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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Aug 8, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 237: David Holstein




David Holstein

Hometown: New York

Current Town: Los Angeles

Q;  Tell me about your show in Chicago.

A:  About a year and half ago Chicago Shakespeare commissioned my good friend (and brilliant composer) Alan Schmuckler and I to write a musical for their summer family series. We decided to take on a readaptation of The Emperor's New Clothes. In the original fable, there's this kid at the end who's the only one who sees the Emperor for who he is (really naked). So we thought it would be sort of fun to take that kid and essentially make that character into the Emperor's daughter and write a show about how kids can see what their parents can't (and visa versa). I don't really know how to write a children's show. So we set out to write a story that worked at eye level for adults, but that kids could also enjoy.

Q:  What is it like to write for Weeds? Isn't Carly the bomb?

A:  Carly (Mensch) is the bomb. Our offices were across the hall from each other. We thought about stringing some soup cans together so we could talk to each other. Instead we bought Nerf guns and shot them at each other's doors. We even got to write an episode together (ep 9, it's the only episode with a Chekov reference in the title). But yeah, writing for Weeds is awesome. We have a license to kill when it comes to storytelling. That is, there's not a lot of things we can't do or stories we're verboten to tell. Part of that comes from writing on premium cable, but mainly we just have these great actors and ballsy writers who equally encourage us to make dark dark drama as well as slappy happy broad comedy.

Q:  What else are you up to?

A:  Between Weeds seasons I wrote on a new show coming out in October called Gigantic. It's a dramedy for TeenNick about kids of famous actors who run amuck in LA. The network said we could lean towards the edgier side, so I tried to insert the phrase "rickety slut" into the dialogue a lot. It appears in episode 9. I'm also working on a new play that deals with alien abductions and divorce. I'd really like to finish that.

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 15 I had a crush on a girl I was in a community musical with. I thought if I wrote her a screenplay she would fall in love with me. It didn't work.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My senior year at Northwestern, I was told we would have a guest lecturer in our creative writing program for the winter semester. His name was Tracy Letts. I'm not sure if he ever taught another class. Anywhere. He's such a fucking animal. He cursed a lot in class. Killer Joe teaches me so much every time I read it. Same with Martin McDonagh's stuff. It's funny because I don't write those types of plays, but I wish I could. Rolin Jones might be my favorite living writer.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I get excited by theater when I know that what I'm watching couldn't be anything else but a play. Or rather that it needs to be a play. Television is too often about reality, and so I really appreciate when I'm watching something on stage that has created its own reality, with its own rules that couldn't exist in any other medium.

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

A:  Keep writing. Work with your friends. Don't listen to people who yell. Keep some lemon candy in your pocket. And remember that you're never as bad as your worst reviews and never as good as your best.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  A play of mine called The B-Team was recently published. Check it out!
http://www.originalworksonline.com/b-team.htm

And if you're in Chicago this summer, The Emperor's New Clothes is playing at Chicago Shakes on Navy Pier until Aug 29.

Aug 7, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 236: Trav S.D.




Photo by Joe Silva

Trav S.D.

Hometown: Wakefield, Rhode Island

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I am collaborating on an opera with an extremely talented young composer named David Mallamud. It's a cross between Gilbert & Sullivan and Universal horror pictures I call The Curse of the Rat-man.

Q:  Tell me about "No Applause--Just Throw Money"

A:  It's a very personal history of vaudeville and its legacies within show business and American culture in general. It came out at the end of 2005 and required four years of very fun research. The book strives to be entertaining as it delivers information (ironically, most books on this topic just aren't). I would say 98% of its readers (including, thankfully some important critics) prize it on that basis. 2% seem to be old sticks in the mud who only believe something is serious if it's boring.

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

A:  When I was a very small child there was an incident where I got a lot of mirthful attention from a roomful of grown-ups by repeatedly falling on my bottom, bouncing back up, and falling down again. This was my first arena, my first applause. Most of the time I was a quiet, almost silent child. I spent most of my time alone, dreaming. But the materializing of those dreams into concrete action, even foolishness, to be shared with others in order to communicate...this was an entirely distinct phenomenon. When I write, I write for myself, but I write for the room, too. The goal ultimately is universal pleasure. This is why so many people in the theatre go insane.

