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1100 Playwright Interviews

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

Aug 4, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 230: Molly Rice


Molly Rice

Hometown: Born in Houston, TX, but Austin is home.

Current Town: New York City

Q:  Tell me about the Saints Tour and Futurity the Musical.

A:  SAINTS TOUR means a lot to me. I wrote the play in 2009 for Ray Rizzo's live arts exchange MOTHERLODGE (a great festival, www.motherlodge.com), to take place in Louisville, KY. The play was a bus tour, led by a "Tour Guide" character who uncovers the secret saints of a local area. I wrote it using Google Maps Street View, never having been to Louisville, and Ray connected me to local musicians willing to be planted around the city for audiences to discover. Actress Emily Hyberger (a Louisville native), director/ writer/ actor Marc Bovino, and I went down and put the thing together in a week. And it was just magical. We had local sax player Mauriece echoing through the Salvation Army's cavernous 1950's gymnasium, and Louisville singer/ songwriter Tyrone Cotton singing about time in a graveyard, showered by white cherry blossoms, and so many other magical Louisville moments. We enlisted the Center of Hope Soup Kitchen, where the tour ended and we all ate a meal together. It was Community Theater, in the deepest sense of the word. I wrote it to be redesign-able for production in different communities, each time using a local actor and musicians, local sites, and a local community service organization-- so this Spring director Rachel Chavkin and I tested its flexibility in the West Village as a walking tour, with Taylor Mac as the Tour Guide and 20 participating artists and musicians (!!!). Totally different-- the Village itself was a character-- but totally interesting to see its translation. I plan to do it in as many cities as I can. The play is a story, but also a sort of frame to showcase these rich little pockets of culture out there that we sometimes lose sight of in New York. And as a writer, the sites just unfold into stories in the most exciting way.


FUTURITY is a beautiful example of a contemporary music/ theater hybrid. It was conceived and developed by the Lisps, a strange, smart Brooklyn band who I'd never heard of. I went and saw a presentation of FUTURITY at Joe's Pub in Spring 2009 because somebody sent me an email about it and it sounded cool, and I was like, this is fascinating-- there is something special here. I was touched by the way it balanced intellectual ideas with the emotional force of music. I felt like its book might need some development and that I might be a good match, so I connected with them and joined the team. The story is about a Civil War soldier and his imaginary relationship with mathemetician/ Lord Byron's daughter Ada Lovelace, which is fascinating enough, but at root the play's about the way science and art talk to each other, push each other forward, from one era to the next. I'm thrilled to be working on it.

I love working on strange music/ theater hybrids like these two. I was into music from early on--singer/ songwriter out of high school, went to Austin for college and promptly quit to play in bands. Music and story cleave to each other in my brain-- they're never fully separate strands of narrative. Even straight plays feel like compositions, and songs and compositions have a shape that feels like story. I'm interested in trying to 'braid' them in new ways, and with these two projects I'm still working it out.

Q:  What else are you up to?

A:  Right now I'm writing a new play about lying. It's a commission from the Tisch Grad Acting program, an ensemble piece for 9 grad actors who are aMAzing. It's an awesome challenge to write a narrative that makes room for the full range of 9 skilled actors like those guys. I'm also working on a final draft of my musical CANARY (with Ray Rizzo and Rachel Chavkin), and Rachel, composer Stephanie Johnstone and I are developing a new piece about James Agee and Walker Evans based on Agee's book Let Us Now Praise Famous Men.

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 family used to watch the Carol Burnett show when I was very little. When I was 3 or 4 my dad asked me why I liked it so much, and I said, "The song and the story." That pretty much sums it up for me.

After my dad died, I found that written on the back of an envelope in his files. That probably explains something about who I am as a person. I'm not sure what.

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

A:  It would be interesting to see New York Theater become a little less insular, get more curious about work in other places. Coming out of Austin in the 90's and early 2000's, where 1 out of 4 shows produced were new plays, I knew when I got here that New York did not represent American theater-- New York theater is local, too. There are innovative conversations going on between locally-grown theater and the communities that grow it, and the have a lot to teach us about what American live art really is.

