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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Jul 7, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 368: Dana Lynn Formby



Dana Lynn Formby

Hometown: Cheyenne Wyoming

Current Town: Chicago Illinois



Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I am currently working on rewrites for Corazón de Manzana that will be starting previews August 20th of this year. I am also working on a rewrite of my play American Beauty Shop. 


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 brother and I pulled our bow and arrows on each other in our shooting range in the back yard. We were about four feet from each other. Dad had to talk us down. I guess this memory explains a lot about my writing because we were laughing together a few seconds before and ready to kill each other in that next moment. Dad took the shooting range down that afternoon.


Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Charles Smith for being my mentor, and for writing such palpable disturbing images in his plays. Lynn Nottage for her ability to find beauty in dark places.



Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A;  Inexpensive and down to earth. I come from a Blue Collar Background and was not raised to go to the theatre. When I see a show my folks would love, that makes me happy.



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


A:  You have to tell the critic in your brain to go get a bag of chips while you write. He can come back later and tell you stuff, but he shouldn’t be there while you are creating. 


Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My play Corazón de Manzana opens at the DCA Store Front theatre on August 26th and runs through September 26th. Here is a link
http://www.dcatheater.org/shows/show/corazon_de_manzana/


Jul 6, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 367: Dennis Miles


Dennis Miles

Hometown: Santiago, Cuba

Current Town: Silverlake (a neighborhood west of Downtown Los Angeles)

Q:  What are you working on now? 


A:  I have a play idea about a woman whose lover will not marry her and she plots an elaborate revenge.

Q:  How would you characterize the LA theater scene? 


A:  Hit and Miss, mostly miss.  The acting, I find, is almost always good because LA attracts the best theater actors from throughout the country. They come here hoping to act commercially. While they wait, they theater act and that's just great for LA audiences.  The writing is very poor, although  I love Justin Tanner.  Better to see some dusty jewel from Europe or something revived that has survived the test of time, than risk our homegrown crop of scribes.  I often think that exceptional playwrighting is a rare gift indeed.  I love our storefront theaters, and that's what I support.  I stay away from "professional" theater. Leaves me cold. I don't want my art to be ironed out and polished and small theater in LA certainly gives me that a lot.   We have some really great companies, among them:  Anteus, Noise Within, Theater of Note (though not currently), Rude Gorilla Theater, though I haven't seen anything of theirs for a while.  A lot of the time, because of lack of money, I would guess, the set designs and custumes are rudimentary, and attention to the detail is rare.  Still and all, small theater is my art form and, as long as it's not a one person show, I'll go see almost anything that catches my interest and often, theater in LA rewards me handsomely. 

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 11 or so a boy born in Panama moved into my neighborhood.  He was the most aware person I've ever met and he woke me up.  He had enormous curiosity and would see EVERYTHING in town and he'd drag me along.  I learn about theater, movies, music, poetry and literature from him.  His name is Joaquin Baquero. He started a literary club that he called Club Minerva and gave us all, there were 3 of us besides him originally, the names of Greek gods!  I was Mercury.  We would give one another assignments for writing and at the next Saturday meeting we would read what we had come up with.  I started writing then and haven't stopped, pretty much, until now.

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


A:  Those awful announcements at the beginning of the performance.  No, seriously, I'd forbid friends from laughing too loudly, and inapropriately,  when they come see their friends. Ah, I don't know.  I'd encourage writers not to come up with stuff that's obtuse for obtuseness sake.  (You can't do Godot again, no matter how well you try to disguise it)  I'd also insist that time not be broken up unless it makes the story more interesting, which usually, always, is not the case.  Well, that's several things.  But I don't have one huge complaint about theater.  One thing I would like to change about LA theater is to make more of us attend our theaters. I always thought that if small theaters advertised at all our community colleges and high schools, let's say, we could get more people to come see our work.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes? 


