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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Aug 23, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 780: Maggie Lee




Maggie Lee

Hometown:  Sunnyvale, CA

Current Town:  Seattle, WA

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  My new play The Tumbleweed Zephyr is running in Seattle until the end of August. It's an Old West steampunk train adventure, and part of a trilogy of plays set in the alternate steampunk world of New Providence. It's being produced by Pork Filled Productions, a Seattle theater company dedicated to pushing beyond the usual expectations of what Asian American theater can be. We are committed to diverse casting and non-traditional scripts, which means for this show we have an awesome multicultural cast having a grand old time running around in a steampunk universe.

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

A:  As an Asian American kid, I was lucky that my parents were fairly encouraging of my writing and didn't push me to become a doctor or a lawyer. However, they were pretty strict that if I was going to pursue writing, I should always do my best at it. So when I was a teenager, my dad kept finding all of these essay contests for me to enter. I was really kind of whiny about it, to be honest – I didn't want to write boring essays, I wanted to be Stephen King! This one contest in particular was called "Our Treasured Trees," and I decided on a lark to write a science fiction short story about a guy wandering around in a post-apocalyptic desert to find the secret thing that will save the world (spoiler: it's a tree). To my complete shock, I won first prize and a bike. All of the other entries were very scientific essays about how trees help the environment, so I felt kind of bad about winning by writing something for fun. But the committee member who handed me the award told me she had tears in her eyes while she was reading my entry. It made me realize that most of the time, people just want a good story. Yes, facts are important and teaching people is important, but what really sticks in our hearts and minds are the stories that make us feel something. And there is nothing more magical than live theater to capture that true intimacy of sharing a story with other people.

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

A:  I would make it more acceptable for the audience to have fun. There is a trend lately that modern plays are all about dreary, terrible people doing dreary, terrible things to each other, and the audience goes away feeling dreary and terrible, and there is no fun allowed because this is SERIOUS THEATER. But to me, having fun does not automatically equal being frivolous and silly. I believe the best plays are the ones that tackle important issues and deep emotions, but in a way that is still creative and entertaining. You can be thoughtful and still enjoy yourself. It's okay to have fun at the theater!

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My theater heroes are stage managers. Seriously, all the stage managers out there. You guys are rock stars.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love new works that push the boundaries of what is possible on stage, and use creativity to make the most of lean budgets. Seattle has a wonderfully thriving fringe theater community that actively champions new plays, so it's been a great place for me to grow as a playwright. In particular, I love genre plays like science fiction and horror. There's no better creepy scare than feeling the hairs on the back of your neck standing on end during a live performance. The world needs more horror plays.

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

A:  Give yourself a deadline. Even if it's just a bunch of friends in your living room reading your play over pizza and beers, at least it holds you accountable to finish something and have it down on paper by a certain date because other people are showing up. Also, go see plays! Nothing will help you better understand what works and what doesn't work on stage than by going to see as many plays as possible. Even the bad ones. Especially the bad ones.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  The Tumbleweed Zephyr is playing at 12th Avenue Arts in Seattle until August 29, 2015. To learn more, visit Pork Filled Productions at www.porkfilled.com.

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Aug 22, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 779: Candice Cain



photo by Katie Bogdanski

 

Candice Cain

Hometown: Brookhaven, NY

Current Town: Brookhaven, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I have another children's play that I'm putting the finishing touches on, entitled "Books: A Treasure." I wrote it for National Library week, and it was performed at different libraries across Long Island. I also adapted one of my older plays, "What Happened Last Night," for the screen. My production team and I are currently working on getting the funding for it. We hope to film it at the end of November this year. It's a romantic comedy that everyone that went to college can relate to!

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 third grade, I had Enrichment with Mrs. Steiner once per week. She would pull me and a few other kids out of our regular classes to work on more creative projects with her. It was a gifted and talented program. I remember one of the topics for projects we had was chocolate. Now, you're giving chocolate as an option to a bunch of third graders-- We all ran with it. That's where I wrote my first play, called "A Journey to Chocolateland." There were like ten kids or so in the class, and we put on this play that I wrote, which Mrs. Steiner filmed. We didn't have sets or costumes, although I remember one of the girls "wearing" a big piece of oaktag with a chocolate bar on it as Mrs. Chocolate. I loved that my idea came to life. It was like everyone was playing in my world of make-believe. Now, as a published writer, it is so much fun for me to see actors playing in my world.

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

A:  Theatre used to be so grand. It was such an event to go and see a show. Recently, my husband and I took our twins to see "Aladdin" on Broadway. We were dressed nicely-- my daughter in a dress, me in a nice outfit, both my husband and son wearing polo shirts, you get the idea. The majority of people there were dressed as though they were seeing a film at the $1 theatre. It was so upsetting to me. Actors, playwrights, directors, producers-- We pour our heart and soul to make a show amazing. It would be so nice if people could take theatre seriously for all of the work that was put into it and dress appropriately when seeing a show. And NEVER EVER EVER leave during curtain calls!!!!!