I also wish we could all chill a little. Yes, there is no money. Yes, theater is not the primary performance genre out there today. Yes, audiences are small. But change is constant. Limitations and resources change throughout the course of history, and we are just a page in that history. We can work to change the limitations and resources. But in the meantime, this is our page. We need to keep the focus on making great things; that's what we're here to do. There's always a way to make them. The rest is more likely to come if we focus on that.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Well I LOVE Ruth Margraff's work-- talk about song and story. I think her brain is a national treasure. Sam Shepard was an artistic father figure. Freddy Mercury is my patron saint. My favorite play is the Bacchae.

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

A:  Let's see...A big turning point came when I stopped asking people to do my work and started doing it, in one form or another. People began to support it, once they could envision it. And that shift really changed the experience of being a theater artist from frustrating to liberating.

When I find people I love to work with, I stick with them. As Paula Vogel says, we rise together.

I find ways to situationally, financially, and personally stabilize my life because we work in a rocky, unpredictable field.

I try to be a good person and to find the good seed in others. I don't work with someone if I can't find it.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  The Tisch show opens in December; Saints Tour will happen again next Spring in New York; and look for a showcase workshop production of CANARY in February 2011! And thank you, Adam, for your interviews!

Aug 3, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 229: Julia Pascal


photograph by Habie Schwarz

Julia Pascal

Hometown: I was born and brought up in Manchester and Blackpool in the north of England but at 14 I moved to London where I have lived ever since.

Current Town: London

Q:  Tell me about Dybbuk.

A:
The Dybbuk.
History

PASCAL THEATRE COMPANY’s innovative take on THE DYBBUK was supported by the British Council on a tour to Poland in l993. (Tim Butchard was the British Council supporting Officer), It went to Bialystok and Radom and was extremely well-received.


The production has been seen in France, Germany, Sweden and Belgium as well as enjoying a British tour. It has received rave press and is now invited to be part of the first theatre festival at the Manhattan theatre The Theater for the New City in August 2010.

We would like to have British Council support and can offer educational workshops around the production,

The play was written and directed by NESTA Dream Time Fellow Julia Pascal.

It was choreographed and designed by Thomas Kampe.

The production which has five performers, uses text, movement and music in a homage to a culture that was annihilated by the Nazis. It is a major work of English theatre which has been part of Pascal’s creation of an English Jewish body of work seen in the l990s and 2000s and published by Oberon Books.


The Dybbuk.

Synopsis


A British woman goes to Germany today and finds it full of wandering souls or dybbuks.


She imagines a ghetto in 1942 where five Jews are assembled for deportation. One of them remembers the story of The Dybbuk . She makes the others re-enact fragments of this famous legend. This work poses the question about why we keep on telling our stories even on the eve of destruction.


The play premiered at the New End Theatre in 1992. It toured in the UK and in continental Europe over a decade and is invited to the Theater for the New City in August 2010 for its professional US premiere.

Q: What else are you up to?

A: I have just written a new play about a London woman who goes to the Brooklyn Bridge to jump off it and another about Mossad. I need to get them read and produced now.

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 brought up by my Romanian grandparents in Manchester. They brought with them an atmosphere of many cultures and spoke several languages. Although I was born in England, I never felt 'English' and this alienation made me always an observer. I was never a religious Jew and embraced atheism at twelve. My Jewishness made me connect to other outsiders. I became fascinated by the lost souls that vanished in Hitler's Europe and learned of the Holocaust as a young child. This had a profound effect on my writing.

I was also a balletomane and dance has had a strong effect on my writing and the way I see work expressed.

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

A: Give women equality.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: Bertold Brecht, Vsevelod Meyerhold, Joan Littlewood, Hilde Holger.  Kantor and Grotowski are also major influences.
Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A: Work that is Poor Theatre and rich in ideas.

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

A: Write what you know and then go much deeper. Talk to people especially people with extraordinary lives. Listen to your grandparents and get them to talk about their own.

Q: Plugs, please:

A: THE DYBBUK by Julia Pascal. US premiere at Theater for The New City, 155 First Avenue (10th Street. East Village. August 10-25 2010. Telephone 212 254 1109. www.dreamupfstival.org www.pascal-theatre.com

Aug 2, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 228: Yussef El Guindi




Yussef El Guindi

Hometowns: Cairo and London

Current Town: Seattle

Q: Tell me about the play you're working on at the Bay Area Playwrights Festival:

A: It’s called THREE WOLVES AND A LAMB. A comedy about the Palestinian and Israeli imbroglio/ conflict. The subject matter just screamed comedy to me. So I just followed those initial screams and ended up with this play. We’ll see if I’ve managed to morph it all into laughter or not. It’s a prickly subject that lends itself to the extremes of both painful comedy and high drama.