A:  Shakespeare, Chekov, Ionesco, Albee, (Virginia Wolf only), Whoever wrote The Apollo of Bellac, Brecht (Mother Courage and Galileo), Lorca (The House of Bernarda Alba).  Beckett. 

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 


A:  Simple, clear, focus on the emotional human, great language, great images, subtle acting (no screaming).

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


A:  I don't have any.  I don't listen to advice myself, so I do my best not to tell people what might work for them.  Artistic writing is an organic endeavor, it is one's life, there's no advice for living out your life, artistic writing is a natural emanation of one's experiences and one's singular mind. 


Jul 3, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 366: Marco Ramirez


Marco Ramirez

Hometown:   Miami, FL

Current Town:  Los Angeles, CA (don't hate)

Q:  Tell me about your play at Dahlia.

A:  Broadsword is a play about a heavy metal band that broke up years ago and is forced to come together because one of their own has died/mysteriously disappeared. It's part funeral-play, part mystery-play. On a good day, I like to think it's one a little Agatha Christie and a little Stephen Adly Guirgis, as filtered through an episode of The X-Files. If that sounds odd, it should - the whole thing takes place in New Jersey.

Q:  What else are you working on?

A:  I'm on the writer's staff for my second season of FX's Sons of Anarchy. That's my very fun day job. Other than that, I'm working on a new play about people who make horror movies in the 1940s (Mister Moonlight, coming to a Literary-Manager's-enormous-pile-of-scripts near 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:  Not sure if this is an answer, but there's an episode of Batman: The Animated Series that still makes me cry.

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

A:  I'd shift our focus to building new audiences. As storytellers, theatre-makers are two or three generations away from becoming totally obsolete, going the way of the brick-layer, the alchemist and the dinosaur. We're competing with streaming media and Transformers movies. Oedipus Rex is losing the battle to Optimus Prime. If we want to stay relevant, we have to keep pushing the form forward and work at getting audiences enamored with the incomparable experience of watching a play.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I caught a production of Point Break: Live in LA that was probably the most theatrical thing I've ever seen (seriously - second only to The Piano Lesson) and the crowd was about 200 wasted Frat boys in DMB T-shirts. In the American theatre, anything ANYONE is doing that brings in the under-50 crowd is worth thinking about, and talking about. I'm not saying Point Break: Live is high art, but it's certainly theatre, and the gentlemen of Sigma Phi were eating it up.

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

A:  See plays, any way you can. Usher for free tickets, sneak in at intermission, punch an old lady in the lobby, I don't care how. See plays you don't expect to like. Let yourself be surprised. A great playwriting teacher once told me, "There's nothing really to learn from watching a masterpiece. There's plenty to learn from watching something imperfect." Take notes, think about what you'd do differently. Don't blame the-state-of-American-theatre for why no one's doing your plays, American theatre is too busy blaming the-state-of-the-American-economy for why they shouldn't be doing plays to begin with. It's your battle. Give them no choice but to say yes. Read more August Wilson. Re-read August Wilson. Read comic books. Listen to old records. Spend too much time on Wikipedia. Talk to old people on the train. Find inspiration in unexpected places.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Broadsword at The Black Dahlia,
http://www.thedahlia.com/

Jul 2, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 365: Warren Manzi



Warren Manzi

Hometown: Methuen, MA

Q:  Tell me about Perfect Crime.   The play is celebrating 24 years and almost 10,000 performances in New York. Did you ever suspect that would be the case when you wrote it?

A:  I always wanted Perfect Crime to be a commercial thriller but I didn’t know it would take off the way it did. I knew that all the rewrites when it first opened strengthened the core of the play. We’ve gained a lot by all the work we’ve done along the way.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Several things at once. Two new stage thrillers are finished and several screenplays are being shopped.

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 mother is my greatest influence because when I was very young she used to read all kinds of mysteries. There were always mystery books around the house. At a young age I read Agatha Christie, Raymond Chandler, Perry Mason, Sherlock Holmes. I became interested in drama in high school and decided to put the two of those things together.

