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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Apr 22, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 445: Adam Kraar


Adam Kraar

Hometown: I was born in Chapel Hill, North Carolina and grew up in Brooklyn, Virginia, India, Thailand and Singapore.

Current Town: Brooklyn, New York

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’ve just completed a new draft of THE KARPOVSKY VARIATIONS, a dark comedy about the diaspora of an American Jewish family, set mostly in airports. It was workshopped at The Playwrights’ Center, and I’m continuing to develop it with The New Group.

I’m also writing a play for Theatre Novi Most in Minneapolis, about the marriage of American dance pioneer Isadora Duncan and Russian poet Sergei Esenin. Novi Most has gotten funding to develop the piece and will present a workshop in November.

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 love this question, since so much of who I am as a playwright stems from my childhood. When I was about five, my mother took me to a production of THE FLOWER DRUM SONG. During one of the numbers (I realize now it was “I Enjoy Being a Girl”), this actress sat alone on stage in front of her mirror, wearing only a slip. Seeing a scantily-dressed young woman on stage was a strange and exciting experience, so I loudly blurted out, “Mommy, why is that woman taking off her clothes?” Instantly, this electrical energy surged through the room – it was the audience laughing at what I’d said! I was amazed by the way this energy had a life of its own that was bigger than the individuals sitting there. The experience hooked me on the unique power of live theatre.

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

A:  I’d wave a magic wand, and change the entrenched “second-hander” nature of many institutional theatres and play development companies. Instead of companies looking for playwrights that other companies think are hot or commercial, theatres would simply look for plays that spoke to them in some fundamental way. It would mean, of course, theatres would have to read more scripts (relying far less on gate-keepers at other institutions). But if a few more companies had the courage to trust their own gut, it would transform the American theatrical landscape.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Anton Chekhov, for his complex love of people and nature, and the unique way that he conjures that love in the hearts and minds of audiences. Lorraine Hansberry and Tennessee Williams I admire for similar reasons, as well as for their outsized hearts and superhuman courage. My graduate school playwriting teacher, Howard Stein, who urged his students to fight for their idiosyncrasies; and taught them to ask, “Why did I need to write this play?” The theatre designer Robert Edmond Jones, for his visionary idealism, and for reminding us that theatre is not a thing of logic, it’s a thing of emotion. Thornton Wilder, for his insight into the group mind of the audience and his brave willingness to experiment with the audience – and for writing the third act of OUR TOWN.

And: Actors, too numerous to name, who stay open to letting a role transform them in ways they know they can’t preconceive. That definitely requires heroic daring.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Any kind of theatre – from a “well-made play” to an anti-dramatic performance piece – where the audience is collectively surprised and/or moved and/or exalted, and which depends on an imaginative collaboration with the audience. (I’m also greatly excited by poetry and belly-laughs in theatre).

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

A:  I have to defer to Horton Foote (whose writing is nothing like mine!), who told a group of young playwrights, “Find out who you are as a writer, and never let fashion sway you from that.” I’d also advise reading hundreds of plays, watching hundreds of plays – and watching audiences.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  For the latest on my work, please check out my website. My one-act plays are widely available in print, including five editions of BEST AMERICAN SHORT PLAYS.

Apr 20, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 444: Trish Harnetiaux


Trish Harnetiaux

Hometown: Spokane, Washington

Current Town:  Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I just finished a draft of a new play HOW TO GET INTO BUILDINGS that I wrote in the Soho Rep writer/director lab. It’s my first stab at a strange, exploded-view love story. Also, I’ve been working with the actress Nadia Bowers on a longer monologue piece that is inspired by Dario Fo’s A WOMAN ALONE… it’s loaded with shotguns and nosey neighbors, loud music and trumpets. Currently it’s called BABY. TRUMPET. BOOM. BOOM.

Q:  Tell me about Steel Drum in Space.

A:  Jacob A. Ware and I started Steel Drum in Space last year when we made our short film You Should Be A Better Friend. Since then, we’ve expanded the creative team to include awesome actor/director/DP/editor Tony Arkin and the result has been that we’re making these short comedy videos that depict, as we say on our site, ‘…the issues of tomorrow today with yesterday's science.’ So far we’ve tackled space cars, robot cats, and out of work astronauts with passive aggressive roommates – but really, there’s an entire galaxy of material out there and we’re releasing about one a month… The new one will be out in the next week!

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 have this memory, I must have been very tiny, of taking my parents’ camera and getting really, super close, like one inch away, from the TV screen during an episode of Miami Vice and taking this picture of Don Johnson. He was wearing a pink coat. I took great care not to get the edges of the set in the shot so I could say I was there with him, in Miami or whatever, when I took it. That we had just been hanging out. That photo never came out, and now, as a result– I despise Miami. Then, later, when I was like eight or nine it hit me. It became pretty clear that I would be an astronaut – but then, later, also president of the United States. But before all that I wanted to work in the bakery at the supermarket and hand out the free cookies to kids when they asked.

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

A:  That people would be tripping over themselves to go see shows, and that there was more funding for productions of new plays. Sorry if that’s two things.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Ionesco, Mac Wellman, Caryl Churchill, JM Barrie, Erik Ehn, Ada Limón, Jennifer L. Knox, Kenny Powers, Aristophanes, Salinger, Derek Jeter, Hemmingway, early Tim Burton, Beckett, Dave Eggers, Jenny Schwartz, President Barak Obama, Tina Satter, Erin Courtney, Albee, Normandy Raven Sherwood, Wes Anderson, Eric Nightengale, Jude Domski, Vaclav Havel, Charlie Kaufman, Lou Piniella, Will Eno, Darryl Strawberry, Willie Nelson, Richard Brautigan, Jacob A. Ware, Julian Dibbell, Joe Orton, my dad, Edgar Allan Poe and Shirley Jackson – to name a few.

(Confession: I just had to answer this question for something on the Soho Rep site and totally cut-and-paste. But actually I’ve added a few things that are different.)

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theatre that doesn’t take itself too seriously, is not pretentious, or precious, but transports/takes you on an adventure through language/images/emotions. Usually there is something very off kilter, leaving you slightly disoriented. The best theatre is ultimately satisfying not because it teaches anything, but rather that you feel different/think different/have some sort of unique experience/small stroke/revelation that you didn’t know was even possible. I actually like theater that pushes you to try to articulate the experience properly.

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

A:  Surround yourself by people that you think are fucking awesome and inspirational and drive you and motivate you and push you to be not only a better person, but a better writer.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Watch our comedy videos at steeldruminspace.com

Or/and there’s more about my plays and stuff at trishharnetiaux.com

Apr 19, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 443: Michael Elyanow


Michael Elyanow

Hometown: Randolph, MA

Current Town(s): Minneapolis & LA

Q:  Tell me about The Children.

A:  It's a re-imagining of the Medea myth, about a member of the Greek chorus who kidnaps Medea's children to save them from their murderous mom. She uses Medea's sorcery book to transport them all away to the ancient city of Athens, but she gets the magic wrong and they all end up in present-day Athens, Maine. The play combines Greek tragedy, broad comedy, and puppetry to tell a story about how we survive through telling stories.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  A play about sociologist Laud Humphreys who, in 1960's St. Louis, did research on the private lives of men who have sex in public restrooms. It was a study that was as controversial for its subject matter as it was for its research method, which was all about voyeurism and deception and disguise. I'm also developing an animated feature film as well as a TV pilot.

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 little and my parents went out for the night and left me and my two brothers with a babysitter, I used to write treasure hunts for my parents to come home to. I'd leave a note on the kitchen table that read something like, "Go To The Fireplace." And they'd go to the fireplace and there'd be another note waiting for them that read, "Good Job! Now Go To The Sink." And I'd leave a note for them there. And this went on and on until, after walking all over the house, they'd reach the last note which would declare "I Love You" or "We're Out Of Cereal." I don't know why, but I've always gotten a thrill in taking an audience on a journey. As a middle child, maybe I was so used to having to share all my toys that sharing my imagination was the next logical step...