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

A:  Something to do with the broadness of access. To over-simply, the audience for theatre continues to skew "rich", "white" and "old". When I was in school, they used to bus hundreds of us to the local regional theatre several times a year. There's far less of that now, and if anything there needs to be far more. Theatre (I think) is the one place besides houses of worship where you go and are immersed in lessons of tolerance and empathy, whether its through the play you're seeing...or the very fact of sharing space with other, live, smelly humans. It's absolutely vital to the survival of our democracy that we learn to be civil and listen to each other across all the lines that supposedly divide us. Technology is taking us drastically, horribly in the other direction and it bodes ill. Whether its funded privately or publicly I don't care, but everyone needs to be exposed to the theatre.

There's another side of the coin, of course. One is education and outreach. Kids (and nowadays plenty of adults) need to be taught to sit still for two hours and open themselves to classics. The other side is that producers need to stay in tune with the culture at large. It needs to reflect, or at least incorporate the values and concerns but above all the aesthetics of the broader (i.e., popular) culture. I think Indie theatre does a very good job of this. Off-Broadway and Broadway not so much, although they are getting better, and I am getting more and more encouraged all the time.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Oh the list is so long,but here are a few: Shakespeare, Shaw, Wilde, Charles Ludlam, Joe Orton, Sam Shepard...

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Poetry, but it's so bloody rare. It used to be considered mandatory, now almost no one ever "goes there". Among contemporaries I like Kirk Wood Bromley. And Young Jean Lee gets very interesting, very intoxicating affects by purposefully doing things "wrong". Sometimes editors mistakenly think (because I'm a "vaudeville fan") that I'll automatically enjoy light theater, but as a general rule I hate it. I'm looking for a complex experience...laughter and tears, and with lots and lots of levels. A child should get it, but it should challenge us, too. (I might add to my "seminal theatrical experiences" a production of "Waiting for Godot" I saw at Trinity Rep when I was 13. Burlesque clown Bert Lahr had starred in it several decades before. The emotional reality was completely accessible to me at 13, and since no one EVER knows the answers to its questions, the 13 years old's experience of the play is just as valid as a philosophers. To me, that's the best kind of theatre. Light on the outside, heavy at the center. Just like a Tootsie Pop).

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

A:  Have rich parents and attend Yale.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My next play will be produced at LaMama ETC, but that's not until March of next year. Until then, you can see me act in Ian W. Hill's Spacemen from Space at the Brick Theatre in late August, and perform some of my pop songs with some of my downtown cohorts at Dixon Place in Trav S.D.'s Last Chance Saloon, Sept 24.

I Interview Playwrights Part 235: Chad Beckim





Hometown: Monmouth, Maine

Current Town: Brooklyn

Q:  Tell me about Cookie.

A:  “Cookie” examines a down-on-his-luck writer (fiction, not playwright!) who enters into a green-card-marriage-for-money via the assistance of his only friend. The piece explores racial and sexual stereotypes, hopefully getting some laughs while challenging audience members to examine their own misconceptions about identity, race and culture.

I wrote half of this play in February over the course of two days, and finished the other half two weeks ago at my grandmother’s cabin in Maine. Last week the cast and director blew the second half apart and I rewrote it into the shape it’s in now, which I hope is a good one. It feels good, anyway.

The first inklings of the play came when I overheard a high school kid utter a really horrible offhand slur to an Asian classmate. The comment stuck with me all day and I wondered if it would have been dismissed as quickly if it had been dished out to someone from another ethnic group. Later, when I reached out to a number of friends of Asian descent for their stories, I was shocked by their experiences with what amounts to blatant racism. I’ve since come to believe – generally, mind you – that racism is more widely tolerated against Asians (any disbelievers watch “Family Guy” or find me ANY movie where the Asian guy kisses the anything-but-Asian woman).

Q:  What else are you up to?

A:  I have another play in this year’s Fringe, “…a matter of choice.” Originally produced in 2005, it helped serve as a stepping-stone for a few up and coming careers, including Chris Chalk, Jeremy Strong, Nyambi Nyambi and Sarah Nina Hayon. I’m excited to see what another team is going to do with it.

I’m also working on a bunch of writing projects: “Good Winter,” an adaptation of “The Main(e) Play” for Table Ten Films; a pilot script about NYC almost-40-somethings with the writer/director Robert O’Hara; and have been going back and forth with an L.A. based friends about some “Creepshow” style-webisodes.

I also just started tinkering with a new play about a Lindsey Lohan-esque celebutante who shacks up with an average Joe type guy who helps her fix her career. I think it’s going to play with “Access Hollywood” style mixed media (cell phone/flip cam recordings that could be made by anyone in the street), and explore the long-standing idea that fame really does corrupt.

