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1100 Playwright Interviews

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Jan 11, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 811: Casey Llewellyn



Photo by Laura Colella

Casey Llewellyn

Hometown: Boston, MA (specifically Brookline and Jamaica Plain)

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  Tell me about O, Earth.

A:  O, Earth is an exploration of what we're doing here living on earth. It started with reckoning with the theatrical and cultural inheritance of Thornton Wilder’s Our Town and takes up many of his themes and concerns while incorporating my own. The characters in the play are concerned with happiness, justice, themselves, each other, their and others' place in the world. I am concerned in the play with the being here-ness and being here together-ness of theater and life (the play will also be at HERE!), so in the play very strange combination of iconic characters reckon with this (ghosts and living people, characters and real people). Part of what I'm interested in is how specificity and universality are represented in theater, and the real consequences of representation and visibility. We each experience life from a singular perspective, so O, Earth is a bunch of very different characters’ engagement with the universal experiences we all share: everyday life, love, and death. Something else specific that I am grappling with in the play is this current moment in gay/queer/trans politics and history in which some of us (white, cisgendered, middle class or rich gay or queer people) have been invited to join the mainstream in the form of unprecedented access to privilege (cultural acceptance, marriage, jobs, visibility, etc.), while issues that affect members of the queer/trans/gay community with less privilege disproportionately have been deprioritized in gay politics (trans and gender non-conforming peoples’ rights, racial justice, de-criminalization of sex work, housing for youth, police profiling, etc.). Even though the most marginalized members of our community are responsible for much of the resistance that has allowed us to get here. Vastly different experiences, access, and choices in the “community” have changed our sense of “our” since people fought together under the banner of gay rights in the last century. So I am thinking about that too. And it’s funny.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m working on a musical called The Body which is The Town about a little girl in a small town in New England where there’s a prison. We showed an excerpt of that at Prelude in 2014. I’m also working on a play with puppets (and actors) that’s a loose adaptation of Mozart’s opera Zaide, called Zaide! We had a reading of that in the Bushwick Starr Reading Series last year. I’m working with director Mia Rovegno on both of those projects. I’m also in the very beginning stages of adapting a book of essays by an author I love, but it’s still in the very beginning stages.

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 second grade, I directed and starred in a play for children called Zatig the Observer. I played Zatig, the male lead, opposite my best friend who was a princess, I think. I remember the play as being very long and having to remember a lot of lines. Now, it seems like it was probably pretty boring since the main action hinged on “observing.” Also, I can't really imagine what the direction of a second grader was like for an audience. From the audacity to direct a whole play myself and make myself the lead, to the wanting to dress up as man and play scenes with someone close to me, to the cross-class romance and butch/femme dynamic, to the emphasis on watching and analyzing what is seen, that early passion project represents a lot of who I still am.

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

A:  The relationship between a theater experience and the world stresses me out a lot. That comes up in O, Earth. Theater has so much power to move people, but often, for many reasons, it is presented or experienced as something to be consumed, and it stays in its little box even if it's an amazing piece that transforms. The part of theater that is an actual event is very important to me. I see writing plays as a way to create live events that I need to exist, and I hope that addresses need others’ have as well. How a play meets and engages the world in which it's happening, both in the writing and the production makes or breaks the experience for me. So much of the time I go see a play and leave at the end, and the whole experience of being in the room with other people, with music and text, becomes this thing that is privately consumed rather than feeling like it’s really traveling out into the world. So I try to make it travel.


Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Split Britches, Peggy Shaw and Lois Weaver have been heroes of mine for a long time. I keep learning from them all the time! Tammy Whynot’s last show was amazing! Adrienne Kennedy, Maria Irene Fornes, and Caryl Churchill are playwrights I love and go back to again and again to look for clues about form and what’s deeper. A new hero is Branden Jacobs-Jenkins. I was so inspired by An Octoroon. It did exactly what I want to do as a theater artist.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I like theater that is surprising, total, connected, and tells a story we need to hear.

