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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Oct 5, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 792: Kevin Armento



Kevin Armento

Hometown: San Diego, CA

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  Tell me about Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally.

A:  It's about an affair between a math teacher and her student, experienced through the eyes of the student's cell phone. The phone guides us through the story like a modern Greek chorus, attempting to unpack the confusing and irrational human behavior it's witnessing.

Q:  How did you form your relationship with One Year Lease Theater Company?

A:  My first day job in New York was at the Joyce Theater, and Ianthe and Jess from One Year Lease were there frequently. We became buds and I learned more about their company, then saw their production of pool (no water) and really wanted to collaborate. So I started sending over my stuff, and it eventually led to the idea of creating something together from scratch.

Q:  Describe the process of writing for this specific ensemble of artists.

A:  What I loved about it was the total freedom to go write whatever I want, while thinking on the company's aesthetic interests, physical style, love of chorus work, etc. So I gave them a blank text, a story that occasionally pops out into some dialogue, but can really be done a thousand different ways with as many actors as you want - and while I knew roughly who would be involved and how they might do it, it in turn gave them the freedom to divine the play they were interested in from that text. That process really came alive in Greece this summer (at One Year Lease's annual retreat), where we spent two weeks delineating the lines.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  An irresponsibly giant show about the birth of jazz in New Orleans. I'm going there for more research and music in a few weeks, because I don't know how to do it, and we have a super special first performance of it planned. Workshopping a show at Arena Stage this winter, so I'm revisiting that. I'm going to have some fun at Serials at the Flea this month. And I'm working on some television assignments because I'm a playwright in 2015.

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 third grade I told everyone in my class that Jonathan Taylor Thomas is my cousin. Like most of my writing, I'm not sure the white lie's meaning, but it felt right at the time.

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

A:  Less self-importance, more engagement with non-theater people.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Caryl Churchill is my hero. Really admire SL Parks, Beckett, Pinter, Butterworth, Washburn, Friel, and August Wilson.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  The kind that can only exist on a stage. The kind that endeavors to theatricalize the storytelling just as much as the story itself. The kind that can find the extraordinary in the banal, or the banal in the extraordinary.

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

A:  See lots of shows and get lots of coffees. Everything is rooted in relationships, a conversation between your work and the people who are interested in it. I think it took me an abnormally long time to learn that. Also, find the writers you connect with and talk about all this stuff. Talk about how it feels weird to constantly apply for things, and forge relationships from scratch. We're not fucking suits so it just feels weird sometimes. But those relationships have been so crucial to every fulfilling artistic project I've been involved in so far, and they're genuinely nurturing just as much as they are beneficial to your career.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  please excuse my dear aunt sally plays through October 24th at 59E59!

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Oct 3, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 791: Amber Ruffin




Amber Ruffin

Hometown: Omaha, NE

Current Town: NY, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I'm currently fiddling with a few musicals. My favorite at the moment is Bigfoot.

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'm the youngest of 5 of mostly girls, so I was severely encouraged growing up. I'm really lucky in that way. No one had the guts to say what I was doing was dumb.

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

A:  I'd cut 20 minutes out of most shows I see. I have always felt every show could be a lot shorter. King Of Kong: A Musical Parody is only an hour, and I love that because you can bring your boyfriend and he won't cry.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My theatrical heroes are all Second City people. People like Christina Anthony and Angela Shelton. I saw them early on and thought, there's no way I could ever do this.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love every musical I've ever seen. Even the bad ones are great! There is something about being brave enough to let people hear the songs you sing in your head that I can't get enough of.

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

A:  I've found it's important to be able to point to a body of work. People tend to stop after one project, but, you should have a pile of shows that you've worked hard on.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  King of Kong: A Musical Parody will be at Onyx Theater in Vegas the weekend of October 9th!
Serial Killers at Sacred Fools theater in LA is most Saturdays!

our website is www.kingofkongmusical.com



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Oct 1, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 790: Charly Evon Simpson


Charly Evon Simpson

Hometown: Born in Queens, NY. Raised in Northern New Jersey.

