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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Dec 28, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 416: Leah Nanako Winkler




Leah Nanako Winkler

Hometown:  Kamakura, Japan and Lexington, Kentucky. I claim both places because I was born in Japan and spent most of my childhood there until my family moved to the United States, where I spent a lot of my formative years. There was also a lot of traveling back and forth in my early life to see my American family on my dad's side while I was living in Japan near my Japanese family on my mom's side and vice versa. I was always immersed in both cultures, and attended school in Japan in the summertime while living in America as well as hoshuko ( a Japanese school for Japanese kids the US) where my mom taught on the weekends, while also attending regular school in Kentucky. These opposite worlds had a severe impact on who I am today which is a defining characteristic of the "hometown" concept.

Current Town:  Astoria, New York.

Q:  What are you working on now?


A:  I'm working on a play with my theater company, Everywhere Theatre Group, and writer Teddy Nicholas , called FLYING SNAKES IN 3D!!! which was a part of the 2011 Ant Fest at Ars Nova and got picked up for the 2012 maintstage season at The Brick Theater in Williamsburg (running Jan 18-29th). It's a play essentially about class division in the theater world under the guise of a hilarious science fiction plot involving a group of multi-cultural heroes fighting mutant flying snakes (a.k.a. rich white people) that are taking over the Earth (a.k.a. theater). It's also about our company's struggle of making collaborative theater in general, especially when the core artists have the disadvantage of being unconnected and coming from poor families. I think it's a timely piece and a lot of sad hilarity ensues as we take on the enormous challenge of making a play about flying snakes, which is essentially better suited for an art form with a much bigger budget like film or television. Most importantly, audiences can throw rubber snakes at the actors during it. You should come!

I'm also working on two television pilots; one about a group of 20-something girl-roomies in Brooklyn who decide to start an escort business and another one with comedian Jen Kwok about an unconventionally beautiful girl who gets dumped by her boyfriend for a thinner woman and finds solace in the underground NY burlesque scene.

Lastly, I'm preparing for a mini-workshop of my play, Death For Sydney Black with New Georges set for April 2012.

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

A:  When I was in elementary school, my Japanese school friends and I were obsessed with Sailor Moon. We use to watch bootleg video tapes and act-out the episodes together after class at one of our houses. The original Sailor Moon stories are really messed up and deep....like they all die horrible deaths multiple times (because they have multiple lives) and lesbian cousins fall in love with each other and cats talk and say profound things about how amidst hardship, life is beautiful and stuff. It got me through a lot of hard times and that's when I started to really see how playing pretend and talking about confusing things with other people through the voices of pre-written dialogue (although we were paraphrasing anime plot-lines) could be really beautiful. I also read a lot of manga, and I'm pretty sure that's where I got my knack for dialogue.

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

A:  That playwrights and artists from underprivileged communities could have a voice on professional stages, instead of those who have no idea what they're talking about go and research them and take credit for their stories.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My teachers who let me explore and be free in theater as a child. One in particular, the awesome Lisa Osterman, who made me read The Deadly Theater when I was like twelve at a public school in KY in the middle of the projects. Also, any NYC theater artist who is constantly struggling but working hard and making beautiful things.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theater that makes me feel things that no other art-form can match up to. This can come in many forms for me, but I am particularly a sucker for visceral things, poetic language, singing, music, modern themes, young people, un-apologetic tones, sex, the combination of many elements, site-specific work, unconventional audience seating, chaos, subtly, slyness and anything that makes me feel extreme emotions. A fantastic movie can make me cry and laugh but a fantastic piece of theater can change my life and whole way of thinking.

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

A:  Take a gamble on yourself and write honestly about what you know. Formulas and insincerity are transparent and people can watch it on their laptops for free. Don't write for the stage unless it needs to be on stage. Also, go see other peoples plays as much as you can and find a mentor whose work you respect at least as much as your own. When you find them, treasure them. Same goes for collaborators.
Most importantly, be inspired by failure, because if you're a playwright, you should be willing to fail a lot or you're doing something wrong.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Come see Flying Snakes in 3-D!!! At The Brick Theater Jan 18-29th! Get your tickets here (https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/pr/899505)

Use the code VENOM for the first two nights to get $12 discount tickets (applicable only for pre-sales, not walk-ups). Come on opening night and join ETG for an VIP after-party!