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

A:  Get in touch with your impulses and follow them even if you don’t understand them. Go deep and stay connected to your gut. My teacher Erik Ehn told me write into my brokenness. That really helpful because it allows you transform by using your fucked up parts as your healing strength rather than just thinking you are a horrible writer and person. Haha. That reminds me, I recommend being gentle with yourself too because the emotions you go through writing and then seeing it performed can be brutal. And obviously, pretty amazing.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Please come see O, Earth! It runs January 24th-February 20th at HERE. Directed by Dustin Wills, Produced by The Foundry Theatre.

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Jan 7, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 810: James Anthony Tyler



James Anthony Tyler

Hometown: Las Vegas, Nevada

Current Town: Harlem, NYC and Minneapolis

Q:  Tell me about Dolphins and Sharks?

A:  “Dolphins and Sharks” is a play that started off as a 10-minute play that was produced in The Fire This Time Festival in January 2015. After the festival, I expanded the play into a full-length. It’s set in a copy and print shop called Harlem Office on 125th Street, in Harlem of course! It is the story of three employees Isabel, Yusuf and Xiomara.

Yusuf is the new employee. He is a Nigerian-American that follows the rules and eventually wants a raise based on his outstanding work performance. Isabel is the veteran employee. She is African-American and she bends the rules and just wants to get by. Xiomara has worked her way up to become the store manager. She is Dominican-American and she wants to keep order in the hope of further climbing up the Harlem Office ladder. The installation of an expensive new state of the art printer is the impetus for an upheaval that brings all three employees to a painful realization. The play explores how economically disadvantaged people function and collide in a capitalistic society.

I’m so excited about an upcoming reading of Dolphins and Sharks on February 1st as part of Labyrinth Theatre Company’s Up Next Series. The extremely talented Charlotte Brathwaite is directing, and the cast includes Pernell Walker, Chinaza Uche, and I was just told today that Raúl Castillo has agreed to be involved in this reading.

Q:  What else are you working on?

A:  I have two projects in progress now. I will once again be involved with The Fire This Time Festival this year where a reading of my newest play titled “Stewart and Lamb” will take place on Wednesday February 3rd. “Stewart and Lamb” is set in the year 1994 in a video store called Primary Video in my hometown Las Vegas.

The protagonist of the play is Zack Lawson, a 63-year-old African American military veteran who works at Primary Video. Zack's supervisor is the owner's 25-year-old white son Ian Philipps, who Zack trained. The play is set in the time where 24-hour coverage of the O.J. Simpson murder case dominated the news, so the racial tension that grips the nation also starts to take hold of Primary Video, and when Zack finds out a secret about Ian he uses it to his advantage and it sets up a battle the leads to (what I hope is) a heartbreaking conclusion. Stewart and Lamb explores issues of race, addiction, and redemption.

I’m also working on a play titled “hop tha A” for Broken Watch Theatre Company. The h in hop is intentionally lower-case; I know it’s silly as hell but whatever. This play is about a lonely New York City nightclub doorman and his rides home on the A trains late at night after he gets off work. The play explores the need for intimacy and what happens when that need is not met.

I should be actually working on that play now instead of using this interview as an excuse to procrastinate!

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 5th grade I was delusional enough to think I was an actor, so I auditioned for the lead role of Santa Claus in the Christmas play at my elementary school. Somehow I got the part, and I remember being so nervous before the 1st performance that my teach Mrs. Champagne pulled me into a classroom and gave me a Coach Phil Jackson like pep-talk, she said something along the lines of, “You can do this. Believe in yourself and when you’re on that stage just keep going. If you forget a line just move on to the next one that you remember, just keep going and don’t stop. Everything’s going to turn out just fine!” Anyone that was in the audience at Lincoln Elementary School would tell you that the highlight of the show was when my bright red Santa Claus pants fell down mid-performance exposing my tighty whities (I didn’t buy my own underwear in 5th grade, thanks mom!). I quickly pulled them back up and continued to perform. The pants fell down again; I pulled them back up and continued to perform. The pants fell a 3rd time! (I really hope whoever was in charge of costumes received a tongue lashing) I pulled the pants up a 3rd time and just kept going.

This is how I approach being a writer. Keep writing, keep submitting, keep seeing shows, keep reading plays, keep supporting fellow playwrights, fall down, get back up and just keep going!