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

A:  Lately there’s too much emphasis on commerciality which has a tendency to create superficiality. I’m very interested in substance. Over the past fifteen or twenty years, maybe even longer, the emphasis has been on flash instead of substance.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Shakespeare is number one. Chekhov, Moliere, Ibsen, Strindberg. Pinter, Tennessee Williams and Pirandello. I’m a huge fan of John Osborne and Tom Stoppard is a genius.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theater that challenges and never panders to the audience yet doesn’t leave them behind. I like plays that take you through a story and keep you on the edge of your seat and on your toes. That’s the most exciting kind of theater to me. For instance, I’ve seen and read King Lear a million times. If I were to re-read it or see a good production of it, I’d still be thrilled by it. It’ll still be as though I’m reading it or seeing it for the first time.

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

A:  It’s a combination of discipline for the writing process and an ability to speak from your heart, from what you feel – of developing a story from what you feel, your past experiences, but at the same time having discipline. Go back to the classics and study them. Why do the plays we consider classic still work? What about them excites you?

I taught high school seniors once and I gave them several plays to choose from as an assignment. They chose Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead by Tom Stoppard. We spent the first two months discussing Hamlet, which Rosencrantz and Guildenstern is based on, and by the time we got to the Stoppard play they were already excited by Hamlet. They became very excited and very successful for that reason. So, look to the classics.

Q:  Plugs, please.

A:  Go see Perfect Crime!

Jun 28, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 364: Mia McCullough



Mia McCullough


Hometown: I was born in Washington Heights in NYC, but mostly grew up in the Hamlet of Hawthorne, NY which is about 11 miles north of the the Bronx. People drive through it, but no one really knows it's there.

Current Town: I've lived in Evanston, IL since 1988. If it had hills it would be perfect.

Q:  What are you working on now?
 
A:  I've been writing and rewriting screenplays all year. I've got one ready to go out the door, and the second one is almost ready. I studied screenwriting and playwriting in college, and opportunities on stage in my 20s led me to forsake screenwriting for a long time. It's good to get back to it. I was feeling a bit burned out on playwriting. I have a play that I started last summer that I think I'm about ready to get back to now. The first draft is half-way...maybe two-thirds done. I've also recently started dabbling in stand-up comedy, which has been a blast. Stretches different muscles, allows me to get back on stage.


Q:  Tell me, if you will, a story from your childhood that explains who you are as a writer or as a person.
 
A:  Hmm. Well. I used to want to be a veterinarian. From the time I was 5 until I was 15, I was pretty dead-set on it. I volunteered at an environmental center for 7 years, I did an internship at the Bronx Zoo, I worked at a vet's office for a summer. The thing about working with animals, there's a lot of death. Short life spans and all that. And sometimes you have to kill the animals you work with, either to end their suffering or to feed them to another animal. I guess it's made me very unsentimental. I have very little patience for sentimental, sappy entertainment; for being emotionally manipulated by film or theatre. I resent soundtracks that tell me what I'm supposed to be feeling. Which is not to say that I'm cold or I don't want to feel things. I'd rather present a truth to the audience and let them have their own emotions about it.

Q:  If you could change one thing about theater, what would it be?
 
 
A:  I would call for a moratorium on Shakespeare productions and teaching of Shakespeare in schools.
First, Shakespeare is the most produced playwright in the nation. I counted one year, (and I didn't count the theatres with Shakespeare Festival in the name), and there were 136 productions of Shakespeare plays. The next most produced playwright was Sarah Ruhl at 23 productions. The man has been dead for almost 400 years. He's not the most relevant voice, but he is the most heard. It's ridiculous. It smacks of idolatry. And theatre people get very upset with me when I talk about this, because he's their Jesus. I'm attacking the core of why many, many people embraced theatre in the first place. But what they're not seeing or not acknowledging is how many people Shakespeare turns away. Because that population doesn't enter their orbit.