Current Town: New York City

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I am working on a play called Hottentotted in Fresh Ground Pepper’s PlayGround PlayGroup. It is a play that brings together the life of Sarah ’Saartjie' Baartman, also known as the Hottentot Venus, with the lives of contemporary black women in the US. Baartman, if you don’t know, was a South African woman put on display in Europe until the 1800s. I’ve interviewed black women of a variety of ages, asking questions about how they feel their bodies are on display and sexualized, about how old they were when they realized fully what I meant to be black and female, etc. I am interweaving the real stories of these women in hopes of highlighting many of the issues we confront today. I’m lucky enough to be workshopping the piece at the beginning of October and it will have a reading open to the public in December.

Other than that, I am working on a short play called Postmark The Night as a part of EST/Youngblood’s Asking For Trouble. It will be one of 20+ ten minute plays going up in mid-October.

And lastly, I just started my MFA in Playwriting. My playwriting class is taught by Annie Baker…which means I feel like I should be working on anything for that class 24/7.

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

A:  Two things come to mind when trying to think of a story. First, when I was four or so, my favorite movie was Dirty Dancing. While watching, I would get up on the coffee table and dance along. All my dolls and stuffed animals would be piled together so they could watch me. I would replay the dancing scene over and over and over again. When I was seven, I moved on to Pretty Woman, which I was told I couldn’t show at my birthday party because other kids may not be ready for it yet. This may explain why I started out more as an actor, continue to write one-woman shows every once and a while, and am a sucker for a good RomCom.

The second memory is that I was always writing stories. In second grade, we wrote short stories that would get “published” so we could take them home and show our families. I wrote story after story, often lying and saying I had already written a “sloppy copy” so I could go ahead and work on the final published copy. I was always writing something and hated going back to the old stuff. I am much better about editing now (but I still think it is the worst…) and, predictably, my turnout is not as fast as then, but I still always have a ton of stories in my head.

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

A:  The lack of diversity that sometimes haunts our theater spaces. I mean diversity of the audience, the theater organization officials, the playwrights, the actors, the directors, the designers, the characters being portrayed on stage…And I mean diversity of gender, race, ability, age, class, etc. The theater I see that excites me the most usually shows me a world that is in someway diverse. I think diversity makes theater stronger. I would change many barriers to theater that cause this lack.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  José Rivera and Sarah Ruhl were my first heroes. I got lost in their words and worlds and soon was considering this whole playwriting thing a lot more. Now? I feel like I have too many heroes to name. There are so many talent theater people and I truly am in awe of a great number of people. Anyone committing to this path and overcoming hurdles and trying their darnedest is a hero in my book.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theater that is passionate and what I mean by that is you can tell all involved are passionate about the piece. I get excited by others being excited about the work. It doesn’t always mean I love the work, but it excites me. I love theater that feels like it has been infused with magical realism and jazz. I love theater that feels like a punch to the gut. I love being surprised. And like I said above, I love theater that is diverse. Leaving the theater energized and not drained—that excites me.

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

A:  First piece of advice: It is okay to be unsure. It is okay to not really know if this is what you want to do. Take the time and the detours. Test the waters. Freak out. Come back.

Related to the above: Use whatever you learned and whatever you experienced during that time and those detours in your work. Those times and detours are fertile ground.

Lastly: Find the artists you admire and want to work with. Find the artists that love your work. Hopefully there will be some overlap. Talk to them. Become friends. Find your community of people because when you can’t find the motivation, they can scrounge up some for you.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Come to Asking for Trouble at Ensemble Studio Theatre! Also, visit my website (charlyevonsimpson.com) in the coming weeks for the official dates of the Hottentotted reading.