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

A:  It would be fun to poll an audience after a play on if they enjoyed it or if they were bored to tears. If the audience enjoyed the play then the playwrights should be rewarded with 50-80% (this would be negotiated in advance) of the box office. If the play bored the audience them immediate execution of the playwright on stage!

Okay, my serious answer is that I don’t think theater in New York is as diverse both on stage and in key positions off-stage, so making theater more diverse is something that I would change.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I wouldn’t write plays today if I didn’t study with Janet Neipris, Liz Diggs, Richard Wesley, and Gary Garrison. For putting my on the playwriting path they are my heroes.

These are playwright heroes that I don’t know, most I won’t know because they are dead, but their work inspires me; Lorraine Hansberry, August Wilson, Alice Childress, Charles Gordone, Ed Bullins, Caryl Churchill, Annie Baker, Rajiv Joseph, Dominque Morrisseau, Tarell Alvin McCraney.

These are playwrights that I do know and am friends with who inspire me, Christina Ham, Andrea Lepcio, Diana Son, Tracey Scott Wilson, Tanya Barfield, Laura Marks, Dan McCabe, Martyna Majok, Jessica Moss, Ted Malawar, Camille Darby, Aurin Squire, Naveen Choudhury, Kristine Reyes, Sandra Daley, Bernard Tarver, Mark Green, Stacey Rose, Cerstin Johnson, Cesi Davidson, Charlie Sohne, Tim Rosser, Mark Sonnenblick, Ben Wexler, Sophie Jaff, Kathleen Tagg, Dana Levinson, Stacey Weingarten.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  What excites me is a clear story with lots of believable conflict. I know this sounds horrible, but I just don’t want to work that hard when I’m in the audience for a show. I don’t want to be confused either. That doesn’t mean that I need to know everything immediately, but I absolutely hate when a show confuses me. I’m like a grumpy old man, “I want clear old fashion storytelling!”

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

A:  Write everyday, try to read and see as many plays as possible, and most importantly stay true to yourself and your own voice. Don’t shy away from writing about the people and things that you are most familiar with. Be truthful!

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  The 10-minutes version of “Dolphins and Sharks” on Saturday January 16, 2015 @ 6pm @ Casa De Beverley
Link to Event: http://www.eventbrite.com/e/one-acts-and-snacks-january-dolphins-and-sharks-by-james-anthony-tyler-and-upstairs-by-erin-lane-tickets-18641129119

“Dolphins and Sharks” (full-length) reading Monday, Feb 1, 2015 @ 4pm Labyrinth Theater Company
http://labtheater.org/up-next/

“Stewart and Lamb” reading Wednesday, Feb 3, 2015 @ 7pm, 7th Annual Fire This Time Festival
http://www.firethistimefestival.com/

“Some Old Black Man” production presented this summer 2016 by Berkshire Playwrights Lab.
http://www.berkshireplaywrightslab.org/

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Jan 6, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 809: Eric Bogosian

photo by MONIQUE CARBONI

Eric Bogosian

Hometown: Originally I come from Woburn, Massachusetts about ten miles northwest of Boston. Used to hang out at the Burlington Mall. We were the first "mall rats."

Current Town: New York City for forty years. Started here as a "go-fer" at the Chelsea Theater, then worked at the Kitchen for a number of years.

Q: Tell me about 100 Monologues.

A: 100 Monologues is a collaboration between me, my son Travis (who has produced all the videos and commandeered the shooting) and the community of great actors I've worked with over the years. I was playing cards with some of these guys about three years ago and the book "100 (monologues)" which was a collection of all the monologues I did Off-Broadway was just published and someone suggested that other actors try to do them, and we shoot them and post them.

Turned out it was a little more complicated than that. (All these actors are SAG actors. The shooting was more expensive than we expected.) Once we got all the union paperwork figured out, we formed a small production company and the actors basically donated their time. We rehearse for a couple of days and then shoot on the Black Magic camera. Many of these actors are character actors most people only get to see for a few minutes at a time in movies or tv. Here they get to stretch out and do their thing. It's all about having fun.

Q: What else are you working on now?