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My favorite playwrights were and still are Neil Simon and Christopher Durang. I also admire David Mamet quite a bit, but I wouldn't necessarily call him a "theatrical hero." As for an actor that is my theatrical hero, I will say Ron Bohmer. When I was a senior in high school, I saw him as Enjolras in "Les Miserables." I was so moved by his performance that I actually wrote him a fan letter and sent it to the theatre. I was absolutely STUNNED when he wrote back to me and included a signed photo. It made me feel as though Broadway was attainable; that "regular" people were involved with productions and that I would be able to do it, too. I still have that photo of Ron. It is framed and on my office wall.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love politically incorrect productions, such as "The Producers." I haven't seen "Book of Mormon" yet, but I heard that it really pushes the envelope. It is thrilling for me to get into the mind of the writer and see their work performed on the stage. Politically incorrect shows pretty much say what the majority of people are thinking, which is why they usually get such a big response to them.

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

A:  Don't let rejection get you down!!!!! The wall leading down to my basement is wallpapered with rejection letters-- Seriously. Just keep at it. The Writers' Market is also a fantastic tool to find publishers for your plays.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  We have an IndieGogo for What Happened Last Night here: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/what-happened-last-night I was also approved for a grant for AIM Hatch Fund, and would REALLY appreciate anyone that wants to contribute to their fabulous 501c3 charity here: http://www.hatchfund.org/project/what_happened_last_night


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Aug 21, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 778: Lisa Rafferty


Lisa Rafferty

Hometown: Montclair, NJ

Current Town: Scituate, MA

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’m co-creating a documentary theater piece on the Boston Marathon bombings with Joey Frangieh and the Boston Theater Company. It is meant to honor and remember those who were impacted, directly or indirectly, and the community that arose on April 15, 2013.

The production will focus on the powerful, profound, inspiring and even lighthearted stories, captured in the words of over 85 interviews. I did 28 of the interviews between April and June of this year with survivors, journalists, runners, medical professionals and others.

The script is being created verbatim from the transcriptions and is inspired by the work of Anna Deavere Smith and the Tectonic Theater Project.

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 made my professional acting debut at age 8, onstage with my mom – a true triple threat and wonderful comedic actress. It was in a musical called ‘Circus, Circus, Circus’ written by the late, great David Vos (‘Somethings Afoot’). That magical experience – all those creative, dynamic, talented people surrounding me – pulled me into the world of theater and I’ve never left.

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

A:  Unsurprisingly, it would be wonderful if ‘making a living in theater’ did not actually mean ‘my day job and my husband keep me afloat.’

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:   David Vos, my mom, Michael Bennett, Moises Kaufman, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Anna Deavere Smith

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theater that pulls in audiences that are not predominantly white, female, suburban (I’m describing myself, btw).

Punchdrunk’s immersive theater, ‘In the Heights’ and ‘Hamilton,’ Theatre Mitu’s documentary mythology, to name a few. And ‘Rocky the Musical’ – the only Broadway show were the men’s room line was longer than the women’s room.

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

A:  Two words: collaborators and deadlines. The only way I get anything done.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Excited by many ‘MOMologues ‘ productions appearing around the country and around the world, courtesy of the fabulous Samuel French. Stay tuned to Boston Theater Company for information on the premiere of ‘Finish Line’ in April 2016.

@lisajrafferty, @TheMOMologues, @BostonTheaterCo

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Aug 20, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 777: Trisha Sugarek



Trisha Sugarek

Hometown: Seattle, Washington

Current Town: Savannah, Georgia

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  A ten minute play, for the classroom, about transgendered teens. I have written 26 of these scripts addressing real life issues in a teen’s life such as, Bullying, running away, drugs, teen dating violence, cutting and suicide.

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

A:  As a writer: I grew up, before television, at my mother’s knee. She told wonderful stories of her growing up, in the wild forests of Washington state, with her 13 siblings. I have written 3 stage plays and 2 novels based on these true stories. My mother (raised in the early 1900’s) went on to own a bar and grill (speakeasy) in San Francisco and was a reigning ‘flapper’ during the roaring 20’s. Her sister, at the age of seventeen, ran away to Alaska to write her music, and homesteaded for the next twenty years. She was inspired by Robert Service’s time in Alaska.

As a person: I was always fascinated with Old Hollywood; ‘going to the movies’ with my Mom was a big part of my childhood. Which I believe led me to drama school (1978). I spent the next 30 years on the stage, and doing radio voice overs and commercials on TV. Which led me to directing. My most proud moment, as a director, was directing The Vagina Monologues. I chose to use 13 actors (instead of the traditional 3) and 3 of those were drag queens/transgendered who performed the monologue: ‘They Beat the Girl Out Of My Boy’ I began writing scripts in 1994 and have enjoyed seeing them produced on stages here and abroad.