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

A;  More women! More onstage and behind the scenes and in positions of power and decision. I wrote my most recent play, ROBYN IS HAPPY, simply because I miss seeing women being funny and fierce and physical onstage.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Alan Ayckbourn for his craft. Peter Brooks for The Empty Space. Frank Galati, who taught me how to teach. Any organization (like The Playwrights' Center, The Lark, New Dramatists, TCG) that supports the development of playwrights, plays, and theater artists.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love a good story well told. But the kind that really feeds my needy creative soul is the kind that fully takes advantage of the theatrical medium itself, that says Here's what you can do with imagination and space and it's something you won't find anywhere else. Suli Holum & Deborah Stein's CHIMERA is a great example of that. So is Dan O'Brien's THE BODY OF AN AMERICAN. And Marcus Gardley's DANCE OF THE HOLY GHOSTS.

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

A:  Read a lot of plays. See a lot of plays. Build relationships, both in the theater and out. Send your material around only when it's ready.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  "The Children" is at The Theatre @ Boston Court, May 3 - June 10. Go to www.bostoncourt.com or www.michaelelyanow.com for more.

Apr 18, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 442: Forrest Leo



Forrest Leo

Hometown:  Talkeetna, Alaska.

Current Town:  Brooklyn, New York

Q:  Tell me about Friend of the Devil.

A:  It’s a farce about a young poet who marries for money instead of love. Following this unfortunate lapse in judgment, he discovers that (as poetry cannot exist without love) he can no longer write. So he does the logical thing to do, and sells his wife to the devil. When his wife’s older brother (who is an explorer) returns from his adventures abroad and hears the news, he insists that they strike out to win her back. Along the way, the poet discovers that perhaps he maybe doesn’t, in fact, hate his wife quite as entirely as he’d thought….

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  A kids’ book about King Arthur’s childhood.

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 in a log cabin in Alaska. We were five miles from the nearest road--which was accessible only by dogsled--and fifty miles from the nearest town. We didn’t have electricity, so my brothers and I spent a lot of time reading and telling stories and generally finding non-electrical forms of entertainment. (By which I mean, I spent a lot of time reading and asking Ma to tell us stories, and my older brothers spent a lot of time throwing things at me.) My dad’s a writer. Every night I fell asleep sandwiched between my brothers in the sleeping loft, listening to Dad hammer away on his ancient Royal typewriter downstairs. It was my favorite sound in the world, and I knew from as far back as I can remember that I wanted to write.

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

A:  Theatre changes itself; it’s in constant evolution. I’m just along for the ride.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Stoppard, Coward, Rostand, Sheridan, Shakespeare.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  A good story, well told.

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

A:  The thing is, I’m a playwright just starting out. But what I’ve found so far is that the best thing you can do is to write all the time, no matter how you’re feeling, no matter how bad you think it is, no matter anything.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Friend of the Devil, directed by Saheem Ali, part of the Pipeline Theatre Co.’s Whisper & Shout. Tuesday, 24 April, 8:00 pm, at the Connelly Theatre, 220 E. 4th St.

Apr 17, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 441: Ginger Lazarus



Ginger Lazarus

Hometown: Brookline, MA

Current Town: Arlington, MA

Q:  Tell me about the play you're doing with Fresh Ink.

A:  THE EMBRYOS is about a couple, Mommy and Daddy, who try to conceive but are unsuccessful with in vitro fertilization. They don't want to give up their frozen embryos, so they take them home and attempt to raise them as children. As it turns out, the embryos are unusually animate, but not in a good way: they eat voraciously, watch way too much TV, and want to be famous. I see them as kind of consummately id-driven blobs of base desire and ambition. Pandemonium ensues.

I'm very, very excited that Fresh Ink chose THE EMBRYOS for their 2012-2013 season. This is a new company on the Boston scene, entirely devoted to new work by local writers. EMBRYOS will get a staged reading, a workshop, and a production by the end of this year. It sounds like a great process for where I'm at. The play has talking embryos in it (they are live, played by actors), and I'm really interested to see how this and other absurdist elements work out on stage. Also, there is some overt political commentary that seems suddenly relevant. I actually started writing the play years ago, back in the Bush era when right-wing ideology was holding sway on things like stem cell research and embryonic rights. When the administration changed, I wondered if the play might lose some of its zip...as it turns out, the recent "personhood" amendments and other firestorms over reproductive rights have shown that embryos are as hot a topic as ever. I might have to make the play even more absurd to keep up with the times.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I'm working on a new play called BURNING, a realistic drama, very different from THE EMBRYOS. It's a contemporary riff on the Cyrano de Bergerac story; the main character is a rabble-rousing blogger/poet who was kicked out of the Army for being a lesbian. She agrees to help a young soldier court a friend of hers, with whom she's secretly in love herself. And her former commander shows up to haunt her with demons from her past, etc. It's pretty intense and different from what I usually write.

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

A:  My mom says that, as a child, I had a rich inner life. This is a nice way of saying I spent a lot of time playing alone in my room. I had a vivid imagination and made up a great many elaborate stories about my model horses and dolls--whole sagas. I think I continue to live in my own little world to some extent.

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

A:  Cheaper tickets would be awesome.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Chekhov, Caryl Churchill, Tom Stoppard, Oscar Wilde, Vaclav Havel, Paula Vogel, August Wilson, Christopher Durang, The Five Lesbian Brothers (best name of a group ever), many others. Closer to home, Kate Snodgrass, artistic director of Boston Playwrights' Theatre, mentor, and new play champion extraordinaire. Also Iain Ryrie, my high school drama teacher, who died last year. Fortunately, the lessons he drilled into me about dramatic structure and making plays that mean something are still very much alive.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Anything that has the audacity to be either scathingly ironic or heart-breakingly sincere. Or both.

Q:   Plugs, please:

A: 
I'm on board to write something (I don't know what, but it will be a musical) for the Boston 48 Hour Film Project next month.

In June, I'll be participating in another home-grown spontaneous-creation event called The T Plays.

And stayed tuned for THE EMBRYOS at Fresh Ink later this year.

Apr 16, 2012

I Interview Artistic Directors Part 8: Hal Brooks



Hal Brooks

Hometown: Philadelphia, PA (Elkins Park).

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  Tell me about the Cape Cod Theater Project.

A:  Now in its 18th year - CCTP has developed almost 60 plays, 44 of which have gone on to have further productions (one on Broadway, many Off Broadway). We develop one play a week each week in July. The actors, playwright and director arrive on Sunday, rehearsing Mon-Sat. Each Thursday, Friday and Saturday night, there is a presentation and talkback. Playwrights can then do re-writes Friday and Saturday, and rehearse them, for that evening's presentation. We have a very sophisticated audience and their participation in talkbacks has been instrumental in CCTP's success.

Q:  How do you create your season?

A:  This was my first time - so I am certain I will learn a lot once the season is up and running. I received about 200 applications this year. I created a reading committee, divvied up the scripts and read a bunch of plays on my own. Based on the readers's reports, and my own tastes, I weeded that list down to 10 plays and decided on four works from that. I attempted to find playwrights at varying stages in their careers and scripts that I thought were at varying levels of development. Of the four "mainstage" shows, I chose plays that are very different stylistically. I am really happy that Mike Daisey will be coming up to work on what's next. CCTP has been a real home for him. And Neil LaBute's play, The Money Shot, is a hilarious read. I can't wait to see it up on its feet. I've gotten to know Bess Wohl at Ojai Playwrights Conference: I watched her do amazing rewrites on her play, Barcelona, so I know she is game for development time. Josh Allen's play, Chrysalis, was totally unusual: fun, smart, scary, dark. I can't wait to hear the audience's reactions.

Ultimately, I wanted to choose a season that I hope will do two things very well: allow playwrights to further develop their plays, and excite our audiences to be part of the development process. Definitely, a longstanding goal is to choose plays that go on and have successful productions. I also initiated a playwright residency. I've invited Meghan Kennedy whose play Too Much, Too Much, Too Many I love, as well as two playwrights I've worked with (Sharr White and Mona Mansour) to come up and work on new pieces.