Also--go see the amazing Emily Davis perform my text in the encore performance of FORTH on January 7th and 8th at 11:30 pm at Magic Futurebox. Arranged by Tommy Smith, directed by Meiyin Wang, with additional text by Leah Winkler (read my text that Tommy used here!) Buy tickets here!
And for the latest news on me, visit www.leahwinkler.org!

Dec 24, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 415: Matthew Stephen Smith



Matthew Stephen Smith

Hometown: Yorba Linda, CA

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q: What are you working on now?

A: I'm working on three projects at the moment. First is a comedy, 7 Ways to Mourn the Dead, in which the ancient royal Trojan family members live their final days of life and/or freedom as neurotic contemporaries in grief counseling. The second is a full-length solo-show, A Gathering of Very Articulate Individuals, that follows a privileged, straight, white male as he attempts to reconcile himself with those he's loved and hurt most, all the while accidentally plunging to his death in two and a half seconds. The third is a three act play, Co-Op, that follows a few months in the life of a socialist student cooperative during the '07/'08 presidential primaries.

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 thirteen I attended a wedding--more specifically, a wedding reception--during which I had to sit between a man and a woman who were in the process of getting a divorce. Knowing no one else at the wedding except my immediate family, all of whom had other friends to chat/dance up, I was stuck fielding questions, insults, stories, etc., between the soon-to-be-not couple. Over the course of a few hours, they became these drunk, iridescent personalities that were funny, edgy, sad, insufferable, and still inconceivably in love (at least it seemed to me) all at once. That was the first time I could articulate to myself that battles between people don't exist primarily on binaries of right and wrong/good and evil, but in the messy matrices of the personal.

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

A: Money. I have three wishes for the genie in this lamp. Show me what theater is like when admission is always free. Show me what theater is like when every ticket is seventy-five (heck! one hundred!) dollars. Show me what theater is like when admission is a voluntary donation.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: Panoply Performance Laboratory ( http://www.panoplylab.org/ ). They are my friends. Also John Guare. Even at this stage in his career, his writing takes exuberant risks that many writers half his age don't even dare approach.

Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A: I'm hard pressed to name a kind. But when I'm excited by a piece of theater, I can't shut up about it.

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

A; Sheila Callaghan already gave the perfect response on your blog... http://aszym.blogspot.com/2009/06/i-interview-playwrights-part-7-sheila.html ...I can't improve upon it..

Q: Plugs, please:

A: Monday, January 16th at Vaudeville Park http://www.vaudevillepark.org/ in Brooklyn, NY. A semi-staged reading of A Gathering of Very Articulate Individuals complete with a bar, large storefront windows, and a teeny chandelier.

Dec 23, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 414: Jerome Parker


Jerome A. Parker

Hometown: The South Bronx, NY

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Two musical projects. One is based on an opera and had a reading at the Public this summer. I'm spending the next months working on the music for that piece. The other is an actual opera - a jazz, opera - that I'm working on with some composer friends that I met while I was in LA. Also, I'm very into the web and the possibilities that come with viewing theater online. I just found out how easy it was to execute and I'm itching to start something on a more regular basis.

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 grew up on the top floor of an apartment building. From my windows I could see Yankee stadium in the distance that would light up when games were being played or fireworks displayed. I felt as though we lived in a penthouse and that the fireworks were celebrating something that had to do with me and my family. Anyway, my brother is, and has always been, a DJ and would spend hours mixing music and making tapes/samples. He would be in the zone, and I would be found sitting in his room, staring out the window with music washing over me, thinking about my future. My brother, my family, music, my childhood, and being in the zone all influence me as both a writer and a person.

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

A:  One thing...?

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  As a young theater maker I devoured everything by Pinter, O'Neill, Genet and Sondheim. And I've never turned down a book by Baldwin, Morrison, Genet and D.H. Lawrence.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  The last great play I saw was Jerusalem. It was epic, the characters were grimy and smart, lots of storytelling within the story, and Mark Rylance - wow ! - a force of nature. I try to stay away from timid, safe plays and love plays that push the form in some way. The first great new play I saw: Our Lady of 121st Street. That one and King Hedley II made me want to become a playwright.