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

A:   I wish more unknown playwrights, who are truly wonderful, had more opportunities getting their work produced. My fear is that the audiences will continue to dwindle as the TV and computer screen demands more and more of their attention.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Lawrence Olivier (Richard III), Nathan Lane (Love! Valor! Compassion!) Dame Judi Dench (whatever she does), Jim Parsons (An Act of God) and Robert Duval (American Buffalo). Oh! You meant playwrights! (grin) Where do I start? Tennessee Williams, Shakespeare, David Mamet, Edward Albee, Peter Shaffer and Trisha Sugarek*. my ALL-TIME favorite writer/hero is Charles Bukowski!

*Hey! Did she just name herself as a hero? Yes, because I tried, I kept writing and….against all odds I got published by Samuel French and have had a few plays produced. We writers are all heroes in my book. It’s a damn lonely, hard job. It takes gargantuan dedication and a very thick skin (think crocodile). Oh yes, I have my own file full of rejection letters.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:   DRAMA and RISK TAKING!

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

A:  Keep writing! Be true to yourself. Write about what you know; your honesty will shine through. And study other playwrights and their scripts. Be open to other possibilities, many of my plays developed into novels because I was open to the idea of expanding my work.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  The most popular post on my blog is my teachings on “How To Write A Play”. I’ve published four Journals/Handbooks on the ‘how to’ of writing fiction and script writing, developing rich characters, and story arc. Leaving 275 lined, blank pages for your work. I have also published “Monologues 4 Women”

My ten minute play, The Art of Murder developed into a series of murder mysteries (novellas) and I am currently working on the 6th book.

My Tribute to Billy Holiday, a one woman show entitled “Scent of Magnolia” has been produced here and in Europe.

Please visit my web site. It is dedicated to the craft of writing. www.writeratplay.com and find all my books and scripts on Amazon.

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=sugarek

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Aug 19, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 776: Jonathan Payne





Jonathan Payne

Hometown: Los Angeles, CA

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I am now in preparation for my Ars Nova Out Loud reading in the Fall, on a play called "Poor Edward". It is a play based off an old Czech Fairy Tale, called "Greedy Guts." Which tells the story of a married couple who can't have children, and the husband brings home something akin to a mandrake root, and they raise it as there own. Dress it in diapers, give it a pacifier, the whole nine yards. It then takes on a Little Shop of Horrors vibe, when the root actually comes to life, and lives off of human blood.

It has been a challenge to write as I usually create huge casts, but this play is only two characters on stage the whole time, with no acts or scene breaks. I am quite excited about it.

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 been writing since I was a young, young thing. My fourth grade teacher Denise Duplessis, had us write a short story of our choosing, and odd enough, I wrote one about an ice cube travelling from Los Angeles to New York in search of a freezer. Why it had to venture all the way out to New York for a freezer is anybody's guess. Mayhaps a deeper meaning? The things you need might be closer than you think.

Anyway, the ice cube somehow makes it there in time. And my teacher loved it. She told me I was going to be a writer. I have been writing ever since.

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

A:  AFFORDABILITY!!! I had the pleasure of going to school in England for three years. It was so easy to see theatre there. I saw so much theatre there in comparison to my longer years here in New York. That the government there invest so much into the theatre is something of note. I wish we could find that here.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  This list could go on forever. But a few for you. Bertolt Brecht. Anton Chekov. August Wilson. Tennessee Williams. Eugene O'Neill. Samuel Beckett. Adrienne Kennedy. Harold Pinter. Sophocles. Lorraine Hansberry. Living: Athol Fugard. Edward Albee. Peter Schaffer. Tony Kushner. Tom Stoppard. Lynn Nottage.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love the stuff that makes you go "WTF was that?" I love the epic on stage. The macro in the micro. The Micro in the macro. Giant ideas, and lights shown in dark and unexpected places. A play from the perspective of a coffee pot. I love work that stretches the bounds of the theatre, which I feel the theatre is quite boundless. I also love that Chekov's plays are viewed as comedies.

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

A:  I cannot speak from any sort of stump, but I feel like what has been most rewarding to me is community. I have to remember that my fellow playwrights have been such a wonderful support to me. One of the major reasons I got in to Ars Nova's Play Group is the wonderful playwright Sarah Gancher. She vouched for me when I was being considered. I will always remember that. The writers in my life have been great sounding boards, commiserators, opportunity and resource sharers, and great advocates.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Sex of the Baby by Matthew Lee Erlbach (fellow Ars Novan) Sept. 9-27 @ Access Theater.
Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally by Kevin Armento (fellow Ars Novan) Sept. 30-Oct. 24 @ 59E59 Theater
A Knee That Can Bend by Emma Goidel (fellow Ars Novan) Nov. 28th-Dec. 20th. @ The Drake (Philidelphia)

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Aug 18, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 775: Judy Klass





Judy Klass

Hometown:  I was born in NYC. I grew up in a small town in New Jersey right over the bridge -- both of my parents taught in Manhattan, and that's where we went on weekends to make life more interesting.