Q: What else are you up to?

A: I’m workshopping another play in August at the Icicle Creek Theatre Festival in association with ACT in Seattle. The play is called PILGRIMS MUSA AND SHERI IN THE NEW WORLD. It explores the emotional havoc that attends those who leave one country to try and make a home in another country....The baggage that one unavoidably lugs around in one’s travels, as well as the stuff you’re forced to leave behind. And how the absence of those things left behind often accrues an emotional weight of its own. A weird number is done on your psyche when you the find the familiar touchstones of your home country absent from your daily life. That is of course both thrilling and exciting, as well as overwhelming, and even terrifying at times. Sometimes, an emotional free-fall takes place, where nothing familiar remains for you to hold onto in times of crises. Truly, one becomes a stranger in a strange land; and one simply can’t create memories and comfort zones fast enough to break this fall.

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

A: Continuing from the previous response: writing (as well as acting) was what I did to create those comfort zones, that sense of home, after emigrating with my family at a young age. I think the constant in my life has been this continuos uprooting, and traveling. Not just from different cities, and countries, but also from one language to another, from one cultural mindset to a completely different one, etc. What has shaped me as a writer and individual has been this need to adapt, to put aside what one knew in order to survive and thrive in whatever new country I was in.

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

A: I was in a theater lobby not too long ago and heard a mother tell her son, who was acting up a tad, that he should behave himself as he was in the theater now. I groaned when I heard this, feeling that we’d surely lost a future audience member. I wish theater wasn’t perceived as being so stiff, stuffy, and inaccessible; or done for a small group of cultural elitists....Of course it would also help if the theater pieces themselves weren’t sometimes stiff, stuffy and inaccessible. It would also help if discussions about theater were woven into the cultural conversation more often. I find it a little depressing when I can’t find American Theater magazine in stores that seem to display every other kind of magazine imaginable. Surely they can find a corner on their endless racks for a magazine that covers the interests and activities of a whole lot of people!

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: I admire those who manage to stay in the game despite long periods of seemingly wandering in the wilderness. Basically anyone who keeps at it, in spite of the obstacles, the disappointments, etc. People who take all that crap in stride and still manage to produce good work. (And who are able to get over themselves and move on when the work misfires or isn’t what they hoped it would be. Theater artists who are able to see those dips and disappointments as part of the ride.)

Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theater that doesn’t bore me. I don’t mean to sound flippant. I like theater that grabs my attention and doesn’t let go. Theater that, while being developed, knows an audience will be in attendance at some point. Yes, this can lead to pandering crap. But I am little put off by plays that simply don’t care about their audience. This may very naturally lead to people not showing up. And nothing is more depressing in theater than seeing so many empty seats.

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

A:  In spite of what is said - that writing can’t be taught - theater is a craft you can learn. The medium has its own demands and requirements. (Note the many successful novelists who couldn’t make the transition to writing for theater.) And so whether you learn that craft on your own by watching/ reading a lot of plays, or you attend playwriting courses, I would advise paying close attention to what makes this particular mode of expression tick. Nobody can teach you, or give you your voice, yes, but the medium in which you choose to express it can be learnt.

Aug 1, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 227: Meg Gibson


Meg Gibson

Hometown, Current Town:

Born in Bridgeton, New Jersey-really South Jersey as we say, down by the Delaware Bay and the reason why they call it the Garden State. I ran around in the asparagus and tomato fields until I was eight. My father is third generation inventor so there was always a lot of creativity going on.

I do remember the parents going to NYC to see plays and how wildly excited they were by what they'd seen. When I was old enough to be taken to the city it was like being in a comic book. It loomed over everything. I spent some time in PA then vamoosed to Utah for college and skiing. I started acting there and then came to NYC for conservatory training. Pretty much been here ever since. I am a settler as E. B. White would say. I've made this my home. NYC- it's tough, it's expensive, it's home.

Q: Tell me about Seven Seven Seven.

A: The play is Tatata. It means the suchness of the moment.

It's a riff on making music, being sisters, having parents that are rock and roll and movie stars from the 1960's, what it is to be second generation to that history, how do they carve out their own careers, keeping their own work real in this culture of fame and product.