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Sep 26, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 789: Helen Pafumi





Helen Pafumi

Hometown: Born in Marin County, CA, but I consider Hilo, HI my hometown since we moved when I was only a few months and stayed for a decade.

Current Town: Sterling, VA

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Writing - I am in the midst of edits on REDDER BLOOD which I was commissioned to write this past year. It follows a woman who legitimately hears the voice of God, but won’t answer back. It’s funny. I promise. It will premiere next summer as a co-production of The Hub and The Jewish Community Center Of Northern Virginia.

Producing - Hub’s 8th Season is starting up and demands a lot of time. Our first piece this year, WISH LIST, is a collaboration from Hub Company members, so its a lot of corralling.

Directing - I’m headed to Malibu Playhouse in November to direct WONDERFUL LIFE which I cowrote a few years back. It’s exciting to revisit the script.

Q:  Tell me about the Hub.

A:  You mean my other child? I co-founded The Hub back in 2008 and have been the Artistic Director ever since. We are headed into our 8th season. We do predominately newer work, and a lot of new play development. You have actually interviewed many of the playwrights with whom we have worked. We are a small operation, but very detailed in the artistry. Once folks work with us, they tend to want to come back. I love being a trusted home for great artists.

We prize work that is magical, fantastical, poetic, funny, redemptive and has heightened theatricality. I am most attracted to plays that have a lot of heart and hope. Kind of corny, but true.

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 climbing trees like it was a profession. The property on which our house sat had a large grove of fruit trees. There was one point when my siblings and I were playing in our favorite lichee tree. We all decided that we need a swing hanging from the tree and proceeded to craft one. I took over as master builder directing things from the ground, then decided they were hanging it wrong and climbed up to tie off the rope myself. Once done, my brother jumped onto the swing without realizing I didn’t have my footing and down I went. The wind was knocked out of me for what seemed like forever, I bruised my back and was covered in bleeding scratches. They had to half carry me back to the house. I was back in the tree the next day.

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

A:  That more people would come to see it.

I also want theatre artists to keep forefront, not just what we want to create, but what we can share. We and the audience are in this together.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Joy Zinoman - She started, built and created the massive success that is Studio Theatre in DC, in a pretty rough part of town (at the time). She is also passionate about teaching others this art form. I’m a fan.

Karen Zacharias - Brilliant writer, easily one of the most down to earth people you will ever meet, and dedicated to giving young people of all walks in life a voice through the arts.

Marc Acito - I have watched Marc go from novelist, to playwright at Hub, to bigger regional houses, to Broadway. He is one of the hardest working people I know and a dear friend to boot. Watching his tenacity and talent move him ever forward is so exciting.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I appreciate anything that really takes me away - and that can be clowning, a musical, a drama - anything. I am actually not someone who wants to scrutinize what I am watching, while I am watching. I only do it when the production is not doing its job. I really am hoping to be entertained and delighted. If I didn’t wonder what time it was, or how much longer it was going to take, then I probably loved it.

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


A:  I am answering this as an AD and a writer.

Please write a comedy. The great comedies comment on our humanity just as much as a drama. And the ones that have honesty and heart, or a touch of the bittersweet in them are pure gold. Of the submissions I get from literary agents, great comedies are the needle in the haystack. And a writer who can handle comedy, can handle anything. So don’t take yourself too seriously. Have fun laughing at yourself and the world.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Visit us at The Hub Theatre http://www.thehubtheatre.org forSeason 8!

WONDERFUL LIFE at Malibu Playhouse http://malibuplayhouse.org/ and at Arts West Playhouse http://www.artswest.org/ this December.