Current Town:  I live in Nashville, Tennessee. I had tenure at a community college on Long Island; I taught there while living in Brooklyn and then in Manhattan. But I hated the commute to Long Island, two hours each way, four days a week. I'm a songwriter, as well as a playwright, and I heard about a guy in Nashville who demo’d songs for not much money, full band demos, so finally I could hear my songs the way I heard them in my head. I put out my first CD: called Brooklyn Cowgirl to show I get the joke, I’m an unlikely person to be doing country music. (This year, ten years later, I finally released the sequel, with pictures from the same photo shoot and all, called The Brooklyn Cowgirl Rides Again.) In the years after I first visited Nashville, I noticed that I was spending at least part of every vacation there, that when I wasn’t going to Nashville to pitch songs and so on, I was writing songs and planning which ones to demo and planning my next trip. I got a one-year sabbatical, and I wound up running away from home to Nashville, and not going back. I gave up tenure. This seemed like a dubious move during the Recession, when I was unemployed and underemployed. At the moment, I’m teaching at Vanderbilt full-time and I’m very happy. Nashville is a great town for songwriters – it can be more isolating for playwrights, however.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  As a playwright, I’m very happy that my full-length play After Tartuffe, a play in verse (?!), has been produced at last, in the Fresh Fruit Festival, and I feel good about that production. I of course have one-act and full-length plays and musicals which are unproduced, and I send them out . . . I know what the next full-length play I want to write will be about. When I first came to live in Nashville, I was supposed to spend my sabbatical year writing a screenplay about Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the women’s suffrage movement. But there were different stories from different times in Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s life I wanted to dramatize, and I could not get a handle on how to structure the script. So, the next full-length play I write will be about a writer who grapples with that problem that has had me flummoxed for so long, and she winds up writing a cycle of plays about Cady Stanton, at different moments in her life, and scenes from those plays within the play will be part of it, but the playwright’s life will be the main story, including her relationship with her estranged father, and things going on in her life will loosely parallel the scenes from the past. Her father will be a Hollywood guy, who tries to get closer to her by telling her to turn what she’s written into a screenplay, so there will probably be some satire of what the movie business is looking for also . . . It’s a play that requires a lot of research – I will really need to know all about the women’s movement in the 1800s and read the primary sources.

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 don’t have a story of one day or one moment. I can say that I come from a family of writers. When I was a kid, there were many hours when both my parents disappeared up to their offices in the attic – they had one on each side of it – and you could hear the typewriters clacking away, and that was a good feeling. My mother Sheila Solomon Klass wrote fiction: novels and also YA books. My father Morton Klass was a cultural anthropologist, so the books he wrote were non-fiction. But he had also dabbled in fiction. His brother, my Uncle Phil, was a Golden Age of SF writer, using the pen name William Tenn. My sister writes and my brother writes . . . it was kind of what you were expected to do in my family. I have some vivid early memories of waiting on-line with my family for tickets to Shakespeare in the Park, having a picnic and then sitting in the Delacorte Theater watching King Lear, Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Taming of the Shrew and other plays. There was very little my parents thought I was too young for. They took me to Cat on a Hot Tin Roof on Broadway when I was seven or eight. Sandy Dennis was in it. I could not follow it at all. I thought it was funny that the bratty kids were called no-necked monsters, and I understood that Big Daddy was dying – other than that I did not have a clue about what was going on. And when I read it now, I do see how it would baffle a kid that age. But I also think a lot of people underestimate kids, that kids understand some things indirectly and sideways, and with many plays and films they can grasp more than adults give them credit for, so I’m glad I was brought along for the ride to many events. That, plus the sense that I might be drummed out of my family if I didn’t write, pushed me in this direction. I wrote a play at around age seven that startled a teacher, and when I was fourteen or so I wrote a play about a bunk full of girls at a summer camp, playing a card game and baiting each other, that impressed my father – those might have been signs that writing for the stage was for me.

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

A:  Oh, more national funding for and concern about theater, as there is in Britain, more theaters open to new plays, more theaters open to women writers, all the usual stuff . . .