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

A:  As a kid I read everything I could get my hands on – I was sickly and always had bronchitis and asthma attacks, and was constantly bedridden. We didn’t get cable until I was 13 and it forced me to read. I think that shaped me tremendously. (Interestingly enough, I still won’t have cable in my home to this day.) My youngest brother, his friend and I used to play this game called “Middle of Midnight,” where we’d be in their rec room, doing normal life things, and suddenly one of us would should out, “Middle of Midnight!” and we’d all race to the sofa and cover our heads with an old blanket. We were writing scary things without even realizing it.

I didn’t start “playwrighting” until I was 30 (I only dared to start calling myself a playwright a couple of years ago). My friend – the writer/director Robert O’Hara – read a short story I’d written and asked me why I didn’t write plays. When I told him I wasn’t sure if I knew how (six plays later and the process is still as mystifying and exhilarating as ever), he put me through a writer’s boot camp, where I started with a monologue, wrote around that until it turned into a scene, then wrote around that until it turned into a play – which turned out to be “…a matter of choice.”

Prior to that, I remember writing a lot, just for me. I didn’t show it or share it with anyone. There’s this poem that I love that talks about loving something in secret, between the shadow and the soul. That was my early writing – something I loved doing in secret.

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

A:  The notion that a play lives or dies based on reviews is just unacceptable. Careers can be derailed by bad – or just plain negative – reviews, and the glee with which some of these critics eviscerate plays and playwrights is morally unacceptable.

Earlier this spring, some playwright friends and I were discussing the new offerings of the season, lamenting the fact that we couldn’t afford most of them (the consensus was that $20 was the most we could afford). This is a group of established writers who know the NYC theater landscape who can’t afford to see the work that’s being produced. And if we – real aficionados – can’t go because we can’t afford it, then who’s going?!? Most theater is unaffordable. (And producing theater is increasingly unaffordable, but that would be a third thing to change about theater, and I’m already over my limit.)

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  The first NYC play that I ever saw that made me catch my breath was “Our Lady of 121st Street” by Stephen Adley Guirgis. I remember leaving the theater and living in it for the next couple of weeks… I could NOT stop talking about the play. To this day I teach it in my Brooklyn College English 2 course.

So many…Robert O’Hara…Conor McPherson (I didn’t see “Shining City” or “The Weir” but read them on the same night and didn’t sleep afterwards)… early McDonaugh…Guirgis…Shanley… Edward Bond’s “Saved”…so SO many.

And then there are the newbies: Sam Hunter and Tom Bradshaw and Sheila Callaghan and Kris Diaz and Annie Baker and Brendan Jacobs-Jenkins…there are so many up and comers out there who are bringing it, and it makes me happy to be coming up alongside them now. (I could name names forever; I’m going to submit this interview and remember someone important and curse myself.)

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I like theater with heart and claws – that is, theater that makes you feel and theater that takes a bite out of you. I want to leave the theater feeling like I have a little bit of slime on my hand – you know, like when you shake someone’s hand and there’s something that just doesn’t feel right that you’re not able to immediately wash off? That’s my shit, man – that’s the good stuff.

If I leave a play and immediately forget about it, you know, the whole, “Good play, let’s get some pudding,” thing, then what was the point? I WANT to be moved…I WANT to be affected…I WANT to have a play shake me to my core and make me feel a little different and think a little different and make me question myself or take me back to those halcyon days of youth and my first few years in New York City.

Make me feel something. Make me think something. Love me hate me hurt me break me.

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

A:  My Brooklyn College syllabus reads, “Reading and writing begets improved reading and writing.” A lot of writers that I know don’t read, and I don’t get that. Also, you have to be kind to yourself – there’s a legion of people out there - and I’m not even talking about critics – who will gladly tear you down. You have to be kind and patient and take care of yourself.

(When I was an actor I had a teacher tell me, “If there’s anything else in the world that you can do and be happy doing, you should do that instead.” When she said it, I thought, “Who the fuck are you?” But I get it, and it’s something that I tell some of my students to this day. Because in the end, if my miniscule opinion is enough to shake your belief in yourself and your work, this might not be the thing for you.)