REDDER BLOOD at The Hub in summer of 2016 http://www.thehubtheatre.org/performances_redderblood.html

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Sep 19, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 788: Jason Pizzarello


Jason Pizzarello

Hometown:  Sherman, CT

Current Town:  Queens, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’m working on a new play based on my experiences in the military (thus far). It’s a comedy. Obviously there’s a lot to take seriously but most men and women in the military also have a wicked sense of humor. Jaded perhaps, but hilarious. As a playwright, I’m trying to find the balance between honoring my fellow Soldiers and making them laugh. But also making it okay for those not in the military to be able to laugh. It’s tricky. I think the theater especially can present this kind of work, but I don’t know, maybe not. I was in Afghanistan most of last year with the National Guard and I’m still trying to process the experience really. So maybe it’s me.

Q:  Tell me about Stage Partners.

A:  Stage Partners is a new licensor/publisher/home for plays that serve young artists and audiences.

Morgan Gould and I started this company with the idea that the process of selecting plays, especially for schools, should be easier and quicker. That’s the reason why we offer the full play to read on our website. Yes, the plays are literature and are respected and protected, but ultimately we (authors) want our plays to be produced. Reading the play is the key to unlock that door. So why not keep the door unlocked? We also offer printable PDFs and speedy licensing. All said and done you can be rehearsing, scripts in hand, the same day you decide to do it.

I hate when people refer to plays for young actors or audiences as “kiddie plays.” I don’t like the term amateur either. These groups desire to have plays with certain requirements (like a shorter length, large cast, gender-flexible roles) but we never condescend to them. Neither do any of our writers. We believe in writing professional plays for everyone.

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 dad’s a landscaper and my siblings and I would often be doing work in our yard with him. At the time it felt like a chore, although I’d do it today in a heartbeat. One day (maybe I was 8 or 9), after I had finished weeding, I was heading inside. He got really upset with me. Not angry, but stern. I thought I was done, but he expected me to ask if there was anything else he needed. He told me “you don’t say ‘I’m done,’ you say ‘what else can I do?’ That really stuck with me and shaped my work ethic. It applies to all aspects of my life and especially my writing process. Be humble and do the work. Don’t settle.

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

A:  I feel like every time I want to see a show, the ticket prices are too expensive. I’m not a student and I’m over 35 so maybe I’m just supposed to have more money? But I guess they have to pay rent, too. It’s the same road block when self-producing in New York City. Rent is too damn high!

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  On a personal level my theatrical heroes would be my writing buddies because they write on despite the enormous risk of failure. Failure is just not an option for them. It’s not even a thing that exists. There’s only process, only steps forward.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  The kind of theater that isn’t afraid to be odd. Odd, dangerous, and funny. And of course theatrical. I particularly enjoy magic realism and black farces. Sounds like some kind of theatrical witchcraft. I want to laugh and experience a philosophical shift, and I want it to be unexpected. Is that too much to ask?

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

A:  Find or make a writers group. Writing can be lonely and frustrating and at some point or another you start to question whether or not what you’re doing (being a writer) makes any sense at all. That’s when your buddies will lift you up or slap you and get you back in the game. Ideally they also give smart feedback on new work.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Stage Partners!
www.yourstagepartners.com

New Play Exchange!
https://newplayexchange.org/users/419/jason-pizzarello

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Sep 17, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 787: Dylan Lamb


Dylan Lamb

Hometown:  Minneapolis, Minnesota

Current Town: Brooklyn, New York

Q:  Tell me about Ten Ways On A Gun.

A:  Tommy Freely buys a gun online to gain control of his life, then timeshares it with his deadbeat co-workers once his vegetarian girlfriend finds out about it.

This is a play about a play about that gun. It’s a darkly comedic and heartfelt examination of American gun culture, and an exploration of why anyone, anywhere, does what they do.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m writing a play about the phenomenon of checking out people’s butts, and also about finding God, and how maybe those two things are connected? So I guess I’m working on becoming a pervy Joan Osborne.