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I’ve taught a drama lit course at Vanderbilt a number of times, and I fill it with plays that I love. I made the theme of the course plays about families, usually messed-up families, because the claustrophobia of the stage (as opposed to how stories can open up and move around in movies, which students are more familiar with) adds power to those stories: a bunch of people trapped together in a few rooms. I start with Oedipus and Antigone, ‘cause that’s a pretty dysfunctional family right there, and I get a bang, every time, out of how good they are as plays, and I think the accessibility and craftsmanship and power of Sophocles take students by surprise. We read Hamlet and The Seagull, and Long Day’s Journey into Night, which is obviously just incredible. It’s good for me to re-read these plays again and again – it’s a pleasure I get paid for. I teach Glass Menagerie – there is such spare beauty to it. Among the more recent plays are ‘Night, Mother by Marsha Norman and True West by Sam Shepard – and that one really influenced me when I saw it in the Village decades ago. I think some of the spirit of True West wound up in my play Cell, which was nominated for an Edgar and which is published by Samuel French – it’s a play about brothers. I think I was about as influenced by Shepard as Suzan-Lori Parks was when she wrote Topdog/Underdog, which I also teach. It’s odd that such a manly, “macho” play by a guy like Shepard would influence women writers – but True West is a heck of a play to watch when there are two good actors involved. I teach Paula Vogel’s How I Learned to Drive – that made a big impression on me also. I saw a student production at Nassau Community College, the place on Long Island where I used to teach, which was amazing.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I’m good with experimental theater up to a point, but I do best when there is a story I can follow and characters I care about. I respect someone like Arthur Miller who listens to Aristotle and writes plays that are unremittingly serious, but I think I respond best to plays that mix drama or even tragedy with comedy – where the funny often comes out of the painful. I love David Auburn’s play Proof for those reasons – that’s another one that made a big impression on me when I saw it on Broadway. It’s a powerful, serious play, but the fact that Auburn has a background in improv comedy is also a strength. I teach that one in my course also. I don’t teach Stoppard’s Arcadia or The Invention of Love, but I think they’re pretty wonderful. That next full-length play I want to write, about Elizabeth Cady Stanton, may be structured a bit like Arcadia, in terms of moving back and forth between the past and present, and things happening in the two worlds resonating with each other. When I came to NYC recently for the production of After Tartuffe, my boyfriend and I saw Fun Home. It absolutely blew us away. In terms of musicals, that’s obviously state of the art.

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

A:  It’s good if you can figure out who your characters are and just hear them talking to each other in your head. If you reach the point where you are just the stenographer trying to keep up with what they say as they flirt and joke and argue with each other – then they have taken on their own lives, and you can get out of the way. If there are issues you are ambivalent about, so you think you can’t write about them – I’d say those are the issues to explore. You can create two characters with opposing viewpoints, and each of them will argue passionately and well because you understand both sides of the argument so well. And you don’t have to choose to have one character “win.” That kind of confrontation is what I was trying for with my most recent unproduced full-length play The Politics of Fabulousness. I have a woman character who is offended by cross-dressing, who says men in drag are putting on a kind of minstrel show, caricaturing women, and I have a gay man who was her best friend in high school long ago who says nonsense, if that were the case then any time we write in the voice of someone at all different from ourselves, or play a role that is different from ourselves, it could be dismissed as a minstrel show. There is room for creativity, imagination, empathy and human universals. And he asks what business she has teaching African-American Studies when she’s white – isn’t that a form of appropriation and minstrelsy? And what business does she have teaching Women and Gender Studies when, he says, she’s basically homophobic and uptight and anti-sex . . . And there are two other characters in the play with different points of view . . . and everybody’s wrong and everybody’s right. That’s kind of a Zen ideal for me. That’s worth trying to do sometimes. Not all of my plays are like that – After Tartuffe is not like that. There is a definite villain in that play, but the villain is fun. Maybe because I’d accuse myself of being an overly earnest, didactic, conscientious person, I enjoy writing uncensored id monsters who send up the earnest, hand-wringing characters. If you write “bad guys” who take on the characters who have qualities you usually admire, devil’s advocates who are genuinely pointed and funny in what they say, then you won’t wind up with cardboard, one-dimensional villains. You can create characters who are very different from yourself but still provide actors with fun roles to sink their teeth into.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Well, I guess I have been not-so-subtly plugging various things all along here: my albums which are available from CD Baby, and Cell, my play published by Sam French . . . Don Carter who was in The Pillow Man was terrific as that character I was just describing in After Tartuffe, the religious hypocrite, the de-frocked mega-church pastor and aspiring televangelist in an alternate-universe future America that is a Christian Fundamentalist state . . . and Don is interested in moving the production somewhere else, and the director Janet Bentley and I and the rest of the cast are psyched about it. So, we are looking to have a reading or backers audition, and anyone reading this who’d like to come, or would like to give us money or a theater to move to – I’d be glad to hear from you! Two of my short plays, Wooing Olivia and The Poe-ster, will be in a festival at the Secret Theatre in Queens this September. Two of my short plays are published by Brooklyn Publishers as stand-alone scripts. And as I said, I have many scripts which need good homes. People have only to ask me, and I will gladly send synopses or my scripts through the ether.

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Aug 17, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 774: Brett Epstein



Brett Epstein

Hometown: Hamden, CT

Current Town: New York, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  My current passion project is a one-act called Crisis: Ocean Planet, which was inspired by the Dawn Brancheau tragedy at SeaWorld in 2010.

I'm on draft four right now; the play recently had staged readings at BAM (Beta Series) and Bristol Valley Theater (New Works Initiative). The Brancheau incident inspired Blackfish, which became a phenomenon, but the whole 'captive whale attacks/kills person' scenario is 100% ripe for live theater on many levels (fascinating characters, a plethora of design possibilities, etc).

I also produce a bi-monthly short play event called Rule of 7x7. Simple concept: 7 rules, 7 writers, 7 new plays.

So every other month I commission 7 playwrights (I'm typically one of them) to create new plays based on the same set of rules. Rules change every time so you're never getting the same show; they can be as simple as 'math' or as specific as 'a back-handed compliment on page one, followed by 10 seconds of silence.' Each group then gets 5-7 hours of rehearsal time and viola, it's showtime. The event is always a ton of fun... definitely a 'theater party.' Plus free beer.