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

A:  I played Barney O'Toole, an elderly Irishman, in my fifth grade production of "Show Biz Iz". That should say it all.

Q:  If you could change one thing about the Cape Cod Theater Project, what would it be?

A:  For what I want to do at Cape Cod Theatre Project, I really need to find more housing options. In Falmouth, there is no boarding school (like there is in Ojai) or dormitories (like at NY Stage and Film) so we really rely on the kindness of donors. We are therefore limited in the number of projects we can do at anytime. This year, I am going to initiate a writer-in-residence program so that way at least we'll have more than one playwright up at a time. In my ideal world, we'd be able to have multiple productions there, and a real festival weekend each July, where we could invite industry to see a host of new plays.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Whatever I am working on, especially new play development.

Q:  What plays or playwrights are you excited about now?

A:  That would be telling. But for starters, the playwrights that I've worked with: Sam Hunter, Mona Mansour, Will Eno; and the playwrights that I am going to work with: Alena Smith.

Q:  What do you aspire to in your work?

A:  Creating a home, full of creative people doing innovative work.

Q:  What advice do you have for theater artists wishing to work at CCTP?

A:  Apply! And let me know about your work: your readings, your workshops, your rough drafts. AND COME VISIT!

Apr 10, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 440: Daniel John Kelley


Daniel John Kelley

Hometown: Brooklyn, NY

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  My latest play is Wall, Ball, Summer And Fall (A Coney Island Adventure). It's a play about Handball. It follows a young, privileged boy from Brooklyn Heights who runs away to Coney Island when he discovers his dad has lost his job. There, he meets Moses Dirko- the master of handball, who speaks like he lives in ancient times, but actually lives with his grandmother. Moses takes the boy under his wing, and shows him his world and the majestic, mythic ways of handball. Is this man a hero of legend, to be revered and followed? Or is he merely delusional manchild who worships a kid's game? The boy must decide the path he will take before Coney Island crumbles around him, and summer turns into fall…

I'm also starting to work on a new play about opera lovers who work at a small publishing firm, and experience the collapse of their own personal lives, their company and the American economy over the course of five years as they attend a new production of Wagner's Ring Cycle. Are these merely people whose lives have broken apart? Or are they the fallen Gods themselves? That kind of a thing.

Q:  Tell me about the program you're in at Hunter.

A:  The Hunter MFA in playwriting is run by the inspiring Tina Howe, along with the equally lovely Mark Bly. It's affordable, and manageable with a full time job, which is really ideal, given the economics of playwriting. And Tina is so wonderful to be in class with! She's been in theatre all her life, seen triumphs and not triumphs, but remains completely unjaded, and passionate about the work- excited to see what you bring in, thrilled at your triumphs, encouraging with your not triumphs. She inspires you to be like her in spirit- to stay unjaded, and to write the big-hearted stories that move you.

Q:  You're pro opera. Tell me about why people love opera.

A:  I think people love to see the human experience made grand. Despite the tragic nature of many of the stories, opera is a hopeful medium- the largeness of the event, the years of training necessary to play in the orchestra or to sing the music, and the sheer size of opera houses, speak to a belief that human experiences mean something huge and powerful and cosmic, and that that is worth exalting and celebrating. I think people love to feel like they and their experiences matter, in some lofty cosmic way, and so they love the opera.

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 loved old, epic things when I was a kid. Greek Mythology, Norse Mythology, Arthurian legend, Robin Hood, if it was old and epic, I loved it. So naturally I had a very strong interest in classical theatre- one that my parents enthusiastically encouraged. I must have seen every production of Hamlet that was in New York in the 90s, along with all sorts of Chekhov, Ibsen, Calderon, Schiller and the Greeks. In a few years in my formative pre-teens days, however, most of my extended family passed away for various natural or unnatural reasons. So in addition to spending evenings in dark rooms watching old plays by dead people then, I also spent a good deal of time in brightly lit rooms full of old people speaking about the recently deceased. I think the combination of my fascination with the glories of old and forgotten worlds, and my experience of seeing so many family members slip away so suddenly made me acutely aware of both the potential for immortality that we have as humans (something we have absolutely no control over) and how temporary life is (which we also have no control over at all). I like to think that my plays reflect this- that we, and our worlds, can potentially live on forever, and isn't that wondrous and horrifying! But also, everything could end tomorrow, and doesn't that have its own kind of glory and terror as well?

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

A:  Everyone says it, but really, access- who gets to be the audience and who gets to be the artists. More kinds of people should be able to see more new stories from more varied perspectives.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I’d say…Verdi, Wagner, The Marx Brothers, Paula Vogel, Tina Howe, Caryl Churchill, Shakespeare, Chekhov and Ionesco.

But also my playwriting teachers, who nudged and encouraged and supported me over the years: Scott Martin, Stuart Spencer, and most recently, Tina Howe.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love theatre by playwrights that dig deep into unique subject matter in order to ask big questions and reveal startling truths about human nature. I don’t really care what a play is about in terms of subject matter, so long as you dig deep enough at the human roots of the thing you’re writing about, and discover what it is that make us love or loathe it. I love it when I see a play that’s about something I have absolutely no connection to, and the playwright shows me how I not only can connect to it, but makes me question a part of my life because of that connection.

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

A:  I'm just starting out myself, I feel, so I don't think any "career" advice from me is appropriate. But I will steal something I heard recently from Dan LeFranc when he talked recently at the Dramatist Guild: He talked about having his beginning playwriting students approach their first assignments as "cocktails." Not plays, but "cocktails"- Throw in your favorite flavors, both bitter and sweet, stir, and see if you've got anything that you'd like to drink, that maybe you think you might want to offer to someone else sometime. What I took away from that is the need to approach playwriting from a place of joy: take the things you love and dump them into a play, and see what happens. Write the story about the people you want to celebrate, who have never been celebrated on stage before! Try to make people care about those people as much as you do, to see their pain and struggle and triumphs and failures, so that their story will live for all the ages! Why not try for that? Because, honestly, we could all be dead tomorrow.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  You can read more about my many adventures in playwriting (and my plays) at www.danieljohnkelley.com

I’m curating a project for Howlround this summer called “The Here and Now Project”- you can read more about it here: http://www.howlround.com/the-here-now-project-a-call-for-submissions/

Apr 6, 2012

upcoming spring/summer

Readings:

Hearts Like Fists with by Moxie Street Picture Shows at the Nuyorican  (nyc) April 12 at 9 pm.

Clown Bar with Pipeline in nyc May 1. The Connelly Theater (220 east 4th St)

Mercy (my newest play) at Primary Stages May 9 at 3pm.  Primary Stages Studio  (email readings at primarystages dot org for reservation)

Productions:

Nerve at Cal State Fullerton in CA April 27- May 12

Deflowering Waldo at Eckerd College in FL May 3-6

Incendiary at Wishbone in Chicago May 18-June 9

UBU  at the New Ohio in NYC June 7-16

Hearts Like Fists in LA at Theater of Note  July 27-Sept 1

Why Overhead in NYC , Zootopia TBA Aug/Sept

Hearts Like Fists in NYC by Flux in Nov

Apr 3, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 439: Fengar Gael


Fengar Gael

Hometown: None. As a self-proclaimed resident alien in despair over the recent loss of civil liberties in this mad, militaristic, security-obsessed nation, I claim no town, no country, though my heart’s home is New York.

Current Town: New York City (where going to the theatre is a way of life)

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  A full length science fiction play that takes place in The Garment District called The Draper's Eye, and I'm continuing work on a musical called Soul on Vinyl with the composer, Dennis McCarthy.