All that in ten minutes. I liked the challenge of the form and the sight specific setting of Jimmy's. Jimmy's is an old speak easy- I can always sense the history of burlesque or vaudeville or whatever went on in that back room with this little stage and little bathroom. Doing a theatre piece about young musicians fit with all that.

Q: What else are you working on?

A: I'm currently shaping on the next writing project. It's a short B and W film. That's all I can say for the moment.

Just finished directing the regional premiere of Too Much Memory, the adapted Antigone I wrote with Keith Reddin that Rising Phoenix Rep produced in the Fringe Festival of 2008. I also directed this wildly funny new play called Charm. It's a surreal comedy of manners about Margaret Fuller and her buddies, Emerson, Thoreau and Hawthorne. It's the antithesis of masterpiece theatre. I loved creating it with a very game cast and design team and old friends in Utah at Salt Lake Acting Company. The play is having some regional productions and I'm working hard to get it done here in NYC.

I'm also in a few episodes of AMC's, Rubicon. I play the widow to the mentor who accidently? mysteriously? was killed.

It's taken me a few years, but I'm finally starting to juggle the three gigs- writing, directing and acting.

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

A: Childhood influence to make theatre. I taught myself to read by the age of 4. I don't know which came first- the imagination or reading and seeing it all as I read. It's a 3D movie in my mind's eye- full of texture, smell, sounds. Same with plays. I imagine the production as I read. So, reading gave me the path to making this work. I also can't help but want to play- play with creating work, developing it with actors, or being the actor that brings a story to life. What better edge is there?

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

A: I wish Theatre were better funded. If we didn't need names to draw in box office and critics, if the work just stood on it's own, produced as pure artistic pursuit- that would be a real plus for our culture.

I enjoy the anonymity in work. How great is it to go to BAM or our Fringe Festival and not know any of the creators or performers? Jus going, being this blank slate and taking in what these producers have chosen to present.

Every culture has it's names. I did enjoy Denzel Washington in Fences. Glad he took the time to come do it. He was consummate. But,that will always be a part of our choice. And as a producer, I recognize the need to do that. But we need to look at which piece can be done without the big names. Some work is better without the focus on a star.

More theatre with consummate artists, enthusiastically funded, that's what I'd like to change.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: Theatre heros: Ariane Mnoushkine, Bernie Gerstein, Joe Papp, Simon McBurney, Thomas Ostermeir, LIsa Kron, Les Waters, Irene Worth, Jennifer Tipton, Annie Baker.


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

A: The only advice I have is find your own form, make your demons work for you.

Jul 31, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 226: Daniel McCoy


Daniel McCoy

Hometown: Portland, OR.

Current town: Brooklyn, NY.

Q:  Tell me about your upcoming Fringe show.

A:  My play Group will be world-premiering in the Fringe Festival at the Kraine Theater. Nutshell: it’s a comedy about a therapy group in purgatory populated by those who have died suddenly, gruesomely, and unexpectedly, and are having a rough time making the transition into the great beyond. Guilt, fear and anger are just a few things holding them back and these dead people gots to work it out! Super cool, disgustingly talented cast, all working their booties off. Beautiful, sexy and intelligent!

I’ve been working on the play off and on for several years. It had a reading in the summer of 2008 with Crosstown Playwrights and since then I’ve been futzing with it, but that’s about all. I submitted it to Fringe ultra-last-minute just to see what would happen and what happened is we’re doing it. The play has been in rehearsals for the last couple weeks but I’ve been away most of that time so I’ve been doing revisions remotely, emailing them in, then waiting to hear back how it’s going from my director Heidi Handelsman and producer Jody Christopherson. It’s weird. I’m used to being in the room from the start.

This is my second Fringe show in as many years. My play Eli and Cheryl Jump was up last year at the Player’s Loft. This is very different for several reasons: larger cast (6 as opposed to 2); longer running time (80 minutes as opposed to 45); and newness (first time up as opposed to previously produced). Otherwise the challenges are the same: do a good show and get butts in seats with no money for anything and everyone involved working for practically free. But I’m a DIYer so that’s part of the fun.

Q:  What else are you up to?

A:  I’m working on a new full-length show called (un)afraid with my company, the New York Neo-Futurists, which is going up in October. I’m co-writing the show with fellow Neos Jill Beckman and Cara Francis and will be performing in it with them as well. The show is a deconstruction and exploration of the concept, causes and consequences of fear, both in our society and within ourselves. Using elements of video, puppetry, personal narrative, and audience participation (this is a Neo-Futurists show, after all), we plan to create an immersive environment for the audience to give voice to and confront their own fears while we exploit our own to maximum theatrical effect. Just in time for Halloween, y’all! Sounds kinda concepty, right? Not a lot of specifics, right? That’s because we’re still writing it so we don’t know exactly what it’s going to be. Stay tuned...

