was given for my piece were all women. The idea that came to me was three scientists trapped together, and they disappear one by one over the course of this seven minute play. Trump pulled out of the Paris Agreement while we were in rehearsals for the short play. The disinformation and denial all felt very potent at the time and continues to. The short play was then chosen by AMiOS to be developed into a full length through their First Draughts program, where four playwrights develop their SHOTZ pieces into full lengths over the course of six months. It was a finalist for the O'Neill in 2019 and was slated to have productions at several schools in 2020, including Caltech, before the pandemic hit. It was also chosen for the Landing Theatre's New American Voices Playwriting Festival, which has been postponed due to the pandemic, so I appreciate the opportunity to talk about it here! You can also read it on NPX.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  My play WALDEN will have its world premiere next year at People's Light, and I am currently honing my screenwriting skills working on a pilot.

Lots of ideas for plays in my brain, and I hope to get to work on them soon, but, honestly: I am currently writing this a few days after my bartending job halted, day two of quarantine essentially. I am not working on anything right now. I think we should all be easy on ourselves in this moment. Breathe, listen, maybe journal. But let's not put pressure on ourselves to write "King Lear" - I am letting us all off the hook, okay?

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 wrote a novel called "The Lost Dog" between ages seven and eight - it is handwritten, eighty pages, and was clearly a coping mechanism because my family moved across the country during that time. That's still me - prolific and writing through my pain.

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

A:  That we could make a living doing it and that it could be more affordable and accessible. I believe theater should be funded by the government. I believe everyone involved should be paid more. One thing that I hope comes out of this time is that people value live performance and gathering together more.

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

A:  Share your work with your friends! I would normally say invite everyone over and buy them pizza and read your play - now I guess figure out a way to do that digitally. Get yourself in a class! Classes provide deadlines, which help me so much. And, read plays! New Play Exchange is a great resource to see what's being written by your peers right now.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  You can find me on twitter and instagram @amyrberryman - I'm also on New Play Exchange and my website is www.amy-berryman.com and WALDEN will be at People's Light next year! I'm also interviewed on a wonderful podcast called Beckett's Babies which you should check out!

 

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Mar 8, 2020

I Interview Playwrights Part 1077: D.M. Conte


D.M. Conte

Hometown: Hauppauge, NY is where I spent my formative years, but I wouldn't call it my hometown. I left immediately after high school and never looked back. I would call any town I am currently living in my hometown.

Current Town: Culver City, CA


Q:  Tell me about Worst Case Scenario.

A:  Worst-Case Scenario was born out of an idea of two people who were opposites coming together. I knew She was a survivalist, worried about Armageddon, and He was a germophobe, neurotic and obsessed with the world living under his fingernails. And I sat on the idea for a bit. I worked on other things, but I couldn't shake these two characters. And about a year and a half after the island of Kauai had its false incoming missile alert in January of 2018, it somehow clicked. I knew they had to be in a bar on the island at the time of this false alert. The story is about two people choosing love in their own brokenness. Many romantic stories are written with these ideas of love as a perfect package or fit, that one person will magically change every thing in your life that you don't like. This is not that story. These characters choose love in spite of all the baggage each other has, and there is something really hopeful about that.

Q:  What else are you working on now? 

A:  I have another play, Shame, which I will be mounting this summer. It's a story of two brothers, a modern-day Cain and Abel. I like working on characters that have a hard time getting out of their own way, even when it seems the Universe is conspiring to help them. I also have a half-hour comedy pilot, 150 Jobs, about a young woman trying to find a career in the gig economy, and a feature, Continental Divide, which is a look at the American family in the shadow of the 2016 election. I like to write all genres and mediums. Shame started out as a film, but when I wrapped my head around it, I knew it had to be a play.


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 around six or seven, I would go door to door and visit with my neighbors. Not their kids, I would sit at the kitchen table with the adults and they would have coffee and I would be given a glass of milk. And I would ask them all kinds of questions, about their lives, their parents, ... I wanted to know their stories. I'm not sure what they made of me and my visits, but it made me aware of who they were as people at a very young age. So, I would say that I am a very curious person. I want to know the "why" for everything.

