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Aug 12, 2009

I Interview Playwrights Part 36: Blair Singer

Blair Singer

Hometown: Woodland Hills, California.

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY (like every other playwright you've interviewed.)

Q: Tell me about your play Matthew Modine Saves the Alpacas which is going up at the Geffen. How did this come about?

A:  I met Matthew while I was working on the TV show "Weeds". I was a big fan of his work prior to meeting him and an even bigger fan after I'd met him. He's not only a brilliant actor but he's a terrific human being. He's kind, he's honest, and he's generous. When I left to come back home to New York, Matthew and I vowed to work with each other on a play. Six months later, I pitched him the basic idea of MMSTA, he loved it, and we were off.

 Q: A friend of mine recently took your TV class. He said you were a great teacher. Can you talk a little about how you set up your class?

A: I focus on the business of making television. I assume that everyone who takes the class can write. I would rather focus on how good writers can break into television and how to become aware of yourself as a commodity to be sold to the marketplace. Pretty much, the class is me talking a lot. I talk about my experiences in TV, good and bad, I share my very strong opinions, and spend the rest of the time begging them to take everything I say with a huge grain of salt.

 Q: What TV shows did you write for?

A: Weeds, Monk, and Book of Daniel.

 Q: What are you working on next?

A: You got a job for me, Adam? I'd love to live in Atlanta and have a free maid! I'm very fortunate to have found Mark Armstrong and the Production Company, an excellent off-off Broadway theater company. I've been named their playwright-in-residence and have written a play for the company called MEG'S NEW FRIEND that Mark will direct at Manhattan Theatre Source in November and December.

Q: Who are your heroes?

A: I am in awe of playwrights. EVERY playwright. I began as an actor and I am always amazed at the unique worlds that playwrights construct. Herb Gardner once said, not to me, but to someone, "How do you ask a kamikaze pilot if his work is going well?" Playwrights are kamikaze pilots, trying to find targets that doesn't exist. How can you not find the lifetime pursuit of an ever-moving target heroic?

Q: You are, like me, married to another playwright. Would you recommend marrying a playwright?

A: I would recommend marrying my wife. She's really spectacular. Everyone should get the chance to be married to my wife at least once.

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

A: Marry my wife. That, and put the name of a famous actor in the title of your next play. Matthew Modine is mine but I think Judd Nelson is looking to do some theater.

Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A: I love watching great acting-- that's why I go to the theater-- so any play that offers actors the ability to stretch themselves excites me. I also like anything written about farm animals. Link for Blair's show: http://www.geffenplayhouse.com/180

Sep 16, 2005

Projectile

What I didn't tell you was about my first day of class. I left work early so I could get my required Tetnus shot before class. Now I'm not good with needles and have a history of sometimes fainting. This time I didn't faint. However, I did projectile vomit all over my pants, all over the floor in the heath center, probably all over the nurses (or are they doctors?). They were very nice about it and lent me scrubs to wear to class--or the pants anyway. I had some bright blue pants for my first day of playwriting class. Because of my vomiting they decided I didn't have to have the hep b shot, explaining to me I could only get it from blood. "Like from sharing heroin needles?" I said. "You may have noticed I don't like needles." They also reminded me that I wouldn't have to get another tetnus shot for 10 years. I plan to spend the next 10 years being bitten by dogs and stepping on rusty nails. Hell, what do I have to worry about?

Jun 9, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 191: Nikole Beckwith




Nikole Beckwith

Hometown:  Newburyport Massachusetts

Current Town:  Brooklyn

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Well, I am working on my third full length play over at The Public, as a member of their Emerging Writers Group (which is an amazing amazing group, I feel very lucky) I'd tell you about the play but, I can never really talk about a play before it's done. I can say it's darker than my other two full lengths, in a good way. I can also say that half way through act one I realized it was partly somehow a response to Greg Moss' House of Gold, a play that I love and carry around with me (metaphorically, not in script form) which is happening at Wooly Mammoth in DC this November. You just interviewed him. I've known Greg more than half my life and his plays are like nothing else out there.

Also, I've been working on this comic strip project with The Civilians and WNYC. The Civilians have this incredible show, You Better Sit Down; Tales From My Parents' Divorce which I saw at Galapagos last November and fell in love with. In love, like I still swoon on and on about it as though I saw it just yesterday. They partnered with WNYC to open up the project into a kind of diologue with every and anybody about their own parents divorce and I contributed a comic strip for their museum of "contested objects" then both The Civilians and WNYC thought it'd be great if I did the whole shabang. So I did. I was schooled on the Civilians interview technique and recorded 6 hours of my parents over the phone. I transcribe those interviews in chunks and then figure out what the mini-story is and shape it into a dozen or so frames. I've made comic strips for years now, mostly just about my daily life and/or sad yet hilarious truths (if those things are different). I consider them my shortest plays. This is the first series where I can't take artistic liberties or re-invent anything. It's also the first series that is both not about me and is still about my life. I've felt like a private detective or an archiologist; trying to find out how something that doesn't exist anymore died in the first place. And what did it eat? I feel really lucky to get to be involved with a project I was so taken by and luckier still that I get to learn about these two people I was made by (even if that part is occasionally beyond overwhelming)

Q:  Can you tell me about the thing you're doing with the kids at Stella Adler?

A:  Yes! So this wonderful playwright Melissa Ross invented this program at Stella Adler where she gathers up some playwrights and has them commissioned to write short plays specifically for her advanced teen students. The writers show up and meet the students about a month before class starts, each kid gets up and tells a little about themselves and after that Melissa sends us our cast list and we have about a month to write a play specifically for them. Then Melissa works with the kids all summer directing them into production, then there's a show with all the plays. It's really great. I think it's so amazing for the kids to get that experience of working with text that was made just for them and an equally great catalyst for us playwrights to create something new. This is my second go around, last year I wrote a play about conjoined twins in the hospital after their separation surgery, called Connectivity. I adore the girls I wrote it for and I adore the play. It was a lovely experience for everyone, I am thrilled to do it again. I always write with actors in mind whether they ever know it or not. It helps me develop a more concrete image of the world. I think what melissa has done for the class is amazing; when I was a teen, I was relegated to working with very out-of-date "dramatic scenes" about what "teens" had to deal with in the seventies or what people in their seventies thought teens had to deal with in the 90's. Sometimes teenagers don't need to talk about eating disorders or 90210 style pregnancy scares, they can also talk about regular things. Like getting separated from their conjoined twin.