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

A:  Since my plays tend to have metaphysical dimensions and feature outcasts with megalomaniacal ideas about salvaging an endangered world, I believe my story began when I was stricken with a severe case of bronchitis and bedridden on the day of my first holy communion. Weeks later, utterly alone, wearing the traditional white dress and veil, I nervously stepped down the aisle where a kindly nun drew me aside and told me I was special, that god had singled me out for reasons that only god knew. So for years I actually believed I had a sacred mission and was convinced I’d become a Catholic missionary. But life and literature have since turned me into an atheist, weary and wary of male gods, male clerics, and religions of every kind. That said, I’ve taken enough drugs and seen enough marvels to believe their are dimensions we cannot yet perceive, including hidden realms of the spirit.

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

A:  The American Theatre’s relentless preference for domestic realism, linear “carpet-slipper plays” that tread softly, offend no one, and simply mirror or affirm our quotidian lives (which television and movies do very well). I wish that literary managers in the gate positions of theatres, as well as their artistic directors, would cease underestimating the imaginations of audiences, and start producing more creative, theatrical plays that take the audience to less familiar worlds. Also our paganistic celebrity-worshipping culture has hurt the theatre in that plays seem to be chosen to accommodate movie or television stars and not for the merit of the plays themselves. I also wish there were more plays produced that were written for women by women.


Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I prefer theatre that takes me to unfamiliar worlds, a theatre of heightened passions that’s imaginative, subversive, confrontational, and is a fusion of art forms, reflecting the collage of sounds and images that bombard us daily, yet is as dark, dense, and mysterious as our collective cultural myths. Since the first playwrights were poets and myth-makers, I think plays should aspire to being epic and poetic, with characters who live within the context of history and the social forces surrounding them, but are also brave, mythic protagonists willing to battle the gods. I prefer plays that communicate compelling ideas and images by employing slanted speech that risks being heretical, scenery of uncommon, even alien landscapes, and acting styles that reach beyond the confines of verisimilitude towards song and dance. I am excited by radiant language that lifts me from numbness and conformity, that dares to speak the unspeakable, to question everything, even the moral foundations that inspire our symbols and metaphors. The theatre can also be a place to escape the unrelenting presence of the Internet, FaceBook, and Twitter. I truly believe that the theatre, with its roots in myth, poetry, and spectacle, is starving for visionary creators to continue its honored purpose as the most vital and defining cultural art. But it also needs courageous producers, directors, and audiences willing to participate intellectually and emotionally so that going to the theatre becomes a creative act unto itself.

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

A:  Read poetry, drink wine, taste everything, cultivate all your aesthetic senses and sensibilities; enrich your life with fascinating friends, haunt museums and galleries, attend concerts of every kind; try to avoid social networks or the compulsion to flip to the Internet while writing, and thereby wasting hours of your precious life and causing the muse to flee; try to find sacred, solitary time for just writing as often as possible, and to quote Emily Dickinson, "Be a fire that lights itself." Don't wait for commissions or even kind words of encouragement; be your own inspiration, and it helps to join or create a group that reads and critiques plays-in-process. If playwriting is your literary form, and you possess a quixotic belief in the transforming power of language, remember that words live on the page as well as the stage, so try to make the script a pleasure to read as well as to perform (because it may takes years to find a producer). I should add that theatre can be a humbling profession and you’ll be subject to the hill-valley syndrome of great news (your play is being produced) followed by devastating news (the theatre lost its funding), which means you risk becoming a bipolar manic depressive with delusions of grandeur and multiple personality syndrome, so try to have other outlets and hobbies and take up a sport, like running. Try not to be discouraged by cruel rejection letters sent by merciless, even sadistic literary managers, and then there are those “avoidance directors” who secretly wish playwrights were deaf, dumb, blind, and preferably deceased. Also and most importantly, never police your own imagination: Just because you’re not African, Asian, Jewish, Catholic, or Muslim, or old, young, male or female, or lived through wars, experienced poverty, imprisonment, hideous cancers, and other assorted miseries, doesn’t mean you can’t imagine anything you wish. The great evolutionary triumph of the species is imagination, so to define yourself in terms of your creatureliness, your gender, age, race or ethnicity is to be forever stranded on a smaller planet, so have fun, dabble in everything at every level. I should add that it’s important to keep revising and recrafting your plays, for as the French poet, Paul Valery wrote: "A poem is never finished; it is only abandoned." The same is true of a play so as you evolve, your plays evolve, and you can reenter and refine and restructure their worlds. Although Aristotle wrote (and I tend to agree) that “the essence of drama is story,” I think that the theatre is still evolving, so be inventive, dare to break the rules and know that so much more is still possible. The great advantage of writing for the theatre is that unlike actors, directors, designers and virtually everyone else in the profession, you’re not at the mercy of opportunity. Playwrights can write plays in a prison cell in Muleshoe, Texas, miles away from an actual theatre. Also avoid people who say there’s no future in writing for the theatre. I think people will come to the theatre more than ever before, if only to heal their damaged attention spans, to finally focus on the perpetual wide screen of the stage where no bullying cameras are telling us precisely where to look, no soundtrack assaulting our ears, where we’re no longer isolated but in the company of other human beings, and where our presence actually matters, so keep writing plays. A good rehearsal with an inspired company is right up there with the great sensual pleasures of life!

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  You, Adam, and all the playwrights, directors actors, designers, producers, managers, audiences, ushers, and everyone everywhere struggling to create illusions in theatres today simply because they love it and believe it can be as great as it ever was in defining our culture. I’ve had the great good blessing of working with wonderful developmental and producing theatres in and out of New York, like New Jersey Rep, Playwrights Theatre of New Jersey, InterAct of Philadelphia, Seanachai in Chicago, the Rorschach Theatre in D. C., the Moxie Theatre, the Hunger Artists Theatre, South Coast Repertory, Sundance, the Axial Theatre, and in New York: MultiStages, CAP 21, the Abingdon Theatre, Playwrights Gallery, Flux Theatre Ensemble, Reverie Productions, and many others.

Apr 2, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 438: Katharine Sherman


Katharine Sherman

Hometown: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Current Town: Iowa City, Iowa

Q:  Tell me about Christopher Marlowe's Chloroform Dreams.

A:  We're calling it an Elizabethan noir fairy tale - it lives in a kind of collage universe that plays around with genre, myth, legend and language. Moments reinterpreting myths and fairy tales mingle with tropes and familiar noir characters, the legend around Kit Marlowe's own turbulent biography and the mythology of the play itself - which is on its own a very loose adaptation of Marlowe's poetic rendition of the myth of hero and leander. It's being produced by Lunar Energy Productions, a company Phil Gates and I started in 2009, out of a love of myth and magic. Phil is directing this show and The Red Room Theater used to be a speakeasy, so the stars are aligning...

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I've just started rehearsals for a play called ondine which will be presented as part of the 2012 Iowa New Play Festival this May. It's a kinda medieval romantic fairy tale that cracks and breaks down in form and content as the speakers in the frame go longer and longer without sleep. My director, David Hanzal is all about the beautiful and visceral, and we're planning one hell of a show. I'm really interested in form right now - we just took this awesome class on structure with Mead Hunter, and right now I'm pretty obsessed with how form and content are the same thing - how structure is story. It's informing everything i'm writing.

I'm also working on another play in the Marlowe trilogy, christopher marlowe's mystery play, which was developed at wordBRIDGE playwrights laboratory last summer - it's fun to know a character and stay with him as he's plopped down into an entirely different linguistic and aesthetic universe. And how the forms of those plays work towards telling those different stories as well.

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 really shy and sensitive and didn't speak until I was three even though I already knew how, and then when I was caught and forced to use my words I did so in these long and apparently perfectly grammatical sentences, and I was this tiny little baby-looking thing being all, 'I am doing very well this morning, thank you for asking, how are you?' and people would just laugh. And then I would burst into tears and run away. And now it's like, where my writing kind of lives is in the language.