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 won two goldfish at the Wisconsin Dells doing some ping-pong toss-type carny game that you’re not supposed to ever actually win. I named them Jellybean and Marshmallow. I think I was five at the time. As we headed home to Minneapolis, we filled a couple plastic bags with water to transport Jellybean and Marshmallow. We placed the bags at my mother’s feet. Periodically throughout the trip she would hold the bags up for me to check on them. As we pulled into our driveway, the bags rolled up underneath the glove compartment and burst all over the family camera. My parents tried to save the camera, which was the right move, but it just left me there screaming and trying to catch two flopping goldfish and spit on them enough so they could live. Jellybean and Marshmallow died to save the photographs of my family’s trip to the Wisconsin Dells. Not one picture, however, was of them. My parents were remorseful as we flushed them, but neither more so than me, because I knew it was my ping pong throwing that had placed them in my custody. I never had much interest in fish after that. I think that’s one reason why I write.

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

A:  I would redefine it as a sport. I think it would be more highly valued and better funded. I think it would bring in a more diverse audience from different social and economic classes. I think theatergoers would be more willing to be surprised by the final outcome. Mostly, I think it better describes the process of putting on a play.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Martin McDonagh and Kevin Garnett.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Stuff that ignites discussion, or elicits emotion. Precise, wicked, honest, heartfelt, intelligent and preferably funny.

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

A: Mean what you say. Write with your guts and be proud.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Ten Ways On A Gun will play at Theater for the New City from October 9-25, 2015. Tickets can be purchased here: Tinyurl.com/Tenwaysonagun.
 
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Sep 14, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 786: Rob Urbinati


Rob Urbinati

Hometown: Framingham, Massachusetts

Current Town: New York City

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’m directing “To Kill A Mockingbird” for Queens Theatre. Also, Melissa Maxwell and I are writing a play, “Mockingbird” which considers the events of “To Kill A Mockingbird” from the perspective of the black characters.

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’m Italian, and my grandmothers, my mother, my aunts, my sisters, my (female) cousins and my nieces are strong women who ran/run their families. Their husbands were/are humble and compliant, and stay down in the basement (the American version of an Italian grotto) playing cards and watching sports on television. The women make all the decisions and the men wait in the basement until the women summon them upstairs. Although the common perception/stereotype is that Italian women stay in the kitchen stirring tomato sauce while the men in the family control everything, I have no personal experience with that. Although I’ve never written an autobiographical play, strong women dominate almost all of my plays - “Hazelwood Jr. High,” “West Moon Street,” “Mama’s Boy” and “The Queen Bees” - for better or worse!

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

A:  Just one thing!? I guess the cost of tickets.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Stephen Sondheim and Harold Prince.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I have very diverse tastes. I love experimental theater as much as mainstream theater. I like intense drama, musical comedy and opera. I’ve been accused of liking everything. In New York, I have “uptown” friends who go to Broadway with me, and “downtown” friends who go to the Flea or Soho Rep - or even Brooklyn.

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

A:  Learn how to use the current model of play development to suit your needs.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  The world premiere of the musical “Pete The Cat,” which I directed, just opened at the Rose Theater in Omaha. It’s written by Suzanne Miller and Allison Leighton-Brown and is based on the popular children’s books.

--My book, “Play Readings: A Complete Guide for Theatre Practitioners” will be published by Focal Press/Routledge on October 2.

--“Mama’s Boy,” my play about Lee Harvey Oswald’s mother, opens in Portland, Maine in October 28, starring Besty Aidem, directed by Brian Allen.

I’m writing the Drama League Centennial Gala taking place at The Plaza on November 2, which will honor Bernadette Peters

--I’m directing “To Kill A Mockingbird” which opens November 11 at Queens Theatre

--Samuel French will be publishing three more of my plays/musicals in 2016: “The Queen Bees,” “Howard Zinn’s Rebel Voices,” and “Cole Porter’s Nymph Errant.”

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Sep 13, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 785: Raquel Almazan



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Raquel Almazan

Current Town: New York City – Astoria, Queens

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’m currently working on two large projects that I received funding for. First, a project I’ve been co-developing for several years, The Taco Truck Theater Project- Teatro Sin Fronteras. Writer – Performers: Jose Torres Tama and Raquel Almazan. Directed by: Dipankar Muhkerjee.