I think force-feeding high school students Shakespeare has done more to kill the American public's interest in going to theatre than anything else. Especially with the influx of immigrants in this country, who struggle with modern English, much less Shakespearian English. The plays are inaccessible. If students read more plays about people who looked and talked like them --- and those plays are out there --- they would feel like theatre includes them and they might be more interested in taking part in it, being part of what makes it thrive.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Today I found out that Lydia Diamond's play Stick Fly is going to Broadway, so today she's my hero. I admire a lot of writers who came before me, but my heroes are the people who slog along with me, especially the network of Chicago playwrights who support each other and help each other up the rungs of this ridiculous profession. I live in a very generous community, and even when people move away we still claim them as our own, and cheer them on. I'm proud to be a part of that.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love intimate little plays that give me a view into a world I would not otherwise see, like I'm looking through a peep-hole. When I go to a play I want it to teach me something, hold me captivated from start to finish, and allow me to feel...something. That's my perfect evening of theatre. If I can get two out of three, I'm still pretty happy, but I'm always hoping for all three.

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

A:  Submit your work everywhere. Don't send it one place and wait to hear back.
Don't keep rewriting the same play over and over. You learn much more by writing the next piece.
It's a craft, and it takes a long time to get good at any craft. Hundreds and hundreds of hours of practice.
Challenge yourself.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My play IMPENETRABLE just received an honorable mention in this year's Jane Chambers Competition. And I've got a couple things in the works, but nothing I'm at liberty to talk about.

Jun 22, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 363: Ellen McLaughlin


Ellen McLaughlin

Hometown:
I was born in Boston, MA, then spent a few years in California where my father was at Stanford, but grew up mostly in DC, where my father taught at American University.

Current Town:
Rinde and I (Rinde Eckert is my husband) have been living in Nyack, NY since 1995, it amazes me to realize. It's 18 miles up the Hudson from Manhattan and filled to the brim with theater folks.

Q:  Tell me about Ajax in Iraq.

A:  The short answer is that the piece was an outgrowth of my residence in 2008 at ART in Cambridge, MA and my collaboration with the 2009 class of graduate actors there.

I wanted to create a work that addressed the American solider's experience in Iraq at the time and ended up pairing the kind of material the class was generating (much of it about what female soldiers were encountering) with an adaptation of Sophocles' AJAX. When Gus approached me about having Flux produce it, I decided I'd update the play and make some rewrites for their production. The Flux production is somewhat revised from the original script and I'm currently working to put together a final version for publication by Playscripts Inc., which has done most of my Greek adaptations.

I enclose here a statement I wrote for a magazine interview back in 2009 that gives the full history of the piece as it was prepared for the ART production:

In the spring of 2006, the Institute at ART approached me to ask if I would write a grant proposal to TCG for the playwright in residence grant and I proposed writing something with and for the students that addressed the war in Iraq, even if it was only indirectly. It just seemed impossible not to address the war as we moved into yet another year of it and there was no end in sight. The residency was a sixteen month residency, three months of which, at a minimum, I would spend in Cambridge. I based the proposal on what I understood of Caryl Churchill's collaborations with the Joint Stock Company. I wanted to collaborate with the graduate acting students not just as actors but as fellow artists. This was partly a function of the material, which I needed their help with. I told them that it seemed to me that the current war is their war rather than my war in the sense that my generation is essentially sending their generation to war. I talked about the Vietnam War as being the war that had formed my political sensibility as this war would form theirs. Since their relationship to the war is so much more immediate than mine, I wanted to know what they had to say about it and what it meant to them and I would work with the material they generated.