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 parents divorced when I was 5 years old, and I lived in 12 different houses/condos/apartments (between both parents) between the ages of 5-17. Neither my Mom nor Dad ever stayed in the same place for too long. But we would literally keep moving within the same town (Hamden, CT). I'm sure that subconsciously explains why I'm always on the go, love sleepovers, am somewhat neurotic, am somewhat cynical about love, and why I always opt for month-to-month rentals in NYC.

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

A:  Less fluffy shit.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Right now: Joshua Harmon, Rob Askins, Abby Rosebrock, Dan McCabe. They're writing the kind of theater that I'm talking about in my answer below. Reading one of their plays is an entire experience in itself. Get the popcorn.

Current acting hero: Pablo Schrieber (Mendez on OITNB). He should be on Broadway yearly. He's so hilarious because he's so genuine.

Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Dark, dark comedy. Bold voices. Unconventional heroes. Overlaps. Funny-funny-funny-funny-but-what's-that?!-BOOM!!-the-play-is-saying-something-meaningful-and-real-at-the-same-time-you're-laughing-your-ass-off.

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

A:  If you meet important people or go to an important event, and you're wearing glasses, they'll take you more seriously.

Also: pay attention to pop culture because there are some thrilling things to write about. I had a BALL recently writing a ten-minute play where I asked myself "what would the last meal look like before Teresa Guidice of Real Housewives of NJ fame begins her jail sentence?"

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Rule of 7x7: Summer Edition is Friday, August 21 at 7pm and 9:30pm. $12 tix, free beer included. This round, we've got plays by Lia Romeo, Charly Evon Simpson, Jeff Ronan, Colin Waitt, Natalie Zutter, Jack Gilbert and myself. You can watch the promo video for that right here. Twitter: @RuleOf7x7.

I also developed and starred in this web series called (NOT) BROTHERS, about two half-brothers. You can watch the whole 1st season right here.

For all other Brett Epstein goings-on, my official website is: www.ItsBrett.net.

Follow me: @ItsBrettDotNet

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Aug 16, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 773: Kris Bauske



Kris Bauske

Hometown: Born in Grand Rapids, MI and raised in Niles, MI. I consider both of them home.

Current Town: Orlando, FL

Q:  What are you working on now?
 
A:  I have a lot of irons in the fire, so please don’t be dismayed by the long list. 

Currently reviewing a contract from a British publisher interested in one of my plays, Whispers to the Moon, which is set in Monaco. Contract looks good to me, but I’m waiting on an okay from my agent before moving forward.

Making arrangements to have the illustrated book version of A Good Old Fashioned Redneck Country Christmas represented at the Frankfurt Book Fair in Frankfurt, Germany this year.
‘Redneck Christmas’ is being adapted as a movie this year with filming set to start in Vancouver in the fall. I’m in constant contact with the producer on that project, and I plan to be on set during filming. 

The film producer has a partner who primarily works with stage productions. We are discussing a Toronto production of ‘Redneck Christmas’ this season and possible touring productions for following years. There is one completed sequel, A Good Old Fashioned Redneck Country Wedding, which the stage producer is also interested in which will premiere in Saskatchewan, Canada this year, and I’m working on a third installment – A Good Old Fashioned Redneck Happy Halloween. That’s my only new writing right now.

This is my second year as Co-Chair for ICWP’s 50/50 Applause Award, and summer is our busiest time. I am responsible for the creation of the 2015 Celebration Video, so I’ve been soliciting and reviewing video clips from recipient organizations and working with our volunteer to have the video ready when we make the formal announcement in September.

My play The Nearly Final Almost Posthumous Play of the Not-Quite-Dead Sutton McAllister was in a new play festival last month at The Players Theatre in Sarasota, FL and will be one of five full-length scripts in the Tampa Bay Theatre Festival next month. I spent a week in Sarasota for the festival, and I’m producing and directing for the Tampa festival, so it’s been a busy summer.

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 about six, we lived very close to the church we attended. Some Sundays, my older sister and I would walk to Sunday school together and then come home by ourselves. One Sunday, we saw a tiny kitten near the sidewalk on our way home. My sister told me I’d better keep walking and get home, or I’d be in trouble. Then she continued on her way. I stayed and coaxed the kitten over. I spoke to the animal quietly and petted her and told her how sweet she was. Unsurprisingly, the kitten followed me (half carrying/half coaxing) all the way home. She was the best friend I had as a child. I can’t turn my back on any innocent in need of help, and I still have a deep love and respect for animals. Theirs is the only love without condition or guile. I enjoy writing characters who are that untouched by the world. It’s a breath of fresh air.

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

A:  Our community would be more generous to each other if I had the power to change the theater. I have been incredibly blessed by organizations that freely loan props and costumes; freely share their empty space; and freely help with auditions and promotion. I’ve also been on the other side where a theatre with lots of empty space still expects $1500 a night rental if you’re going to put up a show there. It seems to me we should be more supportive and encouraging to our fellow artists. I would love to see organizations with empty space hold a lottery each year to share some of it with local playwrights. Wouldn’t that be something! 