After several years of Jose Torres Tama diligently applying for funding from larger organizations, The Taco Truck Theater Project- Teatro Sin Fronteras was recently awarded the MAP FUND 2015, kicking off this mobile theater project into high gear. The MAP Fund supported residencies beginning this fall with co- commissioners Pangea World Theater in Minneapolis and Living Arts of Tulsa in Oklahoma.

I’ll be traveling to these cities this fall for residency activities that will include: immigration round tables, community workshops and development of a performance script based on filmed interviews with immigrant communities from New Orleans to Tulsa and Minneapolis. Cultivating stories of undocumented immigrants and DREAMers on the front lines of the current anti-immigrant hysteria. The Taco Truck Theater Project will transform a food vehicle into a theater on wheels to reach immigrant communities and non-traditional theater audiences–crossing geographical, economical, and racial borders.

The second project, is an extension of producing a workshop version of my play La Paloma Prisoner at The Signature Theatre in April 2015. This fall and upcoming spring with the recently awarded the Arthur J. Harris Memorial Prize through Columbia University; I’ll be partnering with STEPS to End Family Violence that will include programming with formerly incarcerated women, universities and other organizations to create exchange towards ending mass incarceration. More about La Paloma Prisoner play http://raquelalmazan.com/latin-is-america/la-paloma-prisoner/

Q:  Tell me about the program you're in at The Playwrights Center.

A:  The core apprentice program pairs me up with a master playwright for mentorship and guidance on navigating the American playwriting landscape. I’ll be traveling to Minneapolis a few times during the 2015-2016 season to attend events, conduct research and for a workshop process of my selected play CAFÉ. It’s always an honor to get the time, space and resources to work on one of my pieces and I’m thrilled to be partnering with The Playwrights Center on the process. In the last year, I’ve worked in Minneapolis twice the last year and look forward to continuing to know the community there and create exchange.

CAFÉ- A sip of coffee. An act the world enjoys one cup at a time. What is the real price of coffee? From the lens of a mystical Mayan Teller, we follow the Maquin family from the ancient world to the present as they struggle to maintain their coffee farm. Set on the mystical Lake Atitlan in Guatemala, generations of the Maquin women dare to stay with the earth; fighting to secure a future as the Mayan calendar ends and a new world begins.

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

A:  One of my first memories of being a child in the US, was in kindergarten, I didn’t know much English at the time and was trying to communicate to the teacher that I needed to go to the bathroom. She would not let me ask her in Spanish to exit the class room to go to the bathroom, she kept insisting I ask her in English. Finally, I got so angry, fed up, and tired, I just started to urinate right next to her desk. I dream of urinating on Donald Trump lately…

I am the Artistic Director of LA LUCHA ARTS GROUP, a production company through which I have produced several of my original works, including plays that comprise the LATIN IS AMERICA play cycle. This bi-lingual cycle of plays will ultimately have 33 parts, one for each of the countries and dependencies in Latin American.

In my practice of theatre, I seek to always create an alchemy of the body through space and spirit. By constructing these bilingual counter-narrative plays I hope to tear down the hierarchy of institutional powers that deter and interrupt our processes as artists and our connections to audiences. I challenge myself to make the invisible and silenced – visible and heard in living forms to propel action and dialogue. My work deals with cultural identity, gender inequality and sexual violence, colonialism and economic injustice, globalization, and the rights of indigenous peoples – all themes directly related to promoting diversity and social justice.

In my Latin is America cycle of plays, I am not only writing about “the others” who are members of the Latin diaspora in America, but also those who are abjected by power in Latin America. My work connects ancient ritual from cultures that have been stifled by imperialism and links them to modern day cultural rituals through field work, scholarly research and social festivals (communal and or social gatherings, celebrations, holidays, religious festivities). My objective is to create models and dialogue that decolonialize events, language and histories in the United States and Latin America by examining how the aftermath of colonialism and the emerging symptoms of neocolonialism affect lives.