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

A:  Get it done, rewrite, apply! And then start all over again. Invest in your future now. The one play of mine I've yet to see/hear, is the one that opened lots of doors for me as a writer. It's epic with grimy, smart characters: Miracle on Monroe.

Q:  Plugs, please:




A:  The Fire This Time Festival - January 19th - 25th @ the Kraine Theater. My play, DIG, directed by LA Williams, will be featured. It's a short story of a homicide detective obsessed by one of his cases: an under-aged, street walker named Indigo.

www.jeromeAparker.net

Dec 21, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 413: Caitlin Montanye Parrish


Caitlin Montanye Parrish

Hometown:  Atlantic Beach, FL

Current Town:  Los Angeles, CA

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I just wrote a short play called 10 Dimensions for Ten at The Gift Theatre in Chicago, and I'm also writing a new full-length called Uncanny Valley that will be workshopped this summer in the DCA Incubator series. I'm also writing a number of TV pilots. And doing homework. And producing a monthly live variety show, the LA chapter of The Encyclopedia Show (originally created by Chicago geniuses Robbie Q. Telfer and Shannon Magnuson).

Q:  How would you characterize the theater scenes in Chicago and LA?

A:  I don't really feel qualified to comment on the LA scene, yet. I've been in grad school, and any spare time is immediately commandeered for sleep. The Chicago scene is my favorite environment on Earth, a loving and bracing community of insanely talented people with long memories: they remember who brought whiskey to strike, and they also remember who was a jackass to the crew. Forever. And, you can't beat the variety or quality of shows.

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 grandmother, a deliciously boozy WASP who somehow ended up in the South, told me when I was seven that you weren't really well-read until you'd read all of the Bible and all of Shakespeare, and decided which one to believe. And then she taught me how to make martinis. The combination set me on a direct course to theatre.

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

A:  I'd make it required in schools.

Q;  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A;  The playwrights I re-read the most are Mickle Maher, Tom Stoppard, Caryl Churchill and Margaret Edson. There's a heightened quality to their work that's always fun to revisit, because I know it's highly unlikely that I've caught every trick they've snuck in. I really wish Margaret Edson would write a second play.

Mike Daisey. Genius.

Robbie Telfer, Shannon Magnuson, Christopher Piatt, and Ian Belknap run three of the most original shows in Chicago. They're not theatre, per say, but they're sure as hell theatrical. The Encyclopedia Show (Robb and Shannon) is an amazing monthly combination of vaudeville and literature. The Paper Machete (Christopher) is a weekly live periodical, a salon in a saloon, he would say. And WRITE CLUB (Ian) is a monthly, three round, bare-knuckle writing match. All these shows boast a wide variety of contributors, many of whom spend the bulk of their time in Chicago theatre. All three shows are challenging the notion of what performance can and should be. Go see them.

Anyone who shows up and gives their all to a play, for little to no money, is my hero. Anyone who shows up and gives their all to a bad play is a hero by any standard.

But Erica Weiss, who's dramaturged and directed almost every play I've written, is my theatrical hero. She is the most steadfast and intelligent director I've ever encountered, and no one understands scripts better. No one. Any playwright who works with her is better for it. I understand when writers are reticent to take suggestions from directors - not every director knows what's best. But, I can count on one hand the number of times I've refused one of Erica's suggestions, watched it play out, and been right. It's like she has absolute pitch for theatre. She hears it and knows immediately if it's right or wrong. She's also very, very funny. And makes me tea when I write. She is, in short, a total baller.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Urgent, and current, and intelligent, and fraught. That's the sweet spot.

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

A:  Write. Constantly. Get feedback. Take feedback. But most importantly:

If and when you are lucky enough to have a play produced, it will have been the result of unbelievably hard work on the part of lots and lots of people. You did not do it all yourself. You are not magic. Thank every single person in your cast, on your crew, on the design team. Thank everyone who helped fundraise. Thank everyone who offered to run the box office for one night. They are showing up, and stepping up, because they love theatre. They are giving you a gift you cannot repay. All you can do is strive to be worthy of their faith, and their aid. If you are an asshole to the people who have helped you, because you are laboring under the delusion that you are the most important, sparkly cog in the theatre wheel, then you are useless, and you have failed as a human.