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

A:  Be warned: I never tell a short story. Ok, when I was in elementary school I decided the violin was my calling, I must have been 8, maybe 9? I convinced my parents to let me take violin as an afterschool elective and knew my life would change forever. It was beautiful; the wood, the strings, the curve of it, the promise of it all. I loved the thing itself and it's potential. I also loved the hard black case with it's furry blue lining, the music stand, the bow, the rosin. I rememeber laying it all out on my bedroom floor and feeling like I had all the tools for greatness. I'd rearrange them over and over on the carpet and look at myself in the mirror holding the violin up to my chin and already feel like I had accomplished something, just by association.

After we learned a couple plinks and plucks and how to hold it I felt pretty confidient I was a virtuoso in the making, then the music sheets came out. The music sheets. I remember so distinctly being in the linoleum music room and staring at Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, or rather what said it was Twinkle Twinkle at the top of the page yet was just a series of blobs and sticks marked with swirly things. The instructor started talking us through the music and I remember thinking "Is she kidding?" I turned to another kid in class for solidarity, prolly about to say something like "What's with these dots, am I right?" but when I faced the other kids in class I realized I was the only one who didn't know what to do about these hyrogliphics mascerading as a song. Even at 8 I had a pretty horrible go at it with authority figures and teachers (I was already in my second school by this time, having transfered after an unreconsilable first grade experience and was down at the Principle's Office enough to be on a first name basis with everyone at my current school) so I opted to keep my mouth shut and pretend I knew what was going on. This pretending went deep. I mimed what I saw the other kids doing with their fingers and bows, but kept my bow a few centimeters above the strings as to not make any actual noise. I even pretended to mess up at points; squinting at the sheet music and jolting my arm in frustration, then shaking it off for the refrain of Mary Had a Little lamb. If there is a refrain. I don't know, I can't read music. I would also often volunteer to play solo in front of the class when the teacher would ask "Can anyone play the second bar for us?" - my arm would shoot up with a beliveable amount of confidience and if she actually called on me I would just say I had to go to the bathroom and excuse myself.

This went on and on and on until finally we had our concert. I was very nervous that someone in the audience would call me out as a fraud. I imagined an unknown adult standing mid song and pointing at me in slow motion "She is not really playing! The unusually tall kid doesn't have the bow on her strings!" and then my life would be over. Luckily, I made it through the concert without such incident and greeted my parents in the lobby for brownies just like everyone else. Suckers. When I saw my parents they said to me "You were great! We could hear you above everyone else! You were the best" they hugged and congratulated me, meanwhile I was more confused than ever. I thought about it all night "We could HEAR you above everyone else" I thought about those words over and over until I finally realized: parents lie. That, of course, opened a Pandora's Box that I wasn't ready for; if parents lie that means my macaroni portrait of George Washington might not have looked life-like, or that they don't enjoy the stuffed animal pageants I put on. What if Santa and the tooth fairy don't really exist, what if they DO have a favorite child and what if it's not me? My mind was basically imploding and it was too much for my single digit brain to handle. I didn't know how to go on, how would I ever glue another piece of macaroni art or make my parents watch me roller skate down the hallway ever again? Unable to face such anarchy I reasoned that they thought they heard me. They thought they heard me because I made them think they could. I had willed them to hear me with my amazing abilities as a pretender. I was too good. I was not meant to play violin, no. I was meant for the stage. I was clearly a born actor, I had, after all, convinced two perfectly sane adults with functioning ears that they heard me play an only slightly imperfect Twinkle Twinkle Little Star. I promptly gave up violin and that same year auditioned for my first play; a community production of Godspell where I not only secretly lip synced all my lines in the chorus but also not so secretly mouthed all of Jesus' lines- a feat both of my parents assured me made the play much better. And I believed them. Happily.

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

A:  (Sigh) money. I just got back from London where I was working with the Old Vic/New Voices Exchange and meeting with some theaters over there. The amount of theater that happens there is incredible, theaters produce like 17 shows in a season sometimes more, so many of them new plays and most of those by new playwrights. Their theaters are funded by the government. A portion of the money that folks spend on lottery tickets goes into the theater. On top of that they do fundraising and have donors. Therefore they do not rely on ticket sales and so they can take more risks, make more new plays. The reading circuit/"development" almost doesn't exist over there, I heard many people say "The best way to serve a playwright and their play is to put their play on" and it's true. They can do that because theater (and art in general) is not just considered a vital part of their culture, it is funded as such. If we (New York/America/Etc) didn't have to pull our hair out over ticket sales and making budget cuts we could make more of what we are capable of, actually put up the plays we hear again and again around music stands with bottled waters. That's not to say they don't have their share of hiccups across the pond, I think if we could merge our two theater climates, we would have theater-utopia.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Theatrical heroes. Well, first and foremost Eric Bogosian. I played Sooze in subUrbia in my hometown circa 1998 and like most young or formerly young folks in the theater, that play changed my life. And then in 2003 or 04 I worked with Bogosian as an actor on two new plays of his and then he gave me a job as his assistant and I moved to New York (making him a personal hero as well). He writes what he wants to see. He writes for his friends, his community, himself; and that is why his work is so immensely watchable while still challenging it's audience. It's hard to trust yourself like that. It's hard not to change with whatever way the wind is blowing at that moment, the wind in this business can blow you right off the page but he has always made exactly what he wants to make.

Charles Busch is another. If you have not read his book Whores of Lost Atlantis, I highly recommend it. It is "fiction" but it's really not; it's really about him getting his play Vampire Lesbians of Sodom into it's off-Broadway run (a play that went on to be the longest running off-Broadway non-musical) he is another example of making the plays you want to see, making the theater for your friends and community and he did whatever it took to get them up, made costumes out of anything he could find and performed in crappy bars. He did it for nothing but the love AND his plays are hilarious. I preformed in Psycho Beach Party (directed by the aforementioned Moss) on and off for about a year and laughed at every rehearsal and every show felt like well, a party- for a year. It's not easy to make something so unabashedly fun. The word "fun" sounds like a small word but it's not. It's big. It's important.

There are a bunch of theatrical heroes out there. Josh Conkel who is a dear friend is also a theatrical hero of mine, he works harder than anyone I've ever met. He is always always working on something new and producing either a play of his own or a new play he really believes in and applying to everything and applying to everything again. And his work is amazing. If the world has any sense at all he will soon be celebrated everywhere.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I don't want to sound like the Easter Bunny but I am excited about theater that is made with love; of the craft, of the unknowable, of the everything. Even if what you're making is dark or difficult, if you lose that core you've lost your play. Or your comic. Or your multi-media art installation featuring live earthworms and 100 ipads, whatever it is you are making. I get excited about things that have that core, things that were made because the person making it wanted to see it, wanted to give it to their friends. I am excited by theater when I can feel people in it.