At one point I had a running list on a piece of paper divided into columns that served as my review system of episodes of Full House - like, date it was on, episode title, story synopsis, and my 'rating' of the episode out of ten, sometimes with what I would've liked to see happen in the episode. I'd like to say that shows my early grasp onto the importance of character and narrative and all that but it also might mean I really liked Full House

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

A:  Expectations - like, ideas in minds of what a play is, and the reverberations of those expectations. Also, money

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Caryl Churchill, Jose Rivera, Mary Zimmerman, Charles Mee, August Strindberg, Federico Garcia Lorca, Henrik Ibsen, Jean Cocteau, Sarah Kane, Antonin Artaud, Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare, Pedro Calderon De La Barca, Robert Lepage, Suzan-Lori Parks. a few that come to mind in other disciplines: Hans Christian Andersen, Arthur Rimbaud, James Tate, Gregory Crewdson, Edward Hopper, Greer Lankton.

Three films also had a huge impact in shaping how I see theater - Ingmar Bergman's The Magic Flute, Jean Cocteau's Beauty and the Beast, and Baz Lurmann's Romeo + Juliet. I saw that when I was ten and it changed everything.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Onstage I love to see magic, beauty, any and all kinds of virtuosity, transformation. I want it to be visceral, powerful, a punch in the stomach that hurts even harder because you're so close. Shows that lean towards being multidisciplinary. Shows that use form and structure to tell stories in different and exciting ways.

I'm also really excited by pieces that are undeniably theatrical - that could not be done in any other medium, that take advantage of the community of actors and audience, that really use the fact that we are all humans here together breathing the same air. Whether that's casting the audience in a role, turning the piece into a ritual - I've been thinking about ritual and narrative a lot lately, actually - about how a lot of rituals we know have narratives that they're built around - so why shouldn't we just flip it and have there be a ritual surrounding whatever narrative it is that we're telling in the theater.

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

A:  Love what you do.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  christopher marlowe's chloroform dreams - playing at The Red Room in the East Village April 18-may 5. info, tickets, and some stuff to look at here - www.lunarenergyproductions.com

ondine - Friday, May 4th at 5:30 & 9:00. Tea parties, sequins, heartbreak, leeches. It's one of four productions, a workshop presentation and five readings in this year's Iowa New Play Festival. It's going to be grand so if you're in or near Iowa City come check it out! Informative things here: http://theatre.uiowa.edu/production/new-play-festival

Also this June is the third annual Hollywood Fringe Festival - there's going to be some really cool and innovative stuff, art of all kinds so I totally recommend checking it out if you're in California - it's June 14-24 of this year. everything you need: http://www.hollywoodfringe.org. Two shows in this year's fringe that i know are going to be excellent:
Nostalgium, by Matt Benyo, directed by Alex Scott - http://www.hollywoodfringe.org/projects/743 and
Eggshell, written and directed by Søren Olsen - http://www.hollywoodfringe.org/projects/921

Last plug: wordBRIDGE Playwrights Laboratory is up there with the best people you will ever meet and what they're doing is incredibly important. Check em out: http://www.wordbridge.org/

Mar 30, 2012

Plays

I added an Amazon store of plays by playwrights I've interviewed, along with a few I haven't interviewed and a stray novel or two by playwrights I like.  You can get there by scrolling all the way down the page or going here.

http://astore.amazon.com/adamszymk-20

Let me stress it took a lot of time but it is in no way all-inclusive.  If you see a play I should add please let me know and if I missed your play, I'm sorry.  Let me know and I'll add it.

Mar 27, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 437: Alex Lubischer



Alex Lubischer

Hometown: Humphrey, Nebraska

Current Town: Chicago, IL

Q:  Tell me about THE Xylophone West.

A:  Often, the desire to explore a certain relationship will inspire me to begin a new play. With The Xylophone West, I wanted explore the unbreakable bond between two boys growing up in rural Nebraska- a relationship that, for most of their community, is too close for comfort.

I wasn’t interested in creating a clear-cut relationship; one defined as distinctly ‘a friendship’ or ‘a gay relationship’. They’re 14-year-old-boys. I don’t think they know what to call it themselves; they only know it’s good. And I think there’s a lot of truth in relationships and ideas when we’re younger. There’s more honesty in the world’s lack of definition at that age. It’s only when we get older that we start forcing ourselves into boxes: “I’m this, she’s that. We fit neatly into these categories.” I think life is more nuanced than that and it’s something I explore in my writing.

Halfway into the first draft I discovered a Mark Twain quote– “It is curious that physical courage should be so common in the world and moral courage so rare.” That fascinated me and informed the rest of my process. I think it rings especially true in today’s world.
Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  A comedy! I’m fascinated by the Elysian quality of golf courses, their Zen characteristics, but also the bizarre Midsummer-esque feel they take on at night. This new play, which hopefully will come to fruition soon, is essentially a love story between a young man and young woman- both of who are closer to the edge of sanity than most. It’s set in the world of golf.

Q:  Tell me about Route 66. Have you read anything there lately that you're excited about?

A:  As Literary Manager for Route 66 I have the opportunity to develop the work of other exciting young artists; it’s a job that’s very dear to me. In April, we’ll be launching our outreach program for early career artists through a special collaboration with the National Theater Institute’s Advanced Playwrights program. The emerging playwrights in the program – Haygen Brice Walker and Mike Poe- will each workshop a play over the course of a weekend, culminating in a public reading for Route 66’s patrons. Working with The Eugene O’Neill Theater Center’s Literary Manager Martin Kettling on this project, as well as Erica Weiss, Route 66’s Associate Artistic Director, has been so rewarding.

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 second grade, I wrote a one-page paper about my greatest hero: Grandpa Ron. Grandpa had been a radio operator and load master/flight attendant in the Air Force in the 50s, 60s, and 70s and continues to lead a truly remarkable life. As a 7-year-old, however, I was not especially cognizant of the facts of Grandpa’s past. Instead, I imagined a story about his years as a fighter pilot, flying deadly missions against the Nazis in World War II.

I think where I’m at now, as a 23-year-old playwright, is akin to that moment in my life. People fascinate me, I admire heroism, and for me, what I’m working toward is finding the authenticity that occurs in everyday life along with the sensationalism. There is a level of romanticism that will always have a place in my storytelling. I’m constantly trying to strike that balance: to find truth through fiction, to tell stories that hurdle the boundaries between romanticism and true life.

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

A:  The money, quite frankly. We live in a society where a vast majority of artists cannot earn a living wage making art. As an early career playwright, you have to accept a life of relative poverty in which you’re working two or three jobs to get by, while writing your plays for little to no money. I think we’ve lost a lot of potentially brilliant playwrights to other professions. I want to make art, I love the theater, but at the end of the day I also want to eat, have health care, and be able to afford to have a family someday. So if I could change anything about theater in this nation, it would be to live in an America that supports its artists.

Q:  Who are your theatrical heroes?

A:  Tennessee Williams and Tom Waits.

Tennessee gave everything for his art. He threw all of his hopes and dreams and demons into it, often with profound results. I admire his devotion to his craft. His plays are at once brutal and sympathetic.

In Tom Waits, I see an artist who utilizes theatricality better than any other storyteller alive today. His songs- his stories, essentially- all submerge you in a unique atmosphere that’s simultaneously otherworldly and American. And in his live performances he makes flesh the theatricality he’s written into every song. He can transport his audience to another world with hat, a megaphone, and a fistful of glitter.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I just saw Too Much Light Makes The Baby Go Blind for the second time in Chicago. That kind of raw authenticity and connection with the audience -that bare-bones kind of theater- thrills me. It’s funny, because that kind of theater also diminishes the role of the playwright as master storyteller.

In terms of more traditional theater, I will always gravitate toward a story that strives for universality. Rarely is it actually achieved, but the effort must be present. It was crucial for me that Xylophone raised the damning consequences of intolerance and hate to where they exist in real life. In a peripheral sort of way, the play ended up tackling anti-gay bullying in America. Now, I’m proud of that and I think that’s an issue we need to have more effective dialogue about.

Cormac McCarthy (who’s probably my favorite novelist and also has a terrific play, The Sunset Limited) once said that the only real literature is that which explores issues of life and death. I apply that same principle to theater. A play may be comedic, it may be about love or any number of themes, but it must transcend a very specific situation to attain universality. The risk of the play’s situation must be every bit as palpable for an audience in rural Nebraska or south-central Los Angeles as it is to an affluent, liberal theatergoer.