Q;  Plugs, please:

A:  Ten at The Gift Theatre, in Chicago, starting January 5th. (http://www.thegifttheatre.org/now.html) Pretty much go see anything they produce, their track record is ridiculous. My play A Twist of Water is going to be in New York at 59E59 in October of 2012, please come see that. And every month I host The Encyclopedia Show LA (http://www.theencyclopediashowla.com/), along with a number of wonderfully strange Angelinos. Please come and have a drink with us.

Dec 20, 2011

I've finally updated my blog to the new modern kind of blog

With all the buttons, etc.  Unfortunately, when I switched over it imported an old blogroll.  So I think some people are missing.  Am I missing you?  Pls tell me if I am.

Dec 19, 2011

I Interview Playwrights Part 412: France-Luce Benson



France-Luce Benson

Hometown: Miami, FL

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q: Tell me about The Talk.

A: One might describe it as a Caribbean /Immigrant take on an After School special gone horribly wrong. Seriously, it’s a comedy/drama about a woman who never had the freedom to explore her own sexuality confronting her adult daughter who after many long years of ambiguity has finally embraced her own. It also explores how time and loss can begin to bridge the gap between mothers and daughters. As a first generation Haitian-American, I always write from that perspective. It is who I am, what I know, and an important piece of my artistic mission. So this play continues my examination of culture clash, identity, and the complex social conflicts specific to immigrants of foreign lands. Manu, the mother, comes to realize that while holding on to the traditions and conventions that preserved her cultural identity – she sacrificed her own desires as a woman. I also thought it would be fun to write a middle aged woman from a foreign country trying to figure out how to use a sex toy.

Q: What else are you working on?

A: Boat People, a full length play about a family in 1980’s Miami who illegally shelter a political exile from Haiti. It is set against the backdrop of the Duvalier dictatorship in Haiti, and the increasing tensions that existed in Miami during this period. Hundreds of Haitians were risking their lives to escape the brutality of the dictatorship, only to be imprisoned under inhumane conditions in detention centers. Meanwhile, immigrants from other countries seemed to be welcomed with open arms. This was also when the A.I.D.S. epidemic sky rocketed in America. There was still not much information and research and the C.D.C. at one point declared it a Haitian disease. The protagonist in the play is a teenage girl ashamed of her heritage and we follow her journey into acceptance and pride. I am currently developing this play in the New Perspectives Theatre’s Women’s Work Lab.

I am also honored to be working on a screen adaptation of Edwidge Danticat’s “Caroline’s Wedding”. It’s a feature length film produced and directed by Easmanie Michel.

Finally, I’ve just submitted a proposal for a commission from the Alfred P. Sloan grant to write a stage play based on Jean Dominique.

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

A: I don’t know that I could pinpoint one defining moment. I do know, however, that when I was growing up there was a lot of discrimination in Miami and the Haitian community was the target of a great deal of negative stereotyping and even aggression. Many Haitian-American kids tried to hide who they were out of fear and shame. I regret to confess that I was one of them. But as I got older, and more informed, I started to appreciate my culture. I began to understand the historical reference point for the aggression. My turning point came when I wrote my first full length play in college. Silence of the Mambo was about a family living in Haiti on the night the Duvalier dictatorship was overthrown. I did extensive research writing this play; studying not only Haitian politics, but history, dance, music, spirituality- all things Haitian. I was fascinated and for the first time I felt an indestructible pride in who I was. It was then that I decided that I would write plays that would celebrate and elevate my culture, and educate others about Haiti’s rich history, legacy, and people.

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

A: More accessible/less elitist.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: Anton Chekov, August Wilson, Lorraine Hansberry, Christopher Durang, and Lorca (just to name a few, but I have many). And, of course, my beloved mentor Milan Stitt.

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

A: Write, write, write. Write everyday, without fail, and make sure you write when you are at your best. Give the best of yourself to your writing.

Q: Plugs, please:

A: The Talk opens on Jan. 19 as part of The Fire This Time Festival

Caroline’s Wedding, my screenplay adaptation begins shooting in 2012

A staged reading of Boat People will take place in 2012 at New Perspectives Theatre