Theater that is especially exciting to me right now: Annie Baker's plays. Duh. They are like eating the best meal ever. The kind of food you can live off of. The Debate Society, I am new to knowing this company and I can't wait to know them all the more, I want them to always be making plays. LAByrinth's summer intensive is coming up and having been there twice I can't imagine another place on earth where that many plays (40 in 2 weeks, whaaaaaaat) are orbiting each other and bouncing around in such a supportive incubator. That's exciting. I'm excited for Orange Hat and Grace this fall at SoHo Rep (with the amazing Matt Maher, also of the Civilians divorce show).
And I am pretty hot on the theater that this generation is generating, proud and pumped to be of this age.

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

A:  Huh. Well, I am a playwright just starting out and I was once advised that one should be spending at least 20 percent of their waking time on their own work and that anything less would be a detriment. I took this advice and things changed. It was very good advice. Find a writing group, or start one. Or both. I think without a community you can become a kind of stray cat meowing at an abyss of doorsteps. Run in a pack. Also, have someone to look up to, it gives you somewhere to go. And of course see lots of things, not just plays. One of my most favorite "theater" experiences was the Tino Sehgal exhibit at the Guggenheim, so so so good. And write like it's your job, because until you do that, it never will be. I am still taking all of this advice, so let me know how it turns out if you get there first.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My divorce comics and The Civilians on WNYC Culture page: http://culture.wnyc.org/series/divorce/

There will also be an exciting event for this project on June 28th at WNYC's Green Space, keep your eyes peeled. I'll be there doing something amazingly audio-visual with my comics!

Also on Monday June 14th some incredible friends of mine are doing a benefit to raise money for my late-stage-neurological Lyme Disease treatment. My health insurance won't cover it, obviously and my brain doesn't know the difference. The show is at Dixon Place and features (the aforementioned) Eric Bogosian, Stephen Adly Guirgis, Blazz & the 88Sound (feat. FELA!’s Kevin Mambo) plus so many more wonderfully talented people that I am forever grateful are so generous. Tickets for Nikole’s Tick Parade are $35 and are available NOW EXCLUSIVELY at http://thetickparade.eventbrite.com/ and for more info you can visit the facebook event page

AND I perform every Saturday afternoon at the Drama Book shop with The Story Pirates, (stories written by kids performed by adults who wish they still were) It is certainly the most rewarding and hilarious thing I have ever been a part of, do check it out. Our next AfterDark show (with drinks and all people your own age in the audience) is at Galapagos on July 30th. Not to be missed.

Dec 10, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 293: Jennifer Barclay


Jennifer Barclay

Hometown: Rochester, NY

Current Town: San Diego, CA. I came here to get my MFA at UC San Diego, and my husband and I fell in love with the California life.

But my Artistic Home is still Chicago, where I lived for 10 wonderful years. It's the place that fostered my early career both as an actor and as a playwright, and I think of it as my artistic home away from home. So far, I've been fortunate to get to go back there lots for workshops and productions of my plays.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Two plays, a feature screenplay, and a TV pilot.

Writing in three genres at once sometimes creates a pressure-cooker in my brain (like now, when the deadlines are closing in), but for the most part I find it incredibly stimulating and healthy to have several balls in the air. I'm learning constantly about how to be a better story teller, and about all the visual and verbal tools I have at my disposal.

I started developing my play, QUARRY, while I was the Playwright in Residence at South Coast Repertory last year. It's set in Chicago against the background of northside gentrification and Cabrini Green relocation. My feature screenplay, THE RIGHT TRACK, is my first romantic comedy. TAKE TWO is my new pilot-- it's my first sitcom, and one of the most challenging things I've ever tried to write. And I've been developing a community-based play with the Old Globe about the foster system called EMANCIPATED. It's one of the most rewarding projects I've ever been a part of. I've had the chance to get to know 4 amazing young adults who went through the system, and who've been brave enough to let me interview them and share their stories on stage.

And, other than writing: my husband and I are on a quest to explore all the National Parks in California. So far we've done 7 of the 9. After that, we'll move onto other states...

Q:  How would you characterize Chicago theater?

A:  Nurturing, stimulating, and grounded. I feel it's incredibly open and welcoming to people who are hard-working and ready to collaborate and create. Part of that is the wealth of opportunities (over 200 theatre companies, constantly buzzing), and part of that is how easy it is to live there. Granted, you have to deal with the biting winters, but you don't have to work tons of hours in a day job to afford a nice apartment, time to do your art, and a pretty high quality of life. It's a place where, I've found, many theatre artists go out of their way to help others. Big theatres like Steppenwolf and Goodman not only co-produce with smaller companies, but their artistic staffs also help to make collaborative connections between emerging artists. For the most part, Chicago theatre people are game-- ready to take a risk and open up their doors, while still maintaining incredibly high standards. The theatre community is highly visible and clearly prized in the city. This, combined with its affordability, make productions accessible to a wide range of pretty diverse audiences.

Q:  Tell me about Vienna.

A:  Oh, Vienna. After graduating from Northwestern, I backpacked through Europe for 6 months on my own. Chicago veteran actor Greg Vinkler had told me about this great English speaking theatre company in Vienna, the International Theatre, and so when I was there I knocked on their door and asked if I could do a monologue for them. A few months later they had an opening in their company, so I moved there for a little while and performed the now-and-forever classic THE MOUSETRAP on weekends, and my one-woman show CLEARING HEDGES on off-nights. The company had a gorgeous apartment and a bike for me to use, and I used to go for rides down the Danube. I taught English for extra cash, learned enough German to order damn fine breads and coffees from the cafes and bakeries, saw the opera for $3, and took weekend road trips to Hungary and Italy. It was heaven.

Q:  What could a student in your playwriting class at UCSD expect?

A:  It's important to me to base a class in not only lots of reading of plays, but also in seeing as many productions as possible so that the students can constantly be reminded that it's a three-dimensional collaborative art, not just a literary one. Luckily, at UCSD, that's easy because there are several productions a week. I think it's essential to foster an atmosphere in the class which is completely supportive and collaborative; where students feel free to take risks and share their constructive feedback. I owe lots of my teaching techniques to my wonderful mentor, Naomi Iizuka.

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 5, I woke up in the middle of the night, padded downstairs, and announced to my parents that I was changing my name to Micky. When I was 7, I decided I wanted to be a boy, cut off my waist-length hair and renamed myself Chris. And when I was 9, I went up to the front of my fourth-grade class to announce that they should call me Fisher from now on. I've always felt the right and ability to reinvent myself; such an American sensibility. Now, through acting and playwriting, I get to keep trying to reinvent myself over and over again-- while still keeping my old common, feminine, given name.