I asked them to prepare a series of presentations for me and Scott Zigler, the director of the project. Over the course of several weeks, they were asked to bring in two solo pieces. The first was to be a theatrical treatment of some primary source material, research they’d done themselves, depending on what their interests were. The second was to be based on interviews they’d conducted. The pieces did not need to be about the Iraq war specifically, but they should concern war as a general subject. The research pieces ranged from theatrical presentations on Rumi, Blackwater hearings, and comfort women in the Korean War, to Civil War letters and computer war games the army uses as recruitment tools. The interviews ranged from conversations the students had their grandparents in which stories were sometimes related for the first time, to homeless Vietnam veterans interviewed on the street as well as returning soldiers, often relatives. One particularly moving interview was conducted with a sister-in-law, the wife of a Marine who was then coping with her husband being absent on his fourth tour of duty in Iraq.

During the next round of my residency, we paired the students off and asked them to collaborate with each other to make new pieces based on new research they undertook together. The pieces they brought in as a result of these collaborations ranged widely and used all kinds of theatrical techniques, video, dance and art installation. After seeing this round of presentations, we asked the group to pursue certain issues further and recombined them in larger collaborations. We also gave them the opportunity to follow their own interests and make pieces together in any combinations they found effective. We subsequently saw, among other collaborations, some large dance pieces, surprisingly complete, one of which ended in a Maori war dance, wonderfully executed by the whole company, which I later incorporated into the final play.

During the months I was away from the students, I did my own research and pursued some of my own lines of thinking, including a study of the psychological toll the war has taken on returning Iraq veterans. I hit on the idea of using Sophocles’ Ajax as a structural basis for the piece. It’s a play I’d never studied closely or attempted to adapt, but always thought a chilling analysis of a kind of military trauma.

Ultimately, I went off and wrote the play. It finally took the form of a direct response to the material the students had brought in, addressing their issues but never quoting directly from their work. It is also an adaptation of the Sophocles text, using that ancient play as a means to reflect on and augment the contemporary story.

This was one of the hardest things I've ever done as a playwright, just because there were so many different people's needs to consider and honor and because the material itself was so disturbing and thorny. But it is also, I have to say, one of the most rewarding things I've ever done and I will always be grateful to the original cast at to Scott Zigler for leading me to make something so different from anything I could have made without them.

Q:  What else are you working on?

A:  In August, I'll be going into rehearsals for an Off Broadway production of my play Septimus and Clarissa, which is an adaptation of Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway. it was written in collaboration with Rachel Dickstein and her NY-based company, Ripe Time, and will be performed at Baruch in September.
I've also been working for several years now (with long interruptions) with the composer Peter Foley on a music/theater piece, working title Inconnu, about an incident that took place in France between the wars.

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

A:  They can expect to be asked to write a lot. They average about seven pages a week, often more, and will ultimately write a play at the end of the semester. It's a lot of work, but I do think one has to write to write. There's just no other way to get a sense of the form than to keep taking a whack at it. I also get them to read many, many plays. I bring in a huge box of my own library of plays, over a hundred, every week, and spread them out on the table and they can pick whichever they want to read, but they read at least two a week. Another of my beliefs being that you have to read to write and it's a tricky form--the more you see the vast variety of ways it can be successfully manipulated, the better.

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 taken to see King Lear at Arena Stage in D.C. when I was quite little, maybe ten or even younger. I had never seen anything so terrifying and beautiful, nor perhaps have I since. I don't think I'll ever get over the blinding of Gloucester--that's one of the worst things that's ever happened to me--and when Robert Proskey, who was playing him, came out for the curtain call ripping the bloody bandage from his eyes as he ran into the light, I nearly fainted with relief. But I also remember the woman who played Cordelia, the straight stalk of her body in the light, the courage of her refusal to pander to her father's insane vanity, "Nothing, my lord", the silence after that, the shock of that statement hanging in the air. I remember identifying that moment as being something I wanted to live inside of and understanding it to be at the essence of the theater: a person standing on the stage, speaking the truth. I later played the part and never took for granted the great good fortune I had in being able to do something I had known all my life I'd wanted to do.