More importantly, you have to work harder than everyone else. As strange as it may sound, I get myself to write by imagining that someone else whose work I respect is writing at that very moment and that they’re going to write something brilliant and I’ll be left in the dust. The way I look at it, the actual writing (the work!) – particularly the focus and time commitment – is the one thing in this business that I have control over.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  
www.cookietheplay.com - Entry #1 into this year’s FringeNYC.

www.freedpurplemonkeytheatrics.com - Entry #2 into this year’s FringeNYC.

www.partialcomfort.org - soon presenting the World Premiere of Sam Hunter’s “A Bright New Boise.”

www.tabletenfilms.com - Eventual producer of “Good Winter,” my adaptation of “The Main(e) Play.”

www.adoveonfire.com - This is the Bill Brittelle, a close friend who’s doing some pretty amazing things to the Contemporary-Classical music scene.

Aug 6, 2010

I Interview Playwrights Part 234: Ruben Carbajal




Ruben Carbajal

Hometown: Racine, Wisconsin

Current Town: Jersey City, NJ

Q:  Tell me about Subdivision.

A:  It's a play I developed with the Soho Rep Writer/Director Lab and director Laramie Dennis. A decade after the first draft, it is at last being produced by Chicago’s Gorilla Tango Theater starting August 4th. It’s about a single mother and her two young sons who invent and converse with imaginary versions of their absent, hard-drinking Father. When he finally does show up, all hell breaks loose. It’s kind of a menacing comedy.

Q:  What else are you working on?

A:  I'm kind of like a dog that buries bones and forgets where he hid them. I always have several scripts going at once. I lose track, rediscover them and pick up where I left off. Right now I'm extending this one-minute piece into a play made up entirely of death scenes. I’m midway through a holiday story, putting the finishing touches on a short that involves the last living man to have read a book. There’s also a screenplay.

Q:  Tell me about your day job(s). What is it like to work for the NBA?

A:  I've been freelancing for eleven years. One of my continuing gigs has been working in the script department at NBA Entertainment. I’m part of the team that produces the live elements of The All Star Games, exhibition matches in Europe/China, and other events. Entering an empty stadium and watching it gradually transform into a full-blown stage for performers like Beyoncé and Alicia Keys never fails to astound me. The job’s given me the opportunity to live in Athens for the Olympics, write a monologue for Arnold Schwarzenegger, script dozens of commercials for network TV, and know my way around Shanghai pretty well. I also love the people I work with—it’s really an all-around great gig. The only problem is that in the downturn of 08' I lost almost all of my other clients, and it’s been tough in this economic climate to find new ones.

Q:  Your bio describes you as "spending the first nineteen years of your life praying to get out of your hometown of Racine, Wisconsin" but goes on to say that you now spend much of your time "talking, writing and thinking about Racine, Wisconsin."

A:  You can leave Racine, but it never leaves you. It's a small city on Lake Michigan between Milwaukee and Chicago, probably best known for cornering the market on kringle, a delicious Danish pastry. The New York Times recently referred to Racine as “The Hamptons of the Midwest”--which made many familiar with the city ponder the question: Was the reporter on street or prescription drugs? It’s also the prom capital of the world. If you don't believe me, you can check out The World’s Best Prom, a documentary I co-produced, on Netflix Instant or here for free. My first published play, The Gifted Program is set in my hometown circa 1986, and is about the last remaining members of Washington High's Dungeons & Dragons club.

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

A:  During a parent-teacher conference in grade school, my Mom was assured that I was a good student, but that whenever I had a book report or an assignment due, I would insist on creating a skit at the last minute as a substitute.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  In the early 90’s I saw some of David Bucci's work in Providence. He’s the reason I started writing plays. Keith Johnstone’s book Impro was and is a great influence. My original plan was to move to a mid-sized city and start a theatre company. I took what I thought would be a six-month detour to visit New York. I’ve been here fifteen years. So I have tremendous respect for Matt Slaybaugh, who is living out my dream with Available Light in Columbus-- he's also someone who really understands the contemporary landscape and has found a way for theatre to fit into it. I'd be lying if I didn't mention your plays and your blog (a resource I would’ve killed for starting out) as a kick in the ass.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Blame my Midwestern background, but I write mostly conventional, naturalistic plays. Personally, though, I love stuff that pushes boundaries. I like being placed off-center, challenged, scared. Stuff like Albee's Tiny Alice, Pinter's The Dwarfs. Young Jean Lee's The Shipment is one of the most daring and satisfying things I've seen in a while. Really loved Clubbed Thumb’s recent production of Anne Washburn’s The Small.

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

A:  Listen. Pay attention. If you don't write it down, it doesn't exist.

Everyone says this, but it’s true: make your own theatre. Lately I’ve been too exhausted to follow my own advice, but in the past this has paid off for me.