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

A:  More new plays, less Shakespeare.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  The wickedly talented and generous teachers I've been so lucky to have, including David Downs, Allan Havis, Karl Gajdusek, Adele Shank and Naomi Iizuka.

My other theatrical heroes include Chekhov, Shepard, Pinter, Albee, Stoppard, Kushner, Steppenwolf, and the Donmar Warehouse.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Juicy, raw, surprising. Dark plays with a twisted sense of humor. Balls-to-the-wall acting. Stories which un-peel new meaning with each revealed layer, and leave me stewing for days or months or years after leaving the theatre.

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

A:  See lots of plays and set aside strict hours for writing. Find collaborators you love, stick with them, and organize your own readings so you can hear your work out loud. Don't get too hung up on one play; keep plunging forward. And this career requires a lot of stamina; make sure you surround yourself with people you love, and a life that inspires you.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My play, FREEDOM, NY, will have its world premiere at Teatro Vista in Chicago May14 - June 12, directed by Joe Minoso.
http://teatrovista.com/stage/freedom-ny.html

For updates on my work and to check out my favorite fiction writer (my husband), my favorite potter (my mother) and my favorite photographer (my father), check out our family's website:
http://www.barclaystudios.com/

Apr 19, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 149: Kathleen Warnock

photo credit: Katrina del Mar

Kathleen Warnock

Hometown: Philadelphia

Current Town: NYC

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’m working on a new full-length, called “Outlook.” It’s been given a reading by TOSOS, and is a semi-finalist for a couple of developmental programs. I also just wrote a short called “Staying Put” last weekend. I think it’s because so many people from high school have started friending me on Facebook. I am also working on about a million other things, because I’m a Gemini, and I am never happy unless I have about six things in various stages of completion.

Q:  Tell me about your series at KGB.

A:  Drunken! Careening! Writers! is held the third Thursday of every month; I’ve been doing it since 2004. I used to work at a literary arts center (the Writer’s Voice at the West Side Y) where I curated a lot of readings, and I developed my own set of criteria for what makes a good reading (five poets is too many!). Later, I asked Denis Woychuk, who owns KGB (and whom I knew from Writer’s Voice) if he’d give me a night. He said he would, and I started calling up writers, and mixing and matching genres and styles, and having fun doing it. The basic criteria is: 1) good writers; who 2) read their work well; and 3) something in it makes people laugh (nervous laughter counts). And 15 minutes tops. I also invite a lot of playwrights to read (as you know!) We’ve been called “Least Boring Reading Series” by Murph’s Bar Guide and “Essential New York” by TimeOut New York.

Q:  Tell me about en avant. How did it come about?

A:  Tina Howe has been a longtime friend and mentor, and she’s a professor at Hunter College, where I studied with her. Tina’s workshop, which is part of the MA curriculum (and as of this fall, part of the MFA Program in Playwriting), attracts a mix of students that often includes working artists (sometimes actors, directors or musicians) who have decided they’d like to learn more about playwriting, or get a masters, or both. At a certain point, several of us decided to form a group dedicated to getting our work produced. I started an online bulletin board, and as we collected the opps, I gave them a basic form (dividing them into categories from very short plays to full-lengths, development opportunities, staged readings, residencies, etc.) In addition, Tina helped us get some funding and space at Hunter to self-produce three nights of one-act plays under the En Avant Playwrights aegis. She even let us produce one of her short plays for the first time in New York City.

We agreed that group members could use the En Avant name for a project, and a couple of us have gone on to produce longer work with it. The group also included Ed Valentine, who’s gone on to NYU, become a Dramatists Guild Fellow, Nickelodeon Fellow, and write for The Fairly Oddparents, as well as producing and having a lot of his theatrical work produced (my last acting credit is in Ed’s “Women Behind the Bush”); and Chance Muehleck, who along with Melanie Armer, founded LIVE Theater and its experimental wing, The Nerve Tank (Bauhaus the Bauhas). The other playwrights are David Marrero, who’s produced some of his work off-off; Tom Dillehay, who’s working and writing in Memphis these days; Dan Shore, who writes operas and is a professor at Xavier University in New Orleans; and Maz Troppe, who came out of the downtown queer theater scene in the ‘80s, left behind a career in banking, and now teaches at a public school for the arts in New York City.

United Stages publishes a collection of the Best of En Avant Playwrights, and I still keep up the bulletin board. I call it my OCD hobby. Since its founding in 2003, it’s had over 230,000 visits and over a million page views. My reasoning toward keeping it up is that if I have to post opps and maintain the board, then I will know what venues are suitable for my work.

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 12, my father’s job took us away from Philadelphia, where I’d grown up, and where most of our relatives were. We moved to Montgomery, Alabama then to Columbia, South Carolina, and when my dad announced we had one more move in us, and it would be before or during my senior year in high school, I decided I didn’t want to start all over again, because frankly, I’d had a terrible time with each move, and wasn’t really socialized to be a teenager at all (I’d gone to a small, all-girl Catholic school in Philly, and didn’t really have any survival skills for a large public school). So I told my parents that I’d rather skip a year and finish before we left. This was in South Carolina, where you only needed 18 credits to graduate and they let the students drive the school buses. So it was remarkably easy to skip a year; I’d already been pushed up one after Montessori. My Dad agreed to let me go to summer school, and drove me across town every morning at 7am to the only school that offered the courses I needed. I passed the courses, made it through senior year, and graduated at 15. My parents told me that was too young to go away to college, so I had to pick a school in Baltimore, where Dad’s last move had taken the family. I chose UMBC because they offered Ancient Greek, which I’d always wanted to study. (And I did study it, all four years).

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

A:  Well, the short answer is that I’d have more theaters do my work; the longer answer is that I wouldn’t so much change the theater as change the climate around it. If you saw Mike Daisey’s “How Theater Failed America,” you might remember how he talks about the ivory tower of academic and institutional theater, and how it ceases being about the work, and becomes more about the buildings and the institutions. I was at a panel recently where Sarah Schulman called MFA programs “workfare for writers” and along with being a fabulous line, there’s an accuracy to it; the danger of an advanced degree program in writing is that it can encourage people to write for an audience of other writers. You definitely need writer’s writers, and people who care intensely about teaching, but you also need open-hearted artists from all backgrounds and people who write about things that are not writing, and not completely about upper middle class straight white people. (Though if that is your niche, than who am I to tell you to write about something else?) I came out of community theater, I don’t have an MFA. I used to be a sportswriter (my first full-length play was about women’s college basketball), and I’d like to see theater be more inclusive and specific to the writer’s passions and interests. Then, I think, you wouldn’t see people thinking of theater so much as a “luxury” but as a part of their lives that makes them more meaningful.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  When I first arrived in New York City (to go to acting school), I was lucky enough to get a gig, first as a volunteer, then as staff, at Mirror Rep, where I got to watch Geraldine Page work up close, and also learn from her in real life. She was very kind to young artists coming up, and never stopped going to class, and never stopped teaching class. (And in my adult life, I have always been in a class or workshop of one kind or another) Sabra Jones was (and is) artistic director of the Mirror, and she’s the first person who gave me a job in the theater, and I got too see, experience and do almost everything from the ground up. One of the directors at Mirror Rep, and one of the most important teachers I had is John Strasberg, whose acting class gave me an artistic vocabulary and a worldview that I still rely on. Mirror Rep’s production of Clifford Odets’s “Paradise Lost,” directed by John, remains one of my touchstone theater experiences.