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

A:  I'd make it free. It appalls me that the theater, which seems to me to be the most essential and probably the oldest of the performing arts, something we have been doing for each other since we've been performing at all, is now the least accessible, since it is impossible for even the people who want to see it to afford going. Theaters should be open to everyone who wants to come in the doors. Just after 9/11, I was performing down at LaMaMa in a production of The Bacchae with a theater company called Beloved Monsters--a tough and disturbing play for tough and disturbing times. We had not known, of course, when we started rehearsals just how terribly appropriate that play would be for the times we were living through when we finally performed it. It was during those hard days when the rubble was still hot and that acrid smoke was still something you smelled everywhere downtown. People were still so jumpy and tender and in need of company, particularly at night, when they'd often wander into the theater, looking for community and find themselves in the audience, almost by accident. What we found was that by the end of that ancient play, which is about the catastrophic death of a city and an incident that cannot be assimilated, cannot be made sense of but which must be mourned, the audience was weeping as one, weeping for those they never knew who had died just a few blocks south of us. It was phenomenal, such a privilege to do--one of those things I'll always be grateful for, that I had the theater to go to during those nights. It made me feel that I was part of the long heritage of human beings who'd been using the medium to try to make sense of our condition, either by attending theater or making theater down the centuries. This is a medium that should be available to everyone always, a means of comfort and a way of understanding ourselves.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  So many, so many... I was given Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? to read when I was about 12 by an amazingly perceptive school librarian. I remember sitting in the window seat of the library and reading this text in the sunlight (I can still remember the font.) I don't think I'd ever seen a play script remotely like it-- I was astonished by the freshness of the dialogue, the way it sounded like very particular people talking, the daring of the ideas, the vividness of it. I started taking it around the library, looking for friends to read it with because it needed, I knew, to be read aloud to be understood. I remember that I couldn't believe it was possible to do that, write with that kind of accuracy, humor and power. Meeting Albee in the last few years when doing Claire in A Delicate Balance (a dream part for me if ever there was one) has been one of the great thrills of my life (if a trifle terrifying.) Caryl Churchill's work has had a tremendous effect on me--seeing Top Girls at the Public when I was just out of college blew my mind, and Mad Forest at New York Theater Workshop was very important to me. There is such an originality to the theatrical imagination at work there, such intelligence and clarity of voice, it continues to inspire me. And of course there are the obvious greats--Chekhov, Williams, and so forth--if you're lucky enough to see great productions. I worked as an apprentice scene painter at Arena Stage when I was in high school in DC and helped paint the rock for Ming Cho Lee's set for Waiting for Godot and as a consequence got to see the invited dress--I'd never even read the play so it was all a revelation to me. I don't remember the director but it was a marvelous, funny and beautiful production--Max Wright playing Vladimir was heart-breaking, one of the great clowns but also (and this is so often the case) one of the great classical actors I've ever seen. I still remember my amazement at the fact of that play, that, as someone said, "nothing happens, twice," yet the whole of human existence is somehow evoked in its tragedy and absurdity. I walked out of the theater that night and thought, this is what I will give my life to.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I suppose I'm drawn to the Greeks because I love taking on the big stuff. I do find I get bored when nothing is risked. I suppose that kind of theater is just a product of people's fear of failure, which is virtually inevitable when you try to do anything worth doing. But why not take on the hardest things? There are worse things than failing--usually having to do with making nice, forgettable baubles that will never matter to anyone--what's the point of that? Why not put it all on the line? All that's at stake is the size of your soul.

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

A:  Make a mess. Go for broke. Read everything you can, see everything you can, steal from the best, figure out how they did it and do it your way. Hang with people who are inspiring to you, who do things better than you do, hang with people who can teach you stuff. And be ambitious, for god's sake. (See above.)

Q:  Plugs, please:

A: Ajax in Iraq, just a few more performances at this point. Septimus and Clarissa in the fall (Ripe Time). Thanks for the soap box.