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

A:  It needs to be funded at the local and state level. It's too hard to create something new when you need to find funds to get it to a decent theater.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Playwrights would be John Patrick Shanley, Lesley Headland. Actors/ Actresses would be Tim Robbins and Salome Jens.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  All kinds, I suppose. I remember seeing Antonio Banderas in "9" on Broadway. He was electric, what an incredible talent! And I have see theater in Los Angeles that has knocked my socks off. Tim Robbin's The Actors Gang has done some of the most courageous and incredible work I've ever witnessed. They did a play Tim wrote called "Break the Whip" about Jamestown and the Algonquin Indians that was done using subtitles. It was incredible. So, all theater can be exciting... If the piece works, you know it... you can feel it.

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

A:  Get in a writing group. Writing is a solitary journey and you need other people to bounce your ideas off of to see if what you wrote is what they are perceiving. Also, go take an acting class. I started out as an actress and it has helped me immensely in the process of writing because the training has been ingrained in me to go moment to moment, and that is important when you are working on complex characters.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Worst-Case Scenario will run at The Hudson Theater March 20- April 11th, starring C. Thomas Howell. Buy your tickets at www.worstcasescenariotheplay.com

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Jan 9, 2020

I Interview Playwrights Part 1070: Haleh Roshan




Haleh Roshan

Hometown: Miami, FL

Current Town: The Bronx

Q:  Tell me about the play you just had published with DPS.

A:  The play I just had published is A PLAY TITLED AFTER THE COLLECTIVE NOUN FOR FEMALE-IDENTIFYING 20-SOMETHINGS LIVING IN NEW YORK CITY IN THE 2010s, haha, which (I hope) speaks to what it is. It's a Brechtian response to narratives that purport to be about "girls," particularly millennial young women living in a coastal urban center. All the young women I know who are technically that demographic are rabidly intelligent, profoundly politically engaged, and incredibly astute as to how the patriarchal capitalist world is operating upon them (even if they/we can't figure out how to escape that pressure), and yet media mostly just shows us as childish narcissists who can't get their shit together about men. So I wrote about the young women I know. But the play is also more generally about all millennials' unbearable anxieties, staring down a totally uncertain future, and how we can hold on to hope for saving what's best about humanity--borderless community, mutual aid, intellectual inquisition, art.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  My primary project is a play about the parallels between the Iranian and Cuban revolutions, and the effects of American geopolitics throughout the 20th century on our conception of identities; it's about how the material consequences of political borders (including economic borders, e.g. sanctions) manifest differently for individuals depending on class, gender, physical appearance, etc.
I also have an Ibsen adaptation in the works I started for a specific director but then got super excited about personally, and a couple adaptations of texts translated from Farsi: an Evin Prison memoir by a communist woman and a meta-play by a radical Iranian writer written in post-Revolution Parisian exile.

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 a story per se, but recently I found in some of my mom's saved papers from my childhood a book report I wrote in maybe 3rd grade; whatever book I read was about the history of wild mustangs in America, and for a solid 4 pages I take adults present and historical to task for allowing millions of mustangs (this is true!) annually to be slaughtered by ranchers or otherwise horrifically injured and left to die to keep land open for cattle grazing and oil drilling.

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

A:  ONE THING ONLY? I would get rid of the reverence for Broadway as arbiter of theatrical standards. Maybe a more positive way to frame this is I would revive the Off-Off-Broadway scene as its own flourishing identity. (And not center it in Brooklyn; let's distribute wild theater across the boroughs, and the country.)

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes? 

A:  I call Arthur Miller my favorite playwright and I've spent many years engaging in my work directly with Brecht's theories, but I tend to have plays that are theatrical heroes rather than playWRIGHTS. Antoinette Nwandu's PASS OVER is a hero, AN OCTOROON obviously, Churchill's LIGHT SHINING IN BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, Fornes' FEFU, Hellman's WATCH ON THE RHINE, Pinter's THE DUMB WAITER, most shows by Elevator Repair Service...

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 

A:  I'm most excited by theater that has no idea what theater is supposed to be. Or, theater that knows exactly what theater is "supposed" to be and actively, intentionally resists the subjugation. Theater founded in exploding the boundaries of theater, and of what we call society.

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

A:  Read things that are not plays! Read fiction and poetry, read the news, read smart criticism of other art forms. See plays all the time, as much as possible for what you can afford. See things you've never heard of, see things by artists from cultures and backgrounds you know nothing about.
Also, learn how to send a good cold email--everything in this industry runs on sending and receiving cold emails.