Tina Howe has been my guardian angel from the moment I met her. She’s helped to shape my vision and craft, and has opened many doors; she’s also one of the artists most committed to emerging artists that I’ve ever met. Doric Wilson found me on the internet, and gave me a reading several years ago of the play then called “The Audience,” that launched the non-self-produced part of my playwriting career. He’s also stood behind me, pushed me through open doors, and is a living, breathing text about the history of New York theater, from the Caffe Cino on. The play he gave a reading to, now titled “Rock the Line,” was produced by Emerging Artists Theatre, won the Robert Chesley Award, and is also published by United Stages. Paul Adams, Artistic Director of EAT, produced “Rock the Line,” and has produced several other plays I wrote, and asked me to be Playwrights Company manager of EAT. Mark Finley is the artistic director of TOSOS (where I now curate the Robert Chesley/Jane Chambers Playwrights Project) and he’s directed my play “Some Are People” since it was a 24-hour 10-minute piece at Wings, through its latest incarnation as “End of Land,” a full-length play.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Big vision, exquisite comedy, fabulous acting, and plays that are confident and fearless. Also, some rock and roll and women making out. Last weekend, I saw “Rescue Me” by Michi Barall, produced by Ma-Yi, and it was thrilling. (And of course I asked a question of the classics professor!) One of my favorite theatrical experiences ever is “Hedwig & the Angry Inch,” which I saw at least a dozen times during its NYC run, and I am overjoyed that it’s set to come back (to Broadway, no less) this year. Though I doubt there will be the super-cheap tickets for late night performances that they offered at Jane Street. I also like theater in really old or interesting spaces. In January, my play, “The Adventures of…” was performed in the basement of an 1835 church in Provincetown; last year, it was performed in the drawing room of a Georgian townhouse in Dublin.

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

A:  Write…and send it out. No one’s going to produce it if it’s still in your computer. And definitely learn how to produce yourself if you’ve got the temperament for it; it’s one of the most freeing things you can do. I’ve learned as much or more about writing from producing my work, watching it take shape in rehearsal, working with designers and techies, and watching the audience very night as I have in a workshop.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Drunken! Careening! Writers! Third Thursday of every month at the lovely & fragrant KGB Bar in the East Village. See www.kgbbar.com for information on each month’s lineup.

Best! Lesbian! Erotica! (well, there are no exclamation points in the actual title, but there should be). I edit it, starting with the 2010 edition. Please buy it. And if you are a writer, please consider submitting work to it.

En Avant Playwrights: http://enavantplaywrights.yuku.com/directory. Visit often and I hope you get many productions.

International Dublin Gay Theatre Festival: I’m the Ambassador of Love for North America, and have had worked presented there the last two years. Spend the first two weeks of May in Dublin. You won’t regret it. www.gaytheatre.ie.

Please hope that I get another production somewhere soon. I’ve developed a sort of weird superstition that I can only get my hair cut when I’m going to one of my own opening nights, and I could really use one before the summer.

Feb 29, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 817: Matt Herzfeld



Matt Herzfeld

Hometown: Shaker Heights, Ohio (we put the “swing” in swing state)

Current Town: Brooklyn, New York

Q:  Tell me about The Improbable Fall, Rise, & Fall of John Law.

A:  John Law is the stranger-than-fiction historical tale of a real-life 18th century Scottish economist named, you got it, John Law. Calling him an economist may be a bit misleading, however. John was no armchair intellectual. His story moves from the gambling houses of London to the royal courts of France (for a brief, glorious moment, he was the second most powerful domestic politician in the country, quite an achievement for a Scotsman in a notoriously xenophobic nation). There are countless detours along the way - we meet sadistic judges, corrupt nobles, perpetually pregnant French peasants, and terribly eccentric monarchs.

While the play is fast, funny, and irreverent, it’s also truer than you might think. It is also, in its own way, quite relevant to our current national debate about income inequality. The play attempts to peel back several layers in order to reveal the philosophies that laid the groundwork for our modern financial system.

I suppose I should also mention that eight actors play over forty parts, the play spans approximately twenty-five years over fifteen scenes, and it’s only the first part of a six-hundred page trilogy (roughly, the section we’re producing now takes us through the first fall and a bit of the rise). If you like your epics absurd and full of bawdy vaudevillian excess, this is the play for you!

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I don’t like talking too much about plays in progress, but I’ve got a handful of works in various stages of development, from completed first drafts to just a few scattered notes. They’re all quite different in form and subject - briefly, I’ve got an adaptation of The Masque of the Red Death in the works, a post-apocalyptic existential satire with a coterie of Three Stooges-like skeletons, and a play inspired by a notorious Japanese cannibal. That makes it sound like I’m just obsessed with death, which isn’t true (I write about sex a lot, as well).

Anyone interested in reading some of my past work can check out some short plays on my website (www.mattherzfeld.com) or visit my New Play Exchange profile to take a gander at my longer plays.

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

A:  Here’s a small memory that’s related to John Law, one of the first times I can really remember being conscious of class differences. This was when I was maybe 10 or 11 (the waning years of pre-pubescence). For the first time, I went over to play at the house of a school friend. I grew up in a fairly luxuriant middle-class household - four-level home, individual bedrooms, big living room, backyard, family dog, etc. Now, my friend happened to be a member of a very wealthy real estate family, and her house reflected it. A huge, cavernous entryway with white marble columns; a swimming pool inside the house (I didn’t even know this was possible outside of school and gyms); a huge winding staircase. I was impressed by all of this, but chiefly remember one major thought - everything looked so empty.

Sure, there was a lot of space between the floor and ceiling, but there wasn’t anything in it. Just a bunch of nothing; an enclosure of empty air. My friend’s bedroom was similarly big, too big for the small number of toys she had, which were carefully placed into a little chest in one corner of the room.

One might assume that the obvious conclusion of this observation is something about conspicuous consumption and waste. Actually, my 10-year old brain went somewhere quite different. I simply couldn’t fathom why, if someone had so much space, they wouldn’t fill it with comic books and action figures.