Q:  What’s it like working with writing partners?

A:  This is my first time writing collaboratively to this degree and it’s an adjustment for sure. It’s a slower process building a full-length show with fellow company members as opposed to just busting out a script, so the learning experience has been, and will continue to be, I hope, a worthwhile challenge. I’ve been a Neo-Futurists for about a year and a half now and my experience writing and performing with the company has been in the ultra-short of Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind (our weekly late-night show that features a rotating menu of the 30 short plays which we attempt to perform in an hour or less). This process, with (un)afraid, is very different because although we are still writing within the Neo-Futurist aesthetic – non-illusory, no fourth wall, real time/task based – the goal is to explore and embrace the long form and steer away from the episodic format we’re so used to performing and writing within.

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

A:  I’ve always been a writer. As a wee child I used to write and draw comic books, mostly rip-offs of the X-Men series, which I was obsessed with as a kid. I had a few short stories and poems published in children’s lit journals when I was in grade school as well. I got into acting in high school, a habit that continued until my early thirties, and didn’t I write much during that time. Playwriting is my most recent artistic venture. I’ve been at it seriously now for about five or six years. It’s like my childhood self is finally catching up with me. That wasn’t really a story, more like an overview.

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

A:  I find I do a lot of theater stuff during the summer, which interferes with my going to the beach. I would advocate for more beach theater, so I can do both. Let’s try to get that started.

Q:  Who are your theatrical heroes?

A:  Gosh, I’m just in love with so much of the stuff I’ve seen from Sheila Callaghan and Young Jean Lee lately. I know those two are probably at or near the top of everybody’s lists nowadaaays, but come on. The dinner scene in That Pretty Pretty... The big set change in The Shipment... And nobody spoke during those scenes. I love watching people DO things on stage, really interesting, unusual things, and those two playwrights create worlds and environments where that shit happens. As icing, their language is bold and beautiful as well. I adore Edward Albee. He made me cry about a dead goat.

Q:  What advice would you give to playwrights starting out?

A:  I feel like I’m still starting out so it would be silly for me to give advice. Give me some advice, please.

Q:  Plugs:

Group at the Fringe fringenyc.org – tickets now on sale...