I align myself with the 2050 movement, where by this date it is projected that the US will hold the largest Spanish speaking population globally; I intend for my plays to respond to the growing Latin American presence in America. To thrust the Latin American voice into the American cannon of theatre by interrupting the hegemonic discourse and mainstream images/concepts of Latin American history.

I’ve lived my life in constant translation: as a child translating for my immigrant parents, and now translating the Latino culture to U.S. audiences through theatre. I navigated challenging power structures of society, race, class, education, gender and the U.S. theatrical landscape, and this navigation influences how I view, create and respond as an artist. As a female writer of color I create a process that is informed by autobiography – primary and secondary sources come from an archive of storytelling narrative. Offering an exchange between Latin America and the United States as the “New Americas” an intersection of arts and activism.

I’m a first generation immigrant who is now an American citizen, my work is English language based with Spanish bi-lingual aspects: the ritual nature in my work is essential to the pre-colonial exploration of culture. English speakers could become aware that power is subverted –that they are the “other”, creating heteroglossic texts.

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

A:  Since my concentration is on the development of writers of color in the American theatre, I would eradicate the one slot goes to a writer of color per season programming. Instead the revolution for theatre and challenge to theatres nation wide would be to provide socially conscious representation of its communities on stage.

Also, what’s up with every new play being 90 minutes long, having a cast of 4 characters or less and centering around affluent people’s neurosis???? I ask the universe to stop producing these plays. 

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Maria Irene Fornes whose vision and experimentation of form and unique process still hasn’t been fully recognized, she really embodies magic and craft dancing as one.

Federico Garcia Lorca who channeled spirits in the theatrical form, lived ferociously and used language to lift his community from violence and patriarchy. He embodies the playwright who risks one’s own life to bring a transformation in the world, he understood the power of theatre and ultimately why positive transformations were a threat to imperialism.

Bertolt Brecht for how he personally engaged with his own work in the rehearsal process. I think modern playwrights are coerced into being “hands off”, I can’t imagine Brecht distancing himself from the difficulty of his own work with his collaborators.

Founder of Butoh Dance Kazuo Ohno, who through his lineage of radical dance and teaching, has left me a way of being, sharing and creating that changed my life to create holistically.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Multi-disciplinary work excites me, pieces that seek to ask and engage in large societal, political questions. Unconventional work that seeks to give voice to disenfranchised groups. Clowning, Butoh Dance, spoken word, poetry, dance theatre, music, traditional art forms, urgency of issues all excite me when experiencing new pieces.

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

A: Truly engage in the world, if we engage with generosity, then we become truth tellers of not only our experiences but of our communities and possibly the world.

Power structures are REAL! Gain supporters of your work who rally around the same issues that your plays fight for, this way theatre artists rise together to get work produced and heard.

Plays take years to develop, seek council from those who have a deep experience with what you’re writing about and invite non theatre people to be a part of your process.

The M.F.A. Playwriting Mafia is real too, after building a body of work, it’s unfortunately necessary to consider a program.

Only do first readings of a new play in a secure environment where you feel supported.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A: Here is a link to my FALL 2015 Touring schedule http://raquelalmazan.com/raquel-almazan-fall-2015-tour-dates/ and my site http://raquelalmazan.com/ for more information on Latin is America play cycle, excerpts, media, upcoming Almazan Monologue pod cast and more!