Jun 21, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 362: Tom Jacobson



Tom Jacobson

Hometown: Oklahoma City

Current Town: Los Angeles

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Just finished a poltergeist incest musical and will next tackle the second play in The Vesuvius Trilogy. I finished the first in February--it's about a Roman family that puts on a fake Greek play in their private theatre on August 24, 79 AD. The second is Clytemnestra, the fake play they put on. And the third will be about the American archeologists who find the family 2000 years later.

Q:  How many plays have you written?

A:  50 full lengths.

Q:  What is your process like?

A:  10 page outline, many drafts, review by a playwrights group and smart director friends.

Q:  Do you work on more than one play at a time?

A:  I can be researching one play while writing dialogue for another, but I couldn't be at the same stage of two plays simultaneously.

Q:  How would you characterize the LA theater scene?

A:  Very vibrant, best kept secret. More plays than anywhere, thanks to the largest acting pool in the world and the 99 Seat Theatre Plan that allows the best Equity actors to appear in tiny venues for almost no money (with the notion that they'll get attention that leads to paid work in TV and film, which actually works sometimes).

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 high school we spent three months deceiving our classmates with fake devil worship at an abandoned farm outside of town: stage blood, giant candles, pentagrams, machetes, burned bones, notes signed in blood, cow skulls, creepy blue lights, black hoods, stolen cars, etc. We finally had to quit when other kids in our school scared themselves so badly they drove away without looking and had a bad wreck. No one was hurt (they were just drunk) but when we arrived to check out our handiwork we saw ambulances and police cars. The driver of one of those cars only found out it was fake last summer at our 30-year high school reunion.

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

A:  Create a strong link between regional and Off Broadway theatres and the 99 Seat Theatres of Los Angeles. The intimate theatres here could be a fantastic spawning grown for plays that could quickly move to larger venues across the country. It's inexpensive to put on a play in a small theatre here, but the quality is extremely high (most of the time). If plays could be launched nationally or internationally here, that would be ideal. The audiences are smart, daring, and younger than in large regional theatres. The plays are being done here already. If only we could find the missing link.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Most of them are writers: Sophocles, Shakespeare, Moliere, Chekhov, Wilde, Miller, Churchill, Kushner.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Good, complicated storytelling that grabs me emotionally and makes me think. I like narrative and get impatient with unstructured images and characters that don't engage me. I like seeing something I've never seen before. I love to laugh and cry in the theatre--if I do either to the point of embarrassment, I'm a happy theatre-goer.

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

A:  Sleep with everyone. Or at least have lots of friendships with actors, directors, designers and other playwights. Actually, it's probably best not to sleep with them. But fall in love with them, definitely. Those are the people who will get your work on stage and make sure it's great. They will literally get you productions. And once you've found great collaborators, nurture those relationships--nothing will serve you and your plays better.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  I've had terrific reviews for the following shows in Los Angeles in the last 10 years, but little luck getting productions elsewhere. Because they've already been done by wonderful actors working with terrific directors, they're pretty polished scripts. It would be fabulous if a regional theatre would pick one of them up!

Bunbury (3 women, 3 men; 1 set) When he discovers he is only a fictitious character in The Importance of Being Earnest, Bunbury joins forces with Rosaline, Romeo’s never-seen obsession from Romeo and Juliet. Together, they win back their loves and change the world by changing classic literature. Winner of a Ticketholder Award and Garland Award for Best New Play, Critic’s Choice in the Los Angeles Times.

The Friendly Hour (5 women) Based on the actual minutes of a women’s club formed in rural South Dakota in 1934, this poignant comedy charts 70 years of personal and national history, from skinning skunks and julebukking in the 30s to restoring native prairie in the new millennium. Soon to be a short film entitled Prairie Sonata.

House of the Rising Son (4 men) When Trent brings Felix home to New Orleans to meet his father and homophobic grandfather, the family’s demons come slithering into the light. Watchful ghosts, sinister hustlers, and a myriad of parasites lead Felix on a Southern Gothic journey to St. Louis Cemetery No. 1. Critic's Choice in the Los Angeles Times.