One of my favorite quotes on writing: “Work calmly, joyously, recklessly on whatever is in hand.” – Henry Miller

Q: What are some writing tools you can't live without?


A:  When I'm on my laptop, I keep a Notezilla sticky pad open to capture quick notes/brainstorms in the moment.

In my back pocket, you'll find this cheap but reliable index card holder, which is perfect for keeping lists and jotting down quick notes. No batteries or wifi required.

Another lo-fi item I can't do without is a padfolio, which I use for meeting notes and writing offline. You can go high-end with these things, but I like the fact that this model is durable, easy to care for and if lost, easily replaceable.

Q:  Plugs, please:


A: 
Subdivision, Directed by Kara Beth Karstedt at Gorilla Tango Theatre in Chicago opening August 4th

My short play Car & Carriage Collide will be in the August issue of Instigatorzine.

Adam and I both have a monologue in the recently-published DPS anthology Outstanding Men’s Monologues, Volume 2, edited by Craig Pospisil, another playwright you should most definitely check out.

A film adaptation of David Bucci’s explosive and hilarious play, Altamont Now is now out on DVD.

I’m looking forward to Daniel McCoy’s play GROUP, directed by Heidi Handlesman.

Heidi’s the founder of Potluck Plays, a reading series where I recently caught Larry Kunofsky’s Your Boyfriend May Be Imaginary. I was blown away with the script’s deft mix of humor and underlying sadness. If there’s a company out there full of ambitious twentysomethings looking for a play that feels like a party, but also has a lot going on, look no further. I’m dying to see this on its feet.


PLAYS BY RUBEN


Essays on Nerve

 

Four playwrights write essays on my play Nerve.

Gus Schulenburg, whose came up with this project, writes, "I feel like this kind of deep reading is missing from our discourse, and when it does occur, it's usually lavished on dead people. I want us to talk meaningfully about plays that are being written now."

They started with Nerve, a play written in 2003/04, my thesis play at Columbia for my MFA.  It was workshopped in 2005 and produced in NYC by Packawallop in 2006.  The 8th and 9th productions of the play will take place this fall in London and Los Angeles.  I hope many more will follow.

Larry Kunofsky:  Some Nerve
Brian Pracht --  On Nerve
Crystal Skillman: Nerve: The Teeny Little Corners of Fears and Longing
August Schulenburg --Under the hood of Nerve

I Interview Playwrights Part 233: Martyna Majok



Martyna Majok

Hometown: Bytom, Poland and later, Kearny, (North) NJ and Chicago, IL

Current Town: New Haven, CT

Q:  Tell me about Mouse in a Jar.

A:  Mouse in a Jar is my curiosity about our defense and protection of the things and people that harm us. And the notion of saving someone – what lives a little deeper under the surface of that desire. In its marketing, the LIDA Project in Denver called it subterranean punk – a horror story about underground life forms, Stockholm Syndrome and the grace of bondage. Things are darkly magical and personified. The house breathes. Or it heaves, rather. A man’s leather belt turns into a whip, then a snake, then gauze. Cicadas and coughs are music. I wanted to tell the story of this immigrant family living in the basement, under domestic violence and illegality, the mother’s unwillingness to leave and her children’s determination to change that. But I have issue with the way a lot of “domestic violence stories” are told onstage and in film – which is alienating, for the most part, and melodramatic. So Mouse in a Jar is expressionistic, with mystery and (I hope) humor and dark magic. And there were to be no victims. Everyone would have agency and ferocity and conviction.

Q:  What else are you working on?

A:  I just finished a draft of a play. I think it’s about self-fulfilling prophecies and our relationships with our enablers. Oh no… I just discovered a pattern…eh, fine. At the play’s center is a newly-orphaned skeptic who has just inherited a fortune-telling business, an unconventional street performer that founds a new art that stimulates senses we didn’t know we had, and the people of their crumbling neighborhood that seek things from them both. It may also be about sex and desperation. And loss and storytelling. And the magic of danger. And the currency of punishment. Pardon the excitement and conjunctions – it was just born last week. I haven’t named it yet.

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

A:  One day, I came home from school to find a dismembered pig in the living room. There were raw pieces of it separated on plates on the floor. And those plates were lining the hallway that led to my room. The first piece I saw was a pinkish hoof. Second, a pinkish leg. A thigh, third. The second thigh. Intestines. The segments, I realized, their placement, had a logic. A progression. I remember understanding I’d eventually find the head. This terrified me. But I had to be in my bedroom, locked, by 4:30. There was no other way. As I walked down the corridor of meat, I remember feeling scared at first, then nervous, then anxious and finally eager. By the time I found the head, I was disappointed. It was pretty much exactly as I’d imagined it. Bugged eyes. Little teeth. Skin like one big scab.