Q:  Plugs, please: 

A:  Corkscrew Theater Festival! https://corkscrewfestival.org/

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Oct 21, 2019

I Interview Playwrights Part 1064: Pat Kinevane



Pat Kinevane

Hometown:

A Beautiful seaside town of Cobh in County Cork... the last port of the Titanic and sits on the 2nd biggest natural harbour in the World!

Current Town:
Dublin… a city that feels like a town — I have lived here 30 years.

Q: Tell me about Before.

A:  Before is a piece about love... and what happens if we block it from each other. It is full of salutes to the Golden age of Hollywood Musicals and the soundtrack is recorded by our National Concert Orchestra. And it sounds Amazing because of their stunning work.

Q: What else are you working on now?

A:  I am working on a number of projects including pruning my garden and painting my kitchen!!

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

A:  I would ban theatre Elites!! I believe theatre is for everyone, not just the Culture Vultures who claim it exclusively for themselves. I am a working class boy and always will be and proud to have broken the mould in this notoriously snobbish Art form.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Irish Actors Niall Buggy, Joan O Hara and Des Cave.

Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Anything that is new and challenging. I am done with posh plays about posh white people written by posh white men!

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

A:  Be afraid of nothing and don't judge yourself.

Q: Plugs, please:

A:  The American premiere of Before at the Odyssey Theatre in Los Angeles, Nov. 14 – Dec. 8. www.OdysseyTheatre.com.


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Jun 19, 2019

I Interview Playwrights Part 1050: Amanda Quaid




Amanda Quaid

Hometown: New York City

Current Town: New York City

Q:  Tell me about your play in the EST Marathon. 

A:  The Extinctionist is a one-act about an environmentalist trying to decide whether to have children. It’s a comedy, of sorts, about the problem of free will. The cast is Sharina Martin, Sean McIntyre, and Stephanie Berry. Pamela Berlin is directing. It’s the very first production of a play I’ve written, so to do it with that team at EST is a huge honor.

Q:  What else are you working on now? 

A:  My play Native Tongue, about an immigrant and an accent reduction teacher, is in the lineup for the HB Playwrights reading series in June. I recently completed a prequel/adaptation of Medea that I’m excited about, which tells the story of Jason and Medea’s marriage from the moment they first meet.

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 high school, there was a Mister Softee truck that would park outside at the end of the day. The driver was an immigrant. I didn’t know him well, but I saw him every day as I was leaving class. One afternoon, I noticed some younger boys arguing with him. I think it was a discrepancy about money. The driver was up in the truck window, perched a foot or two above them, looking down, and they were yelling at each other.

All of a sudden, the boys started hitting the truck, body slamming it, so it rocked back and forth. The driver lost his balance and told them to stop. They laughed at him. Then they started mocking his accent. I stood frozen, shocked, and by the time I was able to process it, they were ambling away, imitating his voice.

It was the first time I realized that an accent could make somebody vulnerable, that speech carried a hierarchy. I suddenly became aware of all the different accents I heard around me in the city, and how each voice held a story. I began to study phonetics, and when I was 19, I started teaching speech. Immigrants found me on Craigslist, or through word of mouth, and came to my living room to work on their accents. It was an incredible education in the relationship between speech and identity, how a person’s very being is intertwined with the way they sound.

I still make a good part of my living as a dialect coach, and now when I write, speech is the first thing I learn about a character. If I can hear their idiolect, I can write for them.

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

A:  I wish actors could earn a living only doing plays.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes? 

A:  Duse, Ibsen, Beckett, Brecht, Caryl Churchill, Mike Bartlett, Alice Birch

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 

A:  I’m excited by plays that can only be plays, that are stylistically theatrical and have a distinct actor/audience relationship. I also love dialectical writing, where there’s a clear opposition between ideas and I’m able to truly see both sides. I think that sort of storytelling is very healthy.

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

A:  I’m just starting out myself, so I wouldn’t presume to give advice. But I can say that I wrote privately for a long time, assuming I would never show my plays to anyone. It wasn’t until I was pregnant with my daughter that I started writing in earnest and finally thought, “Why not?” I expected motherhood to derail my creative life, but I found it fueled it in ways I never expected. It gave me clarity around how I wanted to spend my time, and it gave me confidence to use my voice. Parenthood is certainly not the path for everyone, but I would say I’m glad I didn’t buy into the idea that you can’t be a mother and an artist, because you absolutely can.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A: 
The Extinctionist runs in Series B of the EST Marathon through June 24

Native Tongue will be read at HB Playwrights on Friday, June 28

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