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

A:  I just read Sweet Bird of Youth by Tennessee Williams for the first time, and in the forward of my book he tells this anecdote.

My esteemed colleague said to me, “Tennessee, don’t you feel that you are blocked as a writer?”

I didn’t stop to think of an answer; it came immediately off my tongue without any pause for planning. I said, “Oh, yes, I’ve always been blocked as a writer but my desire to write has been so strong that it has always broken down the block and gone past it.”

I think there’s a lot of truth in that. I think you have to have that, and you have to cultivate that drive and work at it, too. I also find- and this is frustrating- that the best things I write, time and time again, are the things that terrify me, that reveal emotional truths in my soul I would rather have kept hidden. I think you have to write stories that you are afraid to write, and to always push yourself, and never settle for good enough. I say these things not because I’ve mastered them, but because I’ve been struggling with them from the very beginning and continue to do so daily. But it’s good work to do.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  The Xylophone West runs March 16 – April 4 at Red Tape Theatre, 621 W. Belmont Ave, Chicago IL

Tickets are available at thefineprinttheatre.org and brownpapertickets.com

For more on Alex Lubischer’s plays, prose, and freelance, visit www.alexlubischer.com

Mar 25, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 436: Robert Quillen Camp


Robert Quillen Camp

Hometown:  NYC

Current Town:  Santa Barbara, CA

Q:  Tell me about All Hands.

A:  All Hands, my collaboration with Alec Duffy’s Hoi Polloi company, is a performance of the strange rituals of an unnamed secret society. One way I like to think about it is as an exercise in mise-en-abyme, in which everything you see, including very everyday language, is constantly recontextualized as something else, as potentially part of a ritual. The piece never makes it clear: this part is a ritual, this part is an enacted drama, this part is really happening. This constant opening up of the ground creates the abyme, the abyss. One of the questions this piece throws up is whether the desire to collectivize is a desire to retreat from the the individual self, in other words, to desire the absence of the self. When the self recedes, and the group takes over, the possibility for narrative recedes as well, and we are left with the strange pleasures of rituals in themselves (on which composer Dave Malloy and choreographer Dan Safer have done amazing work). All Hands is intended to be a strange, beautiful and messy trip, in the way that I think reality is messy, strange, and beautiful.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I have a project in a very early stage, about extremely long duration and the way that concepts of the distant future are only comprehensible through our vocabulary of the distant past, i.e. myth. I’m spending most of my time working on a Ph.D. in theater and performance studies at UC Santa Barbara.

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 kindergarten, I had to keep a journal. Each page of the journal was split into two parts, with a square drawing area on the top half of the page and lines for writing on the bottom half of the page. The idea was that we would represent, in drawing and in words, something that happened that day at school. I always sketched the scene in the form of a floor plan (viewed from above), until one day my teacher told me that I had to draw the scene from the side, like the other kids did. I cried and cried. Eventually I acquiesced, but I retained a strong sense of the injustice about the whole thing. The first play I ever published, in the literary journal Conjunctions, featured exactly the same kind of diagrams that my teacher had prohibited. I could say something about the value of looking at things differently, etc., but I would also point out the perhaps less laudatory side of my character that this anecdote presents: namely my deep and simmering desire for vindication and revenge.

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

A:  I wouldn’t change anything. The theater keeps fucking up, but that’s the only way it’s ever going to learn.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Mac Wellman, Wolfgang Bauer, Elizabeth LeCompte, Heinrich von Kleist, August Strindberg, Gertrude Stein, Richard Maxwell, Richard Foreman, John Cage, Samuel Beckett, Eugene Ionesco, many many more.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  It sounds trite, but I like theater that is truly surprising. I think that’s one of the things the form has going for it, the capacity to surprise, to defy expectation. I’m thinking about this especially in terms of form, genre, space, and discipline. I like the way in composer/director Heiner Goebbels’s work, for example, a classical music performance suddenly becomes a theatrical performance.

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

A:  Also do something else. Like Chekhov. Then bring that other body of knowledge, that other competency, that other perceptual lens back to the theater. The theater will thank you for it.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Go see All Hands! It’s at the Incubator Arts Project (formerly the Ontological) in NYC until March 31! http://incubatorarts.org/ 

Mar 20, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 435: Lauren Feldman


 
Lauren Feldman
 
Hometown: Miami, FL
 
Current Town:  Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?
 
A:  - Revising my play THE EGG-LAYERS, on the heels of its development (summer 2011-winter 2012) and recent production (March 2012) through Barnard College and New Georges, directed by Alice Reagan.

- Writing/devising/rehearsing THE ORPHEUS VARIATIONS with director Adam J. Thompson and the Deconstructive Theatre Project

- Writing/devising THE FOOD PLAY with director Pirronne Yousefzadeh and an ensemble of actors and playwrights.

- Starting work on a new play about John Milton and his daughters and the writing/dictating of Paradise Lost.

- Figuring out how to be a better and better teacher of playwriting. (This spring I’m teaching Playwriting & Dramatic Structure at Fairleigh Dickinson University; next fall, at Bryn Mawr.)

- Learning how to be an acrobat.
 
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. Jeez. Surely I must have a handful of good, rich childhood stories… But for some reason this is the one that keeps coming to mind today. Why is that?

When I was in elementary school, they gave us pre-tests and post-tests surrounding each grammar lesson. Well I remember getting a pre-test once on active and passive voice, and though the concept was new to me, the correct answers seemed intuitive, and I ended up getting 100%. My teacher, kinda surprised, came over and told me I could use the lesson as free time, since I clearly didn’t need to be taught this information. So I sat at the free-time station and tried to read a book or something, but really I spent the entire time feeling guilty and trying to surreptitiously eavesdrop on the lesson that I’d never formally learned.

I think this story pretty much encapsulates my susceptibility to Imposter Syndrome. Thankfully, though, I’ve mellowed out a tad since then.

Q:  If you could change one thing about theater, what would it be?
 
A:  For new plays to be produced more than read & developed – both of which seem like they’re increasingly becoming a stand-in for productions.

Also: for ticket prices to be affordable for a wider audience demographic.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?
 
A:  Off the top of my head…
David Greenspan
Paula Vogel
Suzan-Lori Parks
Sarah Ruhl
Taylor Mac
Lisa Kron
Deb Margolin
Charles Mee
Mary Zimmerman
Tina Landau
Theatre de Complicite
Shakespeare

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?
 
A:  Theater that’s characterized by theatricality, by magic, by transcendence and transformation

Theater that involves the body; that’s muscular; that really utilizes physical expression

Theater that feels virtuosic (in any way)

Theater that’s created by and shared by a true ensemble

Theater that (genuinely) acknowledges the audience as a formative, vital presence

Theater that tugs at the imagination

Theater that’s playful

Theater that’s verbally (and visually too, why not) poetic; theater whose text soars

Theater that tells stories in unconventional ways

Theater that deftly and stubbornly breaks convention

Theater that tells the stories of folks in non-mainstream demographics

Theater that feels like an event, like an experience

Theater that takes risks

Minimalist theater

Theater that tells the truth

Theater whose truth-telling looks different from (but equally true to) how life actually looks

Q:  What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
 
A:  Well, two of the things I always come back to each time I start a new play are:

Write from a place of hunger, honesty, & courage.

And

In your play, anything is possible, anything goes.

Q:  Plugs, please:
 
A:  For a play of mine:

Grace, or the Art of Climbing will be produced at the Denver Center Theatre next season (Jan-Feb 2013), directed by Mike Donahue.

For a play not of mine:

Dan LeFranc’s new play THE BIG MEAL just opened at Playwrights Horizons, and it’s stunning.

Mar 14, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 434: Dorothy Fortenberry



Dorothy Fortenberry

Hometown: Washington, DC

Current Town: Los Angeles

Q:  Tell me about Status Update.