I remember my mother asking me later if I wanted to know why there was a dismembered pig in our house. I told her at that point, I didn’t care.

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

A:  Health insurance. With dental.

Also, less characters communicating in well-read references and psychotherapeutic parlance. Less commenting, more drama. Less manufactured quirk. More live, simple music onstage like humming or whistling, voices untrained but trying, sounds born from unpredicted parents. More unpredictability and subversion all ‘round.

But to each one’s own.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Sarah Kane.

I have never felt more intimate with a writer for the stage. I think the fourth scene of Phaedra’s Love between Phaedra and Hippolytus is the most perfect scene ever written. Her boldness to present the truths she saw is flooring. And a call, I feel. A challenge to present the heights and depths of things – baldly and disturbingly, if need be, however feels honest. She dared to be intense and naked; she communicated by peopling her plays with primal, fractured, hungry, hunting characters going to the ends with everything they have until there’s nothing left. Her language is able to boil down the densest, most complicated notions and translate them economically into bitingly poetic, active dialogue. She pushes me to dare.

And then there are the unpublished, unproduced gestures of theatrical heroism. People that read drafts and attend shows, all with their own past and present struggles and limited time in existence, gifting the writers of those drafts and the creators of those shows with their attention. I respect those that believe in a thing enough to work its offices and clean its toilets. Then read your draft.

The mentors. Paula Vogel, Ken Prestininzi, Aaron Carter and others, past, present, future.

Also, the city of Chicago is my theatrical hero.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theatre that makes my body react. Makes me gasp or tense. Shiver, laugh, weep. If a show makes me weep, it stays with me always. I think what does it are gestures of striving and rawness. I remember some point in Anne Bogart’s Hotel Cassiopeia just broke me. I think it had to do with offering. I remember feeling this sense of communal loneliness and finding it so achingly beautiful and acceptable. I’d witnessed the kindness of offering and so kindness, in the world, I understood, was available. Recently, Ivo van Hove’s Teorema unstitched me. That was a show of blazing, vulnerable, violent lust co-existing with simple kindnesses – a young, able man adjusted an older, tired man’s leg to facilitate his more comfortable rest and I lost it. But, for me, that gesture had to be paired with the intense, familiar ugliness of those characters’ raging desires. That made me see the kindness. “Thank you” at the end of Sarah Kane’s Blasted is catastrophically kind. It’s real – we’re all actually still children. I see goodness best amongst a lot of cruel. I love a theatre that gropes for beauty in the dark. I love to leave ravaged, carrying something that will gnaw me until I look at it.

So, one that recognizes our fears and desires. Or that we fear and desire.

I’ve been especially excited about the urgency and liveness of devised work/performance art lately. Its drama of deceptive simplicity. Its inventiveness. But I still get genuine satisfaction from a well-wrought story with complicated characters. I’d love a marriage of the two. And I don’t think that has to be relegated to the directorial necessarily; I think it can be in the play.

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

A:  I’m humbled by this question. So from one striver-seeker to others:

Respect yourself. Your time and your solitude. Your choices. Decide you are a playwright. Own it. Do the work. Funnel yourself as completely as you can into the task of becoming an honest storyteller (or conjurer of things). Understand it takes time and effort. But attack it, nonetheless. Read things, see things, step away and live in the world. Save some energy to also just be a person (or burn out, be a person for a while, return, repeat). Take yourself seriously enough to get your work read but not so seriously you close yourself to improving. Or become a jerk.

Be good to people. In general.

Don’t blame. Fix.

Question the surfaces of things. Where’s the beauty under ugly. The terror under peace.

In writing/crafting, remember the wealth of human responses you potentially have at your mercy. Our emotions and psychologies are vast and absurd. We’re capable of being frightened, elated, titillated, worried, elevated, seduced…oftentimes, in seemingly nonsensical combinations. And writers/makers can cause them. Burrow deeply in dark places. Endeavor to conjure all kinds of things in us. You have us for a few hours. Wring us.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  I’ll soon begin working with The Satori Group, an exciting experimental theatre ensemble in Seattle, on a yet-to-be-titled play. Also, watch out for another devised theatre ensemble called Overhead Projector. If you’re around New Haven, please do stop by the Yale School of Drama – I’ll have a play up in November. By then, it too shall have a name.