(un)afraid – New York Neo-Futurists nynf.org

225 playwright interviews alphabetically

Rob Ackerman
Liz Duffy Adams
Johnna Adams
David Adjmi
Derek Ahonen
Zakiyyah Alexander
Luis Alfaro
Lucy Alibar
Joshua Allen
Sofia Alvarez
Terence Anthony
Alice Austen
Rachel Axler
Annie Baker
Trista Baldwin
Courtney Baron
Mike Batistick
Nikole Beckwith
Alan Berks
Brooke Berman
Susan Bernfield
Jay Bernzweig
Barton Bishop
Lee Blessing
Jonathan Blitstein
Adam Bock
Jerrod Bogard
Deron Bos
Hannah Bos
Jami Brandli
George Brant
Tim Braun
Delaney Britt Brewer
Erin Browne
Bekah Brunstetter
Sheila Callaghan
Darren Canady
Ed Cardona, Jr.
Jonathan Caren
Aaron Carter
David Caudle
Clay McLeod Chapman
Christopher Chen
Andrea Ciannavei
James Comtois
Joshua Conkel
Kara Lee Corthron
Jorge Ignacio Cortiñas
Erin Courtney
Cusi Cram
Lisa D'Amour
Heidi Darchuk
Dylan Dawson
Gabriel Jason Dean
Vincent Delaney
Emily DeVoti
Kristoffer Diaz
Jessica Dickey
Dan Dietz
Lisa Dillman
Zayd Dohrn
Bathsheba Doran
Anton Dudley
Laura Eason
Fielding Edlow
Erik Ehn
Libby Emmons
Christine Evans
Joshua Fardon
Kenny Finkle
Sam Forman
Kevin R. Free
Matthew Freeman
Edith Freni
Patrick Gabridge
Madeleine George
Peter Gil-Sheridan
Gina Gionfriddo
Michael Golamco
Daniel Goldfarb
Jacqueline Goldfinger
Craig "muMs" Grant
Katharine Clark Gray
Kirsten Greenidge
Jason Grote
Sarah Gubbins
Stephen Adly Guirgis
Jennifer Haley
Christina Ham
Sarah Hammond
Rob Handel
Ann Marie Healy
Marielle Heller
Amy Herzog
Andrew Hinderaker
Cory Hinkle
Richard Martin Hirsch
Lucas Hnath
J. Holtham
Les Hunter
Sam Hunter
Chisa Hutchinson
Arlene Hutton
Laura Jacqmin
Joshua James
Julia Jarcho
Kyle Jarrow
Karla Jennings
David Johnston
Nick Jones
Julia Jordan
Rajiv Joseph
Jeremy Kareken
Greg Keller
Anna Kerrigan
Boo Killebrew
Callie Kimball
Krista Knight
Larry Kunofsky
J. C. Lee
Dan LeFranc
Andrea Lepcio
Steven Levenson
Michael Lew
EM Lewis
Jeff Lewonczyk
Kenneth Lin
Matthew Lopez
Stacey Luftig
Kirk Lynn
Mariah MacCarthy
Laura Lynn MacDonald
Kara Manning
Ellen Margolis
Ruth Margraff
Tarell Alvin McCraney
Carly Mensch
Molly Smith Metzler
Charlotte Miller
Winter Miller
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Rehana Mirza
Michael Mitnick
Alejandro Morales
Desi Moreno-Penson
Dominique Morisseau
Itamar Moses
Gregory Moss
Megan Mostyn-Brown
Paul Mullin
Julie Marie Myatt
Janine Nabers
Peter Sinn Nachtrieb
Brett Neveu
Qui Nguyen
Don Nigro
Dan O'Brien
Dominic Orlando
Jamie Pachino
Kristen Palmer
Tira Palmquist
Peter Parnell
Steve Patterson
Daria Polatin 
Craig Pospisil
Jessica Provenz
Michael Puzzo
Theresa Rebeck
Amber Reed
Daniel Reitz
Mac Rogers
Andrew Rosendorf
Kim Rosenstock
Kate E. Ryan
Kate Moira Ryan
Sarah Sander
Tanya Saracho
Heidi Schreck
August Schulenburg
Mark Schultz
Jenny Schwartz
Emily Schwend
Jordan Seavey
Christopher Shinn
Rachel Shukert
Blair Singer
Crystal Skillman
Mat Smart
Alena Smith
Tommy Smith
Deborah Stein
Victoria Stewart
Andrea Stolowitz
Gary Sunshine
Caridad Svich
Jeffrey Sweet
Adam Szymkowicz
Daniel Talbott
Lucy Thurber
Dan Trujillo
Alice Tuan
Jon Tuttle
Ken Urban
Enrique Urueta
Francine Volpe
Kathryn Walat
Malachy Walsh
Kathleen Warnock
Anne Washburn
Marisa Wegrzyn
Ken Weitzman
Sharr White
Claire Willett
Samuel Brett Williams
Beau Willimon
Pia Wilson
Gary Winter
Stanton Wood
Craig Wright
Deborah Yarchun
Lauren Yee
Steve Yockey
Kelly Younger
Stefanie Zadravec
Anna Ziegler
(Thanks to Callie Kimball for the alphabetically listed list)