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

A:  I’ve read a lot of other answers to this question on the blog and there’s little here I disagree with. Yes, theater is too expensive (both to see and to make); yes, the larger nonprofits and regionals cater to an aging and affluent white audience that doesn’t fairly reflect the potential reach of the medium; yes, there is a distinct lack of racial, cultural, and economic diversity among frequently produced playwrights, including a persistent and pernicious gender gap; and yes, there is a problematic institutional bias that puts money into the hands of administrators instead of artists (this one isn’t called out as much as it should be; mainly, I presume, due to a reluctance on the part of the artists to anger the administrator-class whose approval they so desperately seek).

But since the last thing I want to do is appear to be too much of a grumbler, I will point out that none of these criticisms really have much to do with any of the fundamental building blocks of theater itself, which has been immensely successful for thousands for years in provoking, enlightening, moving, and entertaining audiences. Most of the problems today are systemic, particular to our time and place. As time and place change, which they always seems to do (much as some politicians try to turn back the clock), so too will the circumstances and situations of storytellers, who historically have proven themselves remarkably adept at adapting to the cultural shifts around them. Still, doesn’t hurt to give things a push in the right direction, which I wholeheartedly encourage anyone with the will and passion to do.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Beyond the holy tetralogy of Shakespeare, Chekhov, Brecht, and Beckett, I have a great love for postwar British drama. Some plays that were really important in defining for me what theater was capable of include John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger (kitchen sink realism to perfection), Peter Nichols’ A Day in the Death of Joe Egg, John Guare’s The House of Blue Leaves (which takes my vote for most heartbreakingly funny play of the later 20th century), David Rabe’s Streamers, August Wilson’s Fences, Caryl Churchill’s Serious Money (the influence of which can definitely be seen in John Law), and Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildernstern Are Dead. I must also mention the B’s, three somewhat neglected (at least in the US) British writers who never cease to amaze me with their imagination and insight - Howard Barker, Edward Bond, and Peter Barnes.

Importantly (with the exception of Rosencrantz, which I saw first as a film), I discovered all of these works as texts before I ever saw them. I’m a huge advocate of treating plays as literature in addition to performance texts, and I believe strongly that one can have as emotional and moving an experience reading a play as one can have seeing a production (sometimes more, if it’s a crap production). It’s a shame that so few people read contemporary plays for enjoyment (seems sometimes that modern plays only get read by directors looking for projects and actors looking for audition material, which is better than no one reading plays at all but still leaves something to be desired for the playwright who wants his/her work to speak to a larger segment of the populace than the slim slice that work in the theatrical world themselves).

Finally, before I take my leave of this question, I can’t neglect my teachers and peers at The New School for Drama, who had such a vital impact on how I approach everything I write. I owe eternal debts of gratitude to Chris Shinn, Laura Maria Censabella, Robbie Baitz, Stephen Karam, Michael Weller, Frank Pugliese, Nicole Burette (in whose class I wrote John Law), Sam Byron, Molly Haas-Hooven, and Dan Kitrosser.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I have pretty varied tastes, though generally I prefer narrative-based works. My favorite thing is when a playwright finds the perfect structure or form to tell their story, the right “box” for the story to fit inside that feels inseparable from the content.

I like plays that have physical boundaries but limitless ideas - plays like Annie Baker’s The Flick, which tears open the hearts of its characters without leaving its single, meticulously detailed setting, or Lucas Hnath’s The Christians, which inventively co-opts the form of an evangelical service to tell a story about faith, doubt, and compromise; Hnath’s pastor hearkens back to Arthur Miller’s morally conflicted protagonists, but he tells his story in a way I don’t think ever would have occurred to Miller. There’s a lot of other examples of these “box plays” - Rajiv Joseph’s Guards at the Taj, which is the most expansive-feeling two-hander I have ever seen (I’m in awe as to how he made a two-person play feel like an entire world), or my New School teacher Stephen Karam’s mesmerizing new play, The Humans, which begins as a fairly conventional family drama and slyly transitions into a place of raw, existential terror. Going back a bit further, two plays I admire very much are Arnold Wesker’s workplace play The Kitchen, which uses the setting of a crowded, busy West End restaurant for a story about how work changes us (without ever getting preachy or obnoxiously Marxist), and David Storey’s The Changing Room, which examines the lives of a number of Northern working class Britons through their interactions in the changing room of an amateur rugby game. At lot of these works roughly adhere to the Aristotelian unities, even while playing around at the borders of them (especially in relation to time, although they share this in common with their Greek ancestors, few of which actually adhered to the unities themselves). Another term we might give plays like this is the “microcosmic” play - big in its concerns, but confined in the scope of its dramaturgy. For me, one essential component of box plays is that their unified setting serves a metaphoric function (the movie theater in The Flick, the church in The Christians, the kitchen in The Kitchen, etc).

Maybe my current obsession with and desire to write box or microcosmic plays is to some extent a reaction against John Law, which is anything but a box play. It extends out in many different directions, jumping from place to place and character to character. Seems only natural that after spending so long on an epic, one might want to try something more confined…

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

A:  Well, I’m not that far along myself, so take this with a grain of salt, but I’ve found you can never go wrong if you’re truly writing out of a desire for honest expression. That way, even if no one every produces your play, even if you have trouble merely getting people to read it, even if it’s (when you’re being honest) not very good in an objective literary sense, it was still worthwhile for you to write it because you had something to say and you got it out of your system, which is just a generally healthy thing for people to do.

Even a play like John Law which, on the surface, might not seem to be a very personal work, comes from deep questions and passionate concerns I have about our economy, from my desire to probe and deepen my understanding of the origins of the entrenched financial systems that have a very real, everyday impact on how I and billions of others live our lives. If this component wasn’t there, it wouldn’t have been worth it to write the play.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A: Dreamscape Theatre’s production of The Improbable Fall, Rise, and Fall of John Law plays as part of the IRT 3B Development Series from March 9th-26th at the IRT Theater (154 Christopher Street). Tickets and more info available here: http://irttheater.org/3b-development-series/the-improbable-fall-rise-fall-of-john-law-part1-a-new-play-about-money/

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Apr 21, 2014

I Interview Playwrights Part 654: Matt Hoverman



Matt Hoverman

Hometown: West Redding, Connecticut

Current Town:  Manhattan

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  THRILLSVILLE - a comedy about a difficult but lovable, developmentally disabled woman from an upper middle class family whose brother moves her into a Medicaid-run residence after it’s revealed the trust fund meant to pay for her lavish apartment was drained by their parents before their death. And I write for a few TV shows on PBS Kids (including ARTHUR and WONDER RANGERS.) My 4-character comedy THE GLINT (about two aging voice-over actors and the women who love them) is also headed for Broadway in 2015, produced by Nelle Nugent and directed by Michael Wilson.