A:  It's a play with songs about moving to a city you don't want to live in because your partner needs to be there, and becoming deeply addicted to the Internet. I wrote it a few months after moving to LA when I noticed that my most intense relationships were taking place over Facebook. It's also an Alice in Wonderland play, featuring Keyboard Cat, some pan-European houseguests, and several references to The Great Gatsby and the oeuvre of Kathy Acker.

Q:   What else are you working on now?

A:  I'm developing a play with Chalk Rep called Mommune about a minimum security facility for wayward mothers, set in the near future. Working with Chalk is fun because they produce site-specifically, so you get to write knowing that your actors can do things that would normally be off-limits. I also was just at the MacDowell Colony writing a play called Partners that I'll be workshopping with Page 73 this summer in New Haven about what the point of marriage is.


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 as an only child in a 2-person family, so I spent a lot of time by myself and a lot of time with grownups. My favorite thing to do was just to listen. When my mom went to visit friends of hers in other cities, she'd bring me along, and I'd just stay at the dinner table, trying to be as inconspicuous as possible, trusting that as the adults had more wine, the evening would get more interesting. And it usually did. Eventually, she would realize I was there, and she'd send me up to bed, but I would just listen from the top of the stairs. Or, I would search through all the books in her friends' guest room for passages about sex, which is how I speed-read Portnoy's Complaint at 13. Anyway, that hunger to find out how people tick and the notion that the answers can best be found in listening and literary sex scenes: still with me.

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

A:  I think, at the end of the day, all theater is community theater. It's local, it's hand-made, and the magic that is taking place is the same transformation that happens when your town mailman is Harold Hill. But I think currently, it really only feels like a community if you're a working theater artist -- I know that if I go see a play in New York or LA, I'm going to run into someone I know in the lobby, but if I were a lawyer or a gym teacher, I probably wouldn't. Which is all to say that I wish community were a bigger part of all levels of theater -- one of the main reasons I don't live in DC is that the wonderful theaters in town rarely produce local playwrights. Which seems nuts. Instead they bring in a cast and a director from New York to put on a play that was a hit in New York, and, well, it seems like that pretty effectively undermines half of what's interesting about theater to begin with.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Oh man, so many. When I was in high school, the school library was being renovated and they were going to throw out any book that hadn't been checked out in the last 5 years, and, to save the plays, I checked out and read their entire drama section, so 15-year-old me got super-into Charles Ludlam and Christopher Durang and Terrance McNally. Also, when I was in high school, a production of Baltimore Waltz at Studio Theatre blew my mind (I know I just undermined the point I made above, but it featured local actors, thank you). Escape from Happiness by George F. Walker will always be a touchstone to me of how "hilariously funny" and "deeply sad" are essentially the same thing. Lynne Nottage's Ruined is a play I study over and over again for its structure and bravery. The Rude Mechs' Method Gun was one of the best things I saw last year. Pig Iron, or course, Pig Iron. Chekov. And, while I'm not making a hierarchy, at the top has to go Caryl Churchill. Every play I've ever written is essentially my attempt to write Top Girls, as is every play I intend to write from here on out.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Scary theater. Theater that pokes at assumptions and comfort zones. Funny theater. Theater of big ideas. Theater that creates tension. Theater that makes me feel like I'm in good hands and then pulls the rug out from under me. Beautiful theater. Watching Pig Iron's Chekhov Lizard Brain thrilled me to the point of tears because it placed me inside the brain of someone in my family who no one in Pig Iron had ever met. And it had to be theater. It was completely and totally theater, it was precise and rehearsed and technically smart, and yet unlike anything I'd ever seen before. It scares me to think that I could have not taken the train in to New York that night and not seen that show. I would be less of a person for it.

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

A:  All right, so, keeping in mind that I, too, am just starting out, I pass along this advice from David Foster Wallace's commencement address at Kenyon, which is, to my mind, the most effective DIY guide to being a decent human being: "In the day-to-day trenches of adult life, there is actually no such thing as atheism. There is no such thing as not worshipping. Everybody worships. The only choice we get is what to worship." By all means worship theater, but try not to worship your own success or perceived lack thereof. That shit will eat you alive.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My play Species Native to California has a reading this Sunday, March 18 at IAMA Theater Company in LA at 7pm (1017 N. Orange Dr) Status Update goes up at Center Rep in Walnut Creek, CA in October. Anything by fellow Titled Field members Jacob Padrón, Teresa Avia Lim, Michael Locher, Roberta Pereira, or Becca Wolff. Also, I am a giant fan of and so grateful to Jen Haley for starting the Playwrights' Union in LA. I wouldn't have written Status Update without their annual Writing Challenge, and I am about to share my first draft of Partners with the same folks at this year's Challenge weekend.

Mar 13, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 433: Ethan Lipton



Ethan Lipton

Hometown: Van Nuys, California.

Current Town: Red Hook, Brooklyn

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’m rehearsing NO PLACE TO GO, a musical I wrote for my band, which the Public is producing in Joe’s Pub, and I’m prepping for a production of my play LUTHER, which Clubbed Thumb is doing this June. Feeling exceedingly grateful for both opportunities.

Q:  Tell me about Ethan Lipton and His Orchestra.

A;  That’s my band. We play all over NYC and sometimes beyond, and we’ve been together almost seven years. The guys I play with (Eben Levy, Ian Riggs, Vito Dieterle) are all great musicians, which I can’t really relate to, but they are also silly, immature old men at heart, and in that sense we are kindred spirits. For a long time the music was my respite from playwriting. Songs are short (plays long), I write them while looking the other way (plays I write hunched over, trying to bore a hole through the keyboard), and performing is immediate (whereas play gestation is more like whale gestation). Recently, though, I’ve been trying to integrate the two in a few projects, which is both exciting and scary; kinda like introducing your two best friends and waiting to see if they’ll get along.

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 first grade I started a mime troupe with Emily Strickstein and Kristin Olson. We explored a number of narratives and themes, most of which culminated in me getting hit in the groin with an imaginary ball. From there I learned how to cross both eyes, then one eye at a time, then how to indulge my sadness, and before I knew it my path as an artist was set.

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

A:  Today? Let’s see. Actually, if I’ve learned one thing during my relationship with theater, it’s that I can’t change it. Theater has to want to change itself. Then it has to talk it over with the board of directors and figure out a way to integrate an education component, and then, maybe, it can have a fundraiser. After which a talk-back is probably in order, and if we could do all that before pilot season, so much the better. See, the only real problem with theater, I think, is human beings. It requires their participation. Lots and lots of them. And that’s what makes it awful, but it’s also what makes it awesome, all of these grown-ups working together to create “make believe” for other grown-ups. So, you know, we should probably be totally overhauling the art form every couple of years – from our creative processes to our aesthetic expectations to the way we run our organizations – but since that seems to be more work than most of us are willing to do, my short-term solution would be just to involve more animals. Oh, and I’d say we should put as much money into paying artists as we put into paying arts administrators, but I think everyone knows that already.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I love art that takes inspiration from other art forms and I have tons of heroes who make other kinds of art, but as far as theater-makers, I definitely owe a debt to people like Ionesco, Albee, Bulgolkov, Churchill, Guare, Shawn, Howe, the Wooster Group, Fornes, Foreman, O’Neill, and Checkov.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A;  A dumb idea deeply committed to.

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

A:  Wonder. And consider risking everything.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  NO PLACE TO GO, Joe’s Pub, March 14-April 8.
LUTHER, Clubbed Thumb’s Summerworks, this June.

Mar 7, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 432: Riti Sachdeva



Riti Sachdeva

Hometown:  Complicated question for an immigrant – born in Bhilai (Chateesgarh) India, grew up in North Cambridge, MA

Current Town: Complicated question for a Gypsy -recently relocated from Albuquerque to Brooklyn.

Q:  Tell me about Parts of Parts & Stitches.

A:  It’s a play set in 1947 during the partition of Pakistan and India, towards the end of British colonial rule in the region. Members of my family were among 1 million murdered and 40 million displaced. Many of the situations and even characters are stories that my aunts, uncles, and papa shared with me. It’s about lovers, friends, neighbors, communities, and nations that are sacrificed for land, water, and political power; it’s about the physical and psychic shock of loss and displacement; and it’s about the courage that makes me wonder “could I possibly make a decision like that – to sacrifice my safety, my body -for someone else’s?”