Jul 30, 2010

225 playwright interviews


Amber Reed
Joshua Fardon
Dan O'Brien
Jonathan Blitstein
Dominique Morisseau
Fielding Edlow
Joshua Allen
Peter Gil-Sheridan
Tira Palmquist
Sarah Hammond
Charlotte Miller
Deborah Yarchun
Anna Kerrigan
Luis Alfaro
Jonathan Caren
Jennifer Haley
Sofia Alvarez
Kevin R. Free
Ken Weitzman
Michael Golamco
J. C. Lee
Ruth Margraff
Kirk Lynn
Tanya Saracho
Daria Polatin 
Delaney Britt Brewer
Alice Tuan
Alice Austen
Jeffrey Sweet
Dan LeFranc
Andrew Hinderaker
Brett Neveu
Christine Evans
Jon Tuttle
Nikole Beckwith
Andrea Lepcio
Gregory Moss
Hannah Bos
Steven Levenson
Molly Smith Metzler
Matthew Lopez
Lee Blessing
Joshua James
Chisa Hutchinson
Rob Ackerman
Janine Nabers
Cory Hinkle
Stefanie Zadravec
Michael Mitnick
Jordan Seavey
Andrew Rosendorf
Don Nigro
Barton Bishop
Peter Parnell
Gary Sunshine
Emily DeVoti
Kenny Finkle
Kate Moira Ryan
Sam Hunter
Johnna Adams
Katharine Clark Gray
Laura Eason
David Caudle
Jacqueline Goldfinger
Christopher Chen
Craig Pospisil
Jessica Provenz
Deron Bos
Sarah Sander
Zakiyyah Alexander
Kate E. Ryan
Susan Bernfield
Karla Jennings
Jami Brandli
Kenneth Lin
Heidi Darchuk
Kathleen Warnock
Beau Willimon
Greg Keller
Les Hunter
Anton Dudley
Aaron Carter
Jerrod Bogard
Emily Schwend
Courtney Baron
Craig "muMs" Grant
Amy Herzog
Stacey Luftig
Vincent Delaney
Kathryn Walat
Paul Mullin
Kirsten Greenidge
Derek Ahonen
Francine Volpe
Julie Marie Myatt
Lauren Yee
Richard Martin Hirsch
Ed Cardona, Jr.
Terence Anthony
Alena Smith
Gabriel Jason Dean
Sharr White
Michael Lew
Craig Wright
Laura Jacqmin
Stanton Wood
Jamie Pachino
Boo Killebrew
Daniel Reitz
Alan Berks
Erik Ehn
Krista Knight
Steve Yockey
Desi Moreno-Penson
Andrea Stolowitz
Clay McLeod Chapman
Kelly Younger
Lisa Dillman
Ellen Margolis
Claire Willett
Lucy Alibar
Nick Jones
Dylan Dawson
Pia Wilson
Theresa Rebeck
Me
Arlene Hutton
Jorge Ignacio Cortiñas
Lucas Hnath
Enrique Urueta
Tarell Alvin McCraney
Anne Washburn
Julia Jarcho
Lisa D'Amour
Rajiv Joseph
Carly Mensch
Marielle Heller
Larry Kunofsky
Edith Freni
Tommy Smith
Jeremy Kareken
Rob Handel
Stephen Adly Guirgis
Kara Manning
Libby Emmons
Adam Bock
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Liz Duffy Adams
Winter Miller
Jenny Schwartz
Kristen Palmer
Patrick Gabridge
Mike Batistick
Mariah MacCarthy
Jay Bernzweig
Gina Gionfriddo
Darren Canady
Alejandro Morales
Ann Marie Healy
Christopher Shinn
Sam Forman
Erin Courtney
Gary Winter
J. Holtham
Caridad Svich
Samuel Brett Williams
Trista Baldwin
Mat Smart
Bathsheba Doran
August Schulenburg
Jeff Lewonczyk
Rehana Mirza
Peter Sinn Nachtrieb
David Johnston
Dan Dietz
Mark Schultz
Lucy Thurber
George Brant
Brooke Berman
Julia Jordan
Joshua Conkel
Kyle Jarrow
Christina Ham
Rachel Axler
Laura Lynn MacDonald
Steve Patterson
Erin Browne
Annie Baker
Crystal Skillman
Blair Singer
Daniel Goldfarb
Heidi Schreck
Itamar Moses
EM Lewis
Bekah Brunstetter
Mac Rogers
Cusi Cram
Michael Puzzo
Megan Mostyn-Brown
Andrea Ciannavei
Sarah Gubbins
Kim Rosenstock
Tim Braun
Rachel Shukert
Kristoffer Diaz
Jason Grote
Dan Trujillo
Marisa Wegrzyn
Ken Urban
Callie Kimball
Deborah Stein
Qui Nguyen
Victoria Stewart
Malachy Walsh
Jessica Dickey
Kara Lee Corthron
Zayd Dohrn
Madeleine George
Sheila Callaghan
Daniel Talbott
David Adjmi
Dominic Orlando
Matthew Freeman
Anna Ziegler
James Comtois

I Interview Playwrights Part 225: Amber Reed

 
Amber Reed
 
Hometown: Brooklyn, though I grew up in Michigan.

Current Town: Tokyo.

Q:  Tell me about the Weasel Festival and your contribution to it.
 