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 parents fought like cats and dogs… except Monday nights at 9pm. That’s when M*A*S*H came on. I’d hide on the staircase and listen to them laughing together. I’m a big believer in the power of laughter to disarm and connect. And I love to write about savage people. And I like to write plays and TV shows that have helpful and hopeful messages for kids on staircases listening to their parents laugh at the TV.

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

A:  I studied playwriting at Brown and acting at the University of California, San Diego- two programs hot for experimental theatre. It was fun, but I hit my breaking point when - playing one of only two human beings in a 3-hour puppet rock musical about William Blake - I requested a handkerchief to wipe away the tears of my wife in a tender scene - and was handed a 3” x 5” piece of lucite. Years later, I came up with the idea for a class on solo performance that focused on the simple, human connection of autobiographical storytelling. I have since taught the 7-week class about 70 times and I've helped shape hundreds of solo shows - many of them winning awards and rave reviews, and all of them coming from a simple, human, authentic place. I don’t want to change or get rid of abstract or experimental theatre, but I am starting to train teachers in my method, and I would like the kind of direct, heart-to-heart work that I encourage in my classes to survive me.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Oh geez, I love the lunacy of Charles Busch and Julie Halston, the big-hearted irreverence of Randy Newman (he was working on FAUST at the La Jolla Playhouse when I was at UCSD), David Lindsay-Abaire (I saw a production of FUDDY MEERS at Oregon Shakespeare that changed my life), Spalding Gray, Horton Foote and the farceurs: Alan Ayckbourn, Feydeau, Moliere, Ben Travers, Ray Cooney, Michael Frayn etc... and my students!

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Plays that are human and real, but which also have a level of comic proficiency. Comic size that is also attached to something real, or at least joyful, recently: ONE MAN,TWO GUV’NORS; LEND ME A TENOR, Matthew Warchus’ BOEING BOEING and THE NORMAN CONQUESTS. TRIBES.

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

A:  Live. And write about what you, and only you, know. Write it in your special way, no matter what other people seem to be liking right now. Look for the moments in your work when you feel, “That’s it! That’s my voice!” Next time, write more like that. Self-produce. Fail and learn from your failures. Be very, very encouraging of yourself. Pass through cynicism, but don’t stop there. Write for your grandbabies, as if you were comfortable with them knowing the dirty bits about you. Write for the ages, for the kids on the stairs, hungry for your hard-won wisdom. You don’t have to impress us. Just remind us of what it means to be alive.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  As mentioned, my play THE GLINT is scheduled to be produced on b’way by Nelle Nugent in 2015, directed by Michael Wilson. So keep your eyes peeled. For other current stuff:
MattHoverman.com
And for more about my classes: createyourownsoloshow.com

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Oct 16, 2018

I Interview Playwrights Part 1006: Ming Peiffer




Ming Peiffer

Hometown: Columbus, Ohio

Current Town: New York City

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Currently in previews of my play USUAL GIRLS at Roundabout Underground. Also writing a play about Toxic Masculinity and the black market organ trade, and a musical about Charles Darwin and women's role in science. Additionally, in TV/Film I am creating an original series at F/X inspired by my play USUAL GIRLS, adapting the graphic novel The Divine into a series for AMC, and adapting the book Chemistry by Weike Wang into a film for Amazon.

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 my 3rd grade English class at my public school in Ohio we learned how to do Descriptive Writing. We learned to use adjectives and had an assignment to write a descriptive story that we then read aloud to the parents who were all invited on the last day of class. All my classmates wrote about rainbows and puppies and I wrote a detailed account, moment by moment, of the day my Dad left us. I wrote about the way his back looked disappearing into the rain. The time that was flashing red on the alarm clock. My mom kicking down the door of the bathroom my Dad had locked himself in, screaming at him to "get out!". The way the cab pulled away into the sheets of rain. As I read it aloud all the parents began to cry. They all came up to hug me afterwards and neither of my parents were even there.

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

A:  More diversity. In every sense of the word. Not just racial diversity, or gender diversity, et cetera, but diversity in form and content. I want messier plays. I want more daring plays. I'm sick of the easy "issue plays" that don't actually challenge the status quo and create the false belief that we are educating ourselves when we are actually deluding ourselves. I want to see more plays coming from the demographic they are portraying. Why are we programming plays about women by men when we haven't even had the opportunity to hear women describe their experiences of being female? Same goes for race, sexuality, disability, et cetera. What stories are we championing and from what perspective? I want authenticity.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Sarah Kane.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  From the above answer you can probably surmise that I like In-Yer-Face theatre. And you'd be correct. I wish we had more plays going up like the ones I saw at Ontological Hysteric (R.I.P.) or PS 122 (R.I.P.) when I first moved to New York. I remember being at a play where a guy handed out vials of his own semen, or a play where the first row was showered in fake blood. And I don't think things like that are happening anymore in the theatre. Or if they are? Please tell me where and I'll be there in the front row getting soaked in blood.

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

A:  Try writing a play on your own before taking a class. I'm an autodidact and I think trying to create for myself before following a rubric was essential to cultivating a singular voice.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My play USUAL GIRLS is currently in previews at Roundabout Underground and opens November 5! Come see it!

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Oct 23, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 510: Lucy Gillespie


Lucy Gillespie

Hometown: London, England

Current Town: New York, New York

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Graduate School at NYU, mainly, but therein I have just started a play about rhetoric and faith. It will take place in the lobby of the Liberal Jewish Synagogue, where my parents used to send my siblings and I on Saturday mornings so they could fight in peace. It will feature some kind of horrific event, perpetrated by young congregants in the basement, and justified by (drum roll) rhetoric and faith. This is all conjecture, though; I haven't gotten far.

In preparation for Graduate School at NYU, however, I had a summer of spring cleaning. I finished a brand new play, A Responsible Adult, about a love triangle between a Kylie, a married tutor in her mid-twenties, Anya, her 15 year-old student, and Malachi, a 40 year-old musician. It's also the families we build for ourselves in New York. The girl is a prodigal cellist and the dude is a jazz musician, so in my head there will be extensive sequences of improvised jazz. That I did not write.