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  When Parts closes, I’ll be in rehearsal for a solo piece Scene/Unseen, directed by Antonio Miniño, being featured in the Planet Connections Festival at Bleecker St. Theatre in June. With the Emerging Writers Group at The Public, I’m 10 pages deep into a revenge fantasy play about a widow of a suicided Indian farmer who comes to work as a maid in the home of the CEO of a multinational bio-tech corporation; in June, I go to the Playwrights Center in Minneapolis to further develop The Rug Dealer, which takes place in a Persian carpet shop in Boston; and I’m looking for an ensemble and funding to keep evolving my flamenco play La Fea: A FlamenChoreoMyth.

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 think it was our first Xmas in the U.S., I was six, and my parents wanted me to experience an American Xmas. They didn’t have much money so my mom bought a big dollar bag of accessories for my generic barbie and individually wrapped each tiny accessory – the high heels, coffee mug, necklace, etc.- so I’d have lots of presents to openJ Can you imagine how she came up with that idea, then spent the time wrapping these items that were a fraction of the size of her pinky (after working a twelve hour day?) How this story explains me as a person and artist: I believe in being resourceful - it’s a kind of alchemy - making magic out of the mundane.

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

A:  Capitalism.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Guillermo Gomez-Peña and Coco Fusco; Carmen Amaya, the late great flamenco dancer; flash mobs; Luis Valdez; Rekha the Bollywood star; Kathakali dance theatre; Miss Piggy; Suzan Lori Parks; Nilo Cruz; GWAR.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Gritty, raw, emotionally and morally complex but not sentimental; fantastical; historical; structurally playful and innovative; movement and music driven.

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

A:  Write, dance, sing, rewrite, cook, garden, rewrite, build community, see shows, rewrite, self-produce.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A;  My solo show, Scene/Unseen at the Bleecker St. Theatre, Planet Connections Festival in June; everything MTWorks puts up; the world premiere of Draw the Circle by Mashuq Deen at InterAct Theatre in Philly April 4-8; Arooj Aftab and Arif Lohar at Asia Society April 28; http://www.facebook.com/midniteschild

Mar 6, 2012

I Interview Playwrights Part 431: Melissa Gawlowski



Melissa Gawlowski

Hometown: Hell, Michigan (yes, really).

Current Town: Brooklyn.

Q:  Tell me about Spring Tides.

A:  I started Spring Tides in my last year of the MFA playwriting program at Ohio University. It started as a satire about a guy named Joe who wakes up one morning to find himself in Hell with a greaser named Frankie and a nun named Bernardina. They then team up to kill God. Obviously, this has nothing whatsoever to do with the current play. Happily I had opportunities for lots of development, including (besides Boomerang) a production in Philly with Cardboard Box Collaborative (I believe they procured a literal ton of sand for the show), and a developmental reading in Alaska with the Last Frontier Theatre Conference. It all helped me find what I really wanted to say. Time helps, too. I think I’ve grown up a lot since my mid-twenties. And happily my plays have come with me.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I'm working on a new full-length play that's a loose riff on the Orpheus/Euridice myth, when I’m not slammed with the reading/writing required for my schoolwork. I’m in my first year of the PhD program in Educational Theatre for Colleges and Communities at NYU. Arts education is another deep passion of mine—I work in the management of teaching artists and school partners at Lincoln Center Institute (with many wonderful colleagues). And I'm also working on planning a wedding and moving to a new apartment with my amazing fiancé. Life is full! But it’s all happy stuff.

Q:  Tell me about Analogous.

A:  Analogous is an organization founded by Marie Evelyn focused on interaction art, which is a term for artworks in various genres that resonate with the concepts of complexity theory. This ranges from the exhibition of visual artworks created with recycled materials to improvised experimental music to rule-based performance. My focus with the company is performance work involving language, as Co-director of Dialogue-as-Performance. One major project we worked on was Metis, which had a couple of different incarnations. The goal was to bring together playwrights and improvisational musicians and explore how a playwright might “improvise” with written words to share sonic/visual space with the musicians. We performed it at The Tank back in 2007 with six playwrights and six musicians. Our second version (last year) focused on the language, using an algorithm Marie and I came up with (she’s a master of algorithms) to determine the direction of the dialogue. It’s fun sometimes to work on things that are quite different from my other playwriting work.

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

A:  Well, this is a disturbing story that I may regret sharing, but when I was a little girl I had a stuffed bunny that served as my imaginary friend. Going to school I’d imagine he was roller-skating alongside the school bus. Also he had wings and could fly. Also he had magic-dust in his tail. One day, to mess with me, my dad told me about how people kill rabbits by holding them upside-down and breaking their necks (I warned you). I obviously found that highly upsetting. That night, I think because I was tempted by the horribleness of it, and I was hitting the age where I was starting to realize, “It’s just a toy. You can’t really hurt it,” I held my bunny upside-down and “broke his neck”. And then cried and cried. But then I consoled myself with the idea that he was a magic bunny, after all. So I took the magic-dust from his tail and resurrected him. Creepy as it is, I think maybe that story came to mind because it’s sort of like my writing—it has magic, and it’s dark, but also hopeful. I won’t say that this explains me as a person, though—I have a pet bunny at present, in fact, and I assure you that he is very well cared-for. No breaking real bunnies. That was a totally terrible story to share.

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

A:  Ummm… more funding would be nice. But besides that, wouldn’t it be great if there was cross-pollination between independent theatre companies across the country? A way for the amazing work being done in NYC to make its way over to Chicago, say, and vice-versa. So that companies could communicate with and inspire each other directly. Places like Portland, too, where they’re doing interesting stuff. And other cities we might not think about. Tulsa—I bet somebody’s doing something totally awesome in Tulsa. I’m a Midwesterner, so I like the idea of sharing more with the region between the coasts.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  There are so many exciting and wonderful writers out there. But heroes? Jacquelyn Reingold writes plays that are beautiful, touching, and incredibly funny. She's the writer I hope to be someday. Other heroes, shoot—well, Shakespeare, man. Beckett. Ionesco. Pinter. Churchill. Those guys are for serious.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I really like playwrights who use a magical quality, who ask big questions, and also make me laugh. Like Fornes, Rivera, Lucas, Ruhl, Durang too, and others. So many others! I recently read Griselda Gambaro’s Information for Foreigners, and that play shook me up. I also have to say that I am very excited by compelling theatrical design. I am so blown away by the work of scenic and lighting and costume designers—their insights and vision can be stunning. I was reminded of this upon seeing the work of Boomerang’s team for my show—I’m so very humbled by the talent I’ve been lucky enough to work with.

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

A:  Write, write, write, and see, see, see. It’s so important to see stuff (theater and dance and music, too), though the expense can be a challenge. It’s very easy to get stuck only seeing the work of your friends, but it’s really valuable to see what else is out there, both small-scale and large. Plus you’ll start to get the opportunity to meet more people, which I’ve found to be critical. Probably 90% of the work I’ve done has been with somebody I’ve met already, or through some personal connection. I think it can be tough being noticed when the group knows nothing about you already. There are a lot of playwrights out there.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Spring Tides opens Friday, March 9th and runs through the 25th at The Secret Theatre. Tickets are available through www.boomerangtheatre.org.  I also have a short play opening the same weekend as Spring Tides, as part of a short play festival by Full Circle Theater Company called “Unlikely Allies”. It runs for four consecutive Sundays starting March 11th at 4 p.m. in the basement of Triple Crown bar in Chelsea. I’ll also plug the work of my fiancé Dan Pratt, because I think keeping aware of work in other disciplines is really valuable. He’s a jazz saxophonist and has several albums out, most recently with his Dan Pratt Organ Quartet. He is phenomenally talented, as are the players in the band, and I’m not just saying that because I’m marrying the guy.