A:  Bring a Weasel and a Pint of Your Own Blood (link: http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=136324809723487&index=1), now in its fifth summer, is a festival of adaptations by current and former Brooklyn College playwriting MFA students.  Karinne Keithley, Kate Ryan, Erin Courtney, and Mac Wellman founded the festival and each year it's produced entirely by the playwrights whose work will be performed the next year.

This year, Corina Copp, Ben Gassman, and Kobun Kaluza--all wonderful, very different writers--have adapted biblical apocrypha.  I'm in Japan now, sadly, but made a short video concerning the book of Tobit that will be shown as well.

Q:  What else are you up to?
 
A:  I'm writing a new play called "Red Flamingoes, Their Similarities to the Skies" and some fiction, and working on my Japanese language skills.  "For the first time we meet.  Please be kind 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 played a giant Velveeta in our fourth grade musical about dairy foods.  It only occurred to me about three years ago that Velveeta is neither.

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

A:  The idea that theater is something to be understood.  "Is this art?  What does it mean? What sort of person will I appear to be if I like or dislike it?"--when art, at its best, is no more reducible or subject to explanation than life, or the world, or whatever one might call the sum of our awareness and unawareness of everything.  It's not a problem exclusive to theater; art museums address this kind of anxiety by covering walls in long paragraphs and draping audio guides around every neck, but too often I think such explications just carry people even farther away from direct experience of the art, and at worst supplant real experience entirely. 

While there aren't any audio guides in theater yet, often as not, the play itself will ponderously unveil some terrible, obvious message.  And when it doesn't--when it's, say, Gertrude Stein's A Family of Perhaps Three--nine times out of ten, people like my mother (who is very smart, but considers Rent daring) feel shut out, like they just don't get it.  But there's nothing to get.  I don't "get" the moon, or the look of people's faces on my street in the middle of a weekday, but here I am and there it all is (thank God!).  I'd love for my mom and everyone like her to be able to trust the integrity of their own experience again: I was here for this, and possibly thought or felt certain things during it, which may or may not be readily communicable--and that's it.  There's nothing more to it.

Or just more joy, more amateurism, and fewer dead children as plot grenades.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?
 
A:  Mac Wellman, of course, from the moment he remarked that one of the great fallacies of American theater is that talking is a form of communication.  And the other members of a playwriting cabal called Joyce Cho: Scott Adkins, Kelly Copper, Rob Erickson, Karinne Keithley, and Sibyl Kempson.  Karinne rounded us all up after graduating from Brooklyn College because it seemed too sad not to see each other anymore.  We knock around ideas and egg on each other's radicalism.  The Chos are more or less directly responsible for beating insane old dreams of personal dominance and self-expression out of me and replacing them with things much more interesting and difficult.  All five have been on a tear with their own work over the past few years--it's been amazing, a real golden age.

From the near past, Arnold Weinstein, too soon forgotten; Gertrude Stein; Jane Bowles.  Herman Melville and Virginia Woolf always feel very present to me, even when writing plays.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A;  Theater that at least starts by addressing the audience in terms of our perfections rather than our limitations. Also, I love feeling that the people behind it recognize that everything about theater is completely crazy and frivolous even as they're throwing themselves into it with everything they have.  Auden said, "To be able to devote one's life to art without forgetting that art is frivolous is a tremendous achievement of personal character."  Shakespeare never forgot, and neither do groups like National Theater of the United States of America or Nature Theater of Oklahoma.

I also share Auden's admiration for protean artists who try one thing after another, not caring if it fails, over those who devote themselves to the perfection of a single thing or type of thing.

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

A:  If you feel comfortable with more professional models of theater-making, that's great, but if not, there are many, many others.  Interest yourself as much as possible in things that have nothing to do with plays.  Build your own intellectual community if you don't find one ready-made.  

More seriously, the first time I met Young Jean Lee, she said I should "make my name more ching-chongy" to get all the Asian grant money.  That's good advice for anyone.

Plugs, please:
I'm out of touch here in Tokyo, but obviously, the Weasel festival!  (link: http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=136324809723487&index=1)  Remaining shows are July 29-30, 2010 at 7:30pm, the East 13th St. Theater, $18/$15 students.   And please see it next year too, and every year after that.

Karinne Keithley is performing Montgomery Park at Mt. Tremper Arts Center in the Catskills on July 31, 2010.  It's more than worth the drive. (link: http://www.mounttremperarts.org/karinne-keithley)