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

A:  Oh man. I was a nightmarish child. Here's one example:

I was the most popular kid (and only girl) in my Hebrew school class of awkward misfits. We all loved our teacher, John Haggard, who was funny and brought in great exercises that, like, made learning about Jewish identity fun! He also always brought in a box of Cadbury's Roses and at the break, he would open the box, lift it high above his head and tip it up so that brightly colored chocolates would tumble out onto the table. If I missed the frenzy, he would save me the orange and strawberry creams. The following September, we had a new teacher who I shall call Deborah. We hated Deborah. Deborah was strict and by the book. The class became less about games and discussions and more about learning Hebrew. She gave out homework and quizzes, she had a high-pitched, whiny voice, and she never, ever brought in Cadbury's Roses for us - or even Quality Street. She had to go. One day I just flipped. She was in the middle of some kind of complex, abstract, probably highly intelligent thought when I stood up and announced that we would continue the class under the table. I crawled under the table and one by one, the boys (my minions) joined me. First, Deborah laughed. Then she started to scold. Then she started to beg. Then she started to cry. Then she crawled under the table and, crouched like a hamster, finished the lesson. We never saw her again.

It frightens me - and I think about this a lot - that this is fundamentally who I am.

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

A:  Audience participation. There should be more of it.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Shakespeare, Stoppard, Churchill, Knee-High, PunchDrunk. Mac Wellman's Chrestomathy completely rewired the way I think about theater. And I drop everything when TJ Jagodowski and Dave Pasquesi come to town.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Stuff that really commits to itself? When it patiently and organically unfolds - as opposed to rushing to define itself as one thing or another, or conform to some kind of structural or narrative formula (which always makes the play seem overdeveloped). Can you tell that I'm in grad school? I love anything that's smart but also gut-wrenching...

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

A:  Self-produce! You will not regret it. Figuring out how to ask people for money is about the best skill you can learn...

Q: Plugs, please:

A: OUTFOXED - about an American study abroad student who gets caught up in a SEX DRUGS VIOLENCE scandal in Italy, and must be bailed out by her mother - is being produced by FullStop Collective, November 30th - December 16th at the Access Theater.

Also: THE ATWATER CAMPAIGN - about the rise and fall of spin-doctor sonofabitch, Lee Atwater, with original blues music - is being produced as part of terraNOVA Collective's Groundworks Reading Series, Sunday December 9th at 3pm.

Also: YOUNGBLOOD Brunches! If you've never been, they are the BEST and the MOST FUN. And I might even get around to writing one this year!

Nov 13, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 525: Jayme McGhan



Jayme McGhan

Hometown: Minneapolis. 
 


Current Town: Chicago. Technically, Elmwood Park, which is the first village over on the West side. I know a bunch of proud Chicagoans that would give me hell if I didn’t own up to that. 



Q: What are you working on now?

A: Lots of revisions for plays I’ve written in the last few years that I haven’t had time to rewrite.

I have a reading of a show called “Damn the River Deep” at Chicago Dramatists this month.

I’m also currently writing and doing pre-production on a feature-length film for Revision Entertainment that I will be co-directing. It’s a heist/adventure/wilderness survival flick set in the Canadian Rockies. The whole film crew will be backpacking for two weeks and shooting as we go, which should prove to be either straight genius or completely moronic. There is something to be said for working on a project where you have to carry a .44 caliber cannon on your hip in case a grizzly attacks. 


Q: How would you characterize the Chicago theater scene?

A: There are so many places at the theatrical table if you’re willing to work hard. Theatre artists bust their butts in this city. They go hard all the time. I love that about this place. I also love the fact that almost every Chicago theatre artist I know is talented in multiple disciplines. It’s an artistic evolution out of necessity. I don’t know anyone who is just a really good actor. I know a lot of really good actors who also happen to kill at costume design or administration or what have you. 
 


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 serial liar when I was a kid. And I was pretty good at it. I told my second grade class that I went to Australia to cage dive with Great White Sharks and that I was almost eaten by a twenty-footer. I must have been crazy convincing because the class talked about it for a long time. One of the kids went home and told his mom, who then called my mom to get travel advice about where to stay in Sydney. My mom was like, “Jayme’s been to the Florida panhandle. A few years ago. I wasn’t aware that he even knew Australia existed.” At some point the lies transformed themselves in to stories that needed to be told in a different medium; mostly because I was sick of being grounded.

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

A: The American Theatre’s attempt to create a culture of celebrity. Let’s just stop that. Hollywood is really good at this. We’re not. In one month’s time my Intro to Theatre students will not be able to tell you who David Lindsay-Abaire is even after seeing his show at Steppenwolf and talking about it for two class periods. My folks really liked Joe Dowling’s production of Brian Friehl’s The Home Place at the Guthrie a few years ago but I’ll stake my yearly playwriting earnings (that was a joke) that they have no idea who Joe Dowling is--and that dude has a road named after him! My grandmother might be able to tell you who Bernadette Peters is but I seriously doubt it. You know what they can tell you? All of them can tell you who won “Dancing with the Stars” last night.
Let’s just let Hollywood keep its culture, shall we? 
 


Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: Shaw. Williams. O’Casey. Boucicault. Pinter. Albee. To name a few.

Gary Garrison is heroic to me. Gary is out there every day advocating for playwrights. I think every writer I know also knows and loves Gary. That pretty much says it all.

I had a dude crush on Eric Bogosian for a very long time. I still do to some extent. When I was a sophomore in college I wrote to him a few times to ask for some advice on creating solo shows. He took the time out of his no-doubt crazy busy schedule to write back to a nineteen year old kid who had all the drive in the world and absolutely no craft. That was pretty nifty.


Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A: Big, Bold, and Challenging. I love stories that hang their hat equally on both language and plot. I like words strung together in a manner that takes your breath away. If you couple that with a moving dramatic arc that has something unique to say about our collective existence then you’ll have a fan for life. I dig spectacle, style, and experimental form as much as the next theatre-goer, but if that’s all your play or production is relying on then count me out. 
 


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

A: Don’t spend all of your time in front of the computer. If you’ve made the decision to be a playwright then also make the decision to become a committed networker. If you can add a sound understanding of marketing and arts-related business to the pile, all the better. Also, learn how to use a drill and a circular saw. Seriously. 
 


Q: Plugs, please:

A: I’m a Resident Playwright at Chicago Dramatists and an Associate Artist at Stage Left Theatre. Both are amazing groups of talented people. Show them some love the next time you’re in Chicago.
I’m also an Assistant Professor of Theatre at Concordia University, Chicago where I get to work with some of the brightest and most talented up-and-coming theatre artists in the city. We’ve always got something kicking around.

And because I love my hometown, check out Yellow Tree Theatre in the Twin Cities. Good friends who make lovely theatre.

And because I love my fellow Chicago writers, check out the plays of Barbara Lhota, Andrew Hinderaker, Dana Lynn Formby, Ike Holter, Randall Colburn, Rohina Malik, Steve Spencer, Mia McCullough, Martin Zimmerman, and Reggie Edmund.