I am truly appalled by ‘theater’ people who try to make their fortunes off the most underpaid, financially strapped members of our community. Theater is a team sport. We need to approach it as such!

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes? 

A:  Kenneth Brannaugh, Tom Hiddleston, Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh, Helen Hayes, Tommy Tune, and of course the great Neil Simon. Mr. Simon and I share an agent, and he has read some of my work and shared his comments with me. I have found him to be a generous, kind-hearted man. He is my hero just for being so gracious with his time when clearly he has no need to be.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?
 
A:  I love theatre that takes me out of myself. When I can sit in a seat for 2-3 hours and wish it had been longer, I know I’m seeing real genius! I prefer theatre that lifts my spirit and makes me feel renewed and exhilarated. It doesn’t happen often any more, but I’m always tremendously grateful and uniquely inspired when it does!

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

A:  Understand that writing for theatre today requires as much talent (if not more) at promotion as it does at writing. Use social media to your benefit. Don’t have a Twitter or Tumblr account yet? Get one, and use it often. Network as much as you can, and stay apprised of what’s happening in our community. Finally, don’t get frustrated. We’ve all been turned down, turned away, and turned off. If plays are your calling, you’ll keep going anyhow. If they’re not, don’t force it. It’s a tough journey even for those who feel called. It’s misery for those trying to force a square peg into a round hole.

Q:  Plugs, please: 

A:  The illustrated book of A Good Old Fashioned Redneck Country Christmas is available on Amazon, Kindle, and Barnes & Noble. It’s a lovely family-friendly book that makes a terrific gift. The plays, both musical and comedy, are available from my wonderful friends at Samuel French. www.samuelfrench.com
 
If you’ll be near Tampa over Labor Day weekend, I’d love to see you at the Tampa Bay Theatre Festival. Tickets to The Nearly Final Almost Posthumous Play of the Not-Quite-Dead Sutton McAllister are available at www.eventbrite.com
 
If you don’t currently support the International Centre for Women Playwrights, please check out the website at www.womenplaywrights.org ICWP’s 2015 recipients for the 50/50 Award will be announced in September! 

Check out my website to keep updated on other projects, and feel free to follow me on Twitter. www.krisbauske.com and @IntlPlaywright

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Aug 15, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 772: Barbara Pease Weber



Barbara Pease Weber

Home Town: I'm a Philly girl, through and through.

Current Town: I've been spending more and more time at the South Jersey seashore. I pretty much live at the beach nowadays.

Q:  What are some of the plays that you’ve written? Where have they been performed?

A:  I've written five comedies that are published by Samuel French and have been performed across the USA, in Canada, and some as far away as Australia and South Africa. My first is an all woman comedy, Delval Divas, about four incredibly bright, successful, professional women, who find themselves co-habitating at the fictional Delaware Valley ("Delval") Federal Correctional Institution, for committing a variety of non-violent "pink" collar crimes. Most recently, Samuel French published my 6W/2M comedy, The Witch in 204 ,which is a sequel (of sorts) to my earlier comedy entitled Seniors of the Sahara, centering around Sylvie Goldberg, a sweet, respectable, retired school teacher who returns home from her grandson's wedding in Israel with an unusual souvenir - a teapot/watering can that is actually a priceless relic containing a geriatric genie with a bad back and a penchant for vodka and V8. It's a quirky and unusual love story that culminates in The Witch in 204, when Sylvie's and Eugene's (the genie's) wedding plans are foiled by their sexy, sultry, and totally wicked new neighbor (Eugene's former paramour) a/k/a, The Witch in 204, who ruins their wedding day by poisoning one of their wedding guests (thinking she was Sylvie) with a lethal "brew" of pills and booze, and who tries to hijack the groom (Eugene) who leaves town leaving Sylvie with a dire warning to "Beware of The Witch in 204". My other comedies published by Samuel French are HOGWASH!, and A Crock of Schnitzel. My newest script (not yet published but it's had several productions) entitled Foolish Fishgirls and The Pearl, is about a trio of flat broke, middle age former mermaids living at the South Jersey seashore, whose lives didn't quite have that happily ever after storybook ending they had hoped for when then rescued their handsome young sailors and swam ashore 30 years ago. Suffice to say, all that chocolate I've consumed before bedtime over the years has resulted in some pretty bizarre dreams, fueling my already wild imagination, and resulting in a heck of a lot of fun.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’ve got at least a half dozen script ideas twirling around in my head, all waiting for the right moment to explode onto a page (should that moment actually ever again occur) and let me run wild with those that may ultimately take some sort of shape in what resembles a play or a story in some form or fashion. One involves Christmas (no, not another family reunion story, but something very different), one involves politics (no, not about boring battles of the Ds and Rs)s, one about the perils and aftermath of a reality TV show, another about my dear old (now departed) dad and his infamous wish (known only to family members) were he lucky enough to be reincarnated, and another about something that keeps coming to me at the oddest times then, poof, like right now, that I inexplicably seem to forget. (With age comes forgetfulness!) The common thread is that they’re all comedies, which is pretty much all I write.