The Orange Grove (4 women, 5 men) A small Lutheran choir in its death-throes provides the backdrop for this Chekhovian warning of the impending doom of mainline Protestantism in America . Laughter through tears with nice lemon bars. Critic’s Choice in the Los Angeles Times.

Ouroboros (2 women, 3 men) Two American couples get caught in a chronological palindrome on a trip to Italy . Stigmata, alchemy, adultery and St. Catherine of Siena ’s severed head plague a nun and a minister in this circular love story that is a comedy if performed forward and a tragedy if performed backward. Winner of Best New Play and Production of the Year LA Weekly Awards.

Sperm adapted from Jacques Miroir’s 18th-century play (2 women, 5 men) Pulled from the stomach of a whale, an American whaler is bleached blind and becomes a modern Tiresias in the court of Louis XVI. He seduces Marie Antoinette and sets the king on a path to destroy France and ultimately humankind. A tragicomedy in rhymed couplets. Critic’s Choice in the Los Angeles Times.

Tainted Blood (3 women, 5 men) Oscar Wilde, Bram Stoker, and Arthur Conan Doyle use logic and religion to fend off a seductive vampire in this fang-in-cheek comedy/thriller. Pick of the Week in the LA Weekly, and winner of seven Valley Theatre League Awards.

The Twentieth-Century Way (2 men) is the true story of two actors who hired themselves out to the Long Beach Police Department in 1914 to entrap "social vagrants" in public restrooms. Thirty-one men were arrested, and the ensuing scandal led to an ordinance against "oral sodomy" in California. Nominated for five Ovation Awards, a GLAAD Award and four LA Drama Critics Circle Awards, winner of Outstanding Production of a Play (New York International Fringe Festival), and a 2010 Agnes Moorehead Award (Top Ten Live Performances, Gay City News).

And then I have 25 plays not yet produced--world premieres available! The most recently written are:

The Rosy Fingers of Dawn (2 women, 3 men) Not even the eruption of Mount Vesuvius can stop an inventive and theatrical Roman family from putting on their production of a lost Greek classic, Menander's Clytemnestra. The show must go on!

The Journeys of Yuzu adapted from the ancient Pali manuscript (1 woman, 5 men) A young assassin seeks clues to his origin and discovers a secret that changes the world. Pure evil pursues impure good in this irreverent verse drama about the ultimate action hero.

Los York (3 men) UCLA or NYU? Seduction and betrayal or self-sacrificing love? Otis is stuck between two coasts and his two gay uncles, in the middle of an America living in terror. Choosing a grad school was never this hard.

The Lock of the Five Keys (2 men) An American professor pursuing a lost letter by E.M. Forster disappears in India, provoking a manhunt across three millennia in a play within a play within a play within a play within a play.

Tom's website

Jun 18, 2011

tomorrow

CLOWN BAR
by Adam Szymkowicz
directed by Kip Fagan

Lyrics by Adam Szymkowicz and Adam Overett
Music by Adam Overett

with Alex Anfanger, Brett Aresco, Stephen Bel Davies, Sam Breslin Wright, Jamie Effros, Jessy Hodges, Beth Hoyt, Jessica Pohly, Dominic Spillane, and Steve Stout

Long ago Happy left the Clown Bar and the organized clown crime world to work for the good guys.  Now his junkie brother Timmy has been murdered, and Happy returns to his old life to ask a few questions.  Can he go home again without getting sucked into the seedy clown underbelly of vice and violence?  And will he survive the gun toting clowns who used to be his friends? Or Blinky, the lady clown he left behind?

ONE NIGHT ONLY: Sunday, June 19 at 7 p.m.
Seventh Street Small Stage
at Jimmy’s No. 43
43 East 7th Street (between 2nd/3rd Aves)
6 to Astor Place, R/W to 8th Street, F to 2nd Avenue
Seating extremely limited – for reservations and information please call 212.946.5198