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Sep 1, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 784: Ken Ludwig





Ken Ludwig


Hometown: York, PA

Current Town: Washington, DC

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  My latest play, A Comedy of Tenors, which is a sequel to Lend Me A Tenor, is now in rehearsals for its world premiere, co-produced by the Cleveland Play House and the McCarter Theatre. The first preview is coming up on September 5th, and as I sit in rehearsals I find things to rewrite every day. Meanwhile, most of my time is spent on a new play set in the world of Greek literature. I'm having the best time ever doing research for it. Two weeks ago I spent a full day at Harvard's Hellenic Center. As of today, the play is about half finished.


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


A:  When I was a young man, my parents took me to see the Rodgers-Charnin musical Two by Two on Broadway and my mother knew someone in the cast. We went backstage after the show and I met Danny Kaye and I thought, "Okay, this is it. I'm shaking hands with the greatest performer who ever lived. I want to be in the theater for the rest of my life."


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

A:  I would not change very much about the American theater. I marvel and rejoice in the way the country's regional theaters have formed a network that has become, in essence, our National Theater. I work in London a lot and my theater colleagues there frequently ask me if there is a National Theater in New York or Washington or Los Angeles that is equivalent to the National on the South Bank of London. I tell them no, we have something better. We have this huge network of theaters criss-crossing the country that speak to each other and share with each other.


My only suggestion for change would be to encourage more theaters to offer cheap seats to students every day of the year.


As a side note, concerning theater education: I'd like to see high schools, colleges and universities teach courses about the history of comedy from William Shakespeare to Noel Coward. Comedy is a neglected subject and students should understand the beauty of all those gorgeous comedies in our history like She Stoops to Conquer and The Rivals and Dandy Dick and The Devil's Disciple. These are masterpieces and they never get their proper due.


Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I think I just named them in answer to the last question. Shakespeare is God, of course. I have studied his plays for the vast majority of my sentient life. When I was a kid, my parents found an old copy of the LP recording of Richard Burton in John Gielgud's Broadway production of Hamlet and they gave it to me for my birthday. I listened to it till the grooves wore thin and I was off and running. I'm now on the Board of Governors at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, which houses the most extensive collection of Shakespeare scholarship in in the world. We not only collect all things Shakespeare, but we spend a tremendous amount of time on education in schools and universities. Soon, to honor the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death, we'll be sponsoring a traveling exhibit that takes the First Folio to all 50 states.


After Shakespeare, my theatrical heroes are Oliver Goldsmith, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, John O'Keeffe, George Bernard Shaw, Oscar Wilde and Noel Coward. On the performing side, I'm a huge fan of David Garrick (I'm writing a play about him), Sir Henry Irving and Ellen Terry.

On the more modern side, I'm an enormous fan of Woody Allen, who came to my opening of my play Twentieth Century on Broadway, and when I met him I almost fainted for joy. Also, I'm a huge admirer of Sir Peter Hall, who created the Royal Shakespeare Company.


Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  All kinds, but especially new ways of seeing the great old traditions. For example, I love Tom Stoppard's On The Razzle because it takes classical comedy and adds a modern linguistic perspective to it. I love to see people rediscovering the comedy of George Bernard Shaw. We tend to focus on his political philosophy, but I think his most startling innovations had to do with his modern perspective on comedy.

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

A:  Keep your nose to the grindstone and keep trying. Never stop. Don't let anyone tell you that you can't do it. Just keep writing what you believe in. And read, read, read. That's how you learn to write.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Because of my lifelong love of Shakespeare, I recently wrote a book entitled How To Teach Your Children Shakespeare, which is published by Random House. I'm proud to say that a few months ago it won the Falstaff Award as Best Shakespeare Book of the Year. It's available in most bookstores. You can also order it by going to either www.howtoteachyourchildrenshakespeare.com or to my website, www.kenludwig.com and follow the links. The book's website -www.howtoteachyourchildrenshakespeare.com - has one enormously cool feature. Derek Jacobi, Richard Clifford and Frances Barber read the 25 passages in the book that I recommend memorizing. They did it as a favor to me, and I'm enormously grateful. It is truly the most beautiful hour of Shakespeare I've ever heard on a recording.



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