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

A:  I actually have a couple totally different stories, one from my early childhood and one from my late teen/young adult years. While my dream for as far back as I can remember was to be an actor, which I am as well as a playwright, I wrote my first play, using characters from the Peanuts comic strip when I was nine, in fourth grade, for some sort of an extra-curricular writing or English class that was taught by one of the fifth grade teachers, who had a reputation of being strict, scary, and sometimes downright mean! Turns out, she got a pretty bad and undeserved rap from the fifth graders. The teacher wasn't in the least strict, scary or mean, at least in my book. She read my little script, which couldn't have been more than five or six pages at most, and which was chock full of typos having been pecked by me one finger at a time on my father's clunky manual typewriter, I'll never forget - she announced to the entire class that she loved it - and she insisted that it be performed "script in hand" in front of the entire school during some sort of assembly by a cast that I got to hand pick. Never being what anyone would ever dub as shy type, I cast myself as Lucy (who, of course, had the most lines). Coincidentally, I actually got to play Lucy again about ten years later, when I was 19, in a production of You're A Good Man Charlie Brown. I continued to act on and off throughout the years, but didn't write my "next" play until I was around 40 or so, thanks to my husband who more or less cajoled me into sitting down and doing it.

Which brings me to another crazy and wonderful thing that happened when I was cast in a play when I was 18 in 1976, as was a totally cute young fellow named John, also 18, who - fast forward - now happens to be my husband of almost 34 years, and the father of our two grown daughters (ironically neither of whom are remotely interested in performing! Where did we go wrong???) I get so much material from John, directly and indirectly. The things he says, his idiosyncrasies (such as, when we go out to lunch, triple checking, then making me check, that all of the toothpicks are removed from his sandwich before he eats it) turn into to some pretty funny stuff that I've managed to incorporate into my scripts. By way of example, early in our marriage when our girls were small, John had a black velour hoodie bathrobe that I probably got for him as a Christmas gift, and he would put on the robe and somehow tuck our eldest daughter (then about 5) inside with her head popping out, and he'd carry our younger daughter in one arm, and hold a hairdryer in his other hand, and he'd put a dish towel over his head (who knows why? there is no explanation!), and the three of them would chase me around our tiny condo in Ocean City laughing and screaming, "There's a Witch in 204" (our apartment was #204 and, of course, I was "The Witch"). Back then I would have never in a million years dreamed that one day I would write, or that Samuel French would publish, The Witch in 204. The last scene of the play pretty much recreates my treasured memories of oh so many years ago because my character, Herman, disguised as a Wizard (long black robe, etc.), chases Bella (short for Jezebella) The Witch around the South Jersey apartment, pointing at her a hairdryer wrapped in a colorful dish towel which is supposed to be the lethal witch whacking weapon that will throw off enough volts to electrocute even wickedest of witches, so as to scare her off. As they say, art imitates life, crazy and wonderful as it may be.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heros?

A:  I have always loved to make people laugh and have thoroughly enjoyed portraying characters in Neil Simon's The Odd Couple (Female Version), Last of the Red Hot Lovers, The Sunshine Boys, and Ken Ludwig's Moon Over Buffalo and Lend Me a Tenor. So, I'd have to say Simon and Ludwig are probably my playwright heroes, if for no other reason, I have such fond memories of portraying their characters. I wrote my first play, Delval Divas, shortly after portraying Florence Unger in The ( Female) Odd Couple, in part because my husband would not take no for an answer and insisted that I could and should try my hand at writing, and also because I had such a great time acting in all female shows like Steel Magnolias and The Odd Couple. I've been in more than my fair share of dramas, but the most fun (and, to me, that's what this is all about, or why do it?) are my memories of the comedies and the laughter, on stage, back stage, and of course, from the audience.

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

A:  Oh, that's an easy one! Do it cause you love it. Do it cause you want to do it. Do it cause it's YOUR story and you HAVE to tell it. Don't force yourself to write every day, every week, or even every month. Do write when the spirit moves you, when you have an idea, a line, a character, a scene, and your brain will just explode into a zillion particles and pieces if you don't stop whatever it is you happen to be doing at that very moment to get it down on "virtual" paper. Be grateful, humble, and appreciative to all who read your work, perform your work, sweep up the stage after your work, pull the curtain in between your scenes, and clean bathrooms of the theaters that perform your work (and offer to help!) And, of course be humble, understanding, kind, and courteous, to those who don't. Be thoroughly and utterly amazed by all of the great playwrights of the past who wrote their masterpieces without a computer! Become involved in the many aspects of theater as an actor, director, producer, stage manager, house manager, ticket taker, usher, because every time you are involved in a production you can't help but learn something from the experience. Make as many friends along the way as you can. And, the most important thing of all, HAVE FUN!

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