A: I just completed a big project, a history book about the true story of a group of Armenian assassins who avenged the Armenian genocide in 1921. It's pretty incredible. You can go to the Facebook page operationnemesis (one word) to learn about the book and Operation Nemesis.

I'm also acting on a new Netflix tv show called "The Get Down" about the birth of hip-hop. But we had to sign a confidentiality agreement promising that we wouldn't talk about it so that's all I can say.

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 spent most of my time by myself when I was small. I read endlessly and didn't get along with other kids. I spent most of my time in my room either reading or fantasizing in front of the mirror. Later I would find out that this was called "acting" and that I was good at it. So I started acting in high school, loved it and never gave it up. My beloved teacher had us write our own plays and I guess that was what got me started writing. My favorite story is writing the scariest story I could, reading it front of the class and having everyone laugh. I have learned by performing.

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

A: Make tickets cheaper. I think it's absurd that the people who work in the theater can't afford to see each other's shows. How are we going to learn and grow if we can't see the work of our colleagues? A less expensive theater is more vibrant. It is a younger theater. The union situation is problematic. We need a union but we also need the freedom to do shows for and by ourselves.

Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: My first and foremost theater hero is Richard Foreman. He had a simple credo: put on stage what he would like to see himself. That's basically the impulse of a non-commercial, radical theater. I love commercial theater too, but for me, all the good stuff is happening on the fringes. It's where the invention happens. Joe Papp and Wynn Handman was/is also heroes of mine since both these men lived and breathed theater and dedicated their lives to spreading the word and making theater something that includes everyone!

Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A: I like energetic, awkward, slightly manic theater. I like theater that draws you in by its humor and energy and specialness. I'm a member of LAByrinth Theater Company and love what we do and how we do it. Probably my favorite piece of theater ever was "True West" produced by Steppenwolf Theater with John Malkovich and Gary Sinese. Dangerous and funny. The best. I like what Adam Rapp, Tom Bradshaw and Hallie Feiffer are doing . But you never know what's coming next that's going to blow you out of your socks.

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

A: Do everything you can to get your stuff on its feet. Table readings are not enough. Even if it's in the tiniest basement with an audience of ten, you have to get it on its feet. Theater makes it's own rules and you can only learn them by making theater and making mistakes. Theater is not for the timid. You have to throw yourself out there. There is too much emphasis on how things sound and not enough focus on how they PLAY.

Q: Plugs, please:

A: I love what is happening at Rattlestick, Playwrights Horizon, SoHo Rep, PS 122 and what's going on out at in Brooklyn at the Theater for a New Audience. Their production of "The Killers" with Michael Shannon was fantastic.

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Jan 5, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 808: Stephen Kaplan



Stephen Kaplan

Hometown: Northridge, CA - home of the '94 Northridge earthquake. My high school had to cancel our production of Into the Woods because our auditorium was so damaged and there were budget issues (so sadly my Cinderella's Prince/Wolf was never seen) - so we did Working instead because we could do it on a smaller budget).

Current Town: Bogota, NJ - about 15 minutes over the GWB from New York City.

Q:  Tell me about The Community.

A:  Chris Marshall has just been cast as George in Mt. Laurel Community Players’ production of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? He invites Zach, the young, Black actor who’s been cast as Nick, over for a drink to give him some actorly advice – and possibly to kill him. Whatever works. When the production’s Martha and Honey show up uninvited, they find themselves caught in a play about a play (within a play?) tackling deadly issues like race and, perhaps even more dauntingly, community theatre. The play asks questions about how we view stories about race and the not-just-color blindness that many have when trying to talk about it.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I'm currently in my first year of the MFA program at Point Park University and writing screenplays for the first time (which is really cool to stretch different writing muscles) along with working on some other new plays. Revising my play una casa/a home. In the very very early stages of developing a couple other new pieces that don't even quite know what they are yet.

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 7 years old I wanted to take acting lessons so I asked my mom and she said she'd be happy to drive me anywhere and pay for it but that I'd have to do the initial legwork myself. I remember looking up Dramatic Classes in the Yellow Pages (it was right before Draperies) and calling all of the places listed and asking to send me a brochure. I've always known that I wanted to do theatre and I love that my mom empowered me to make those dreams a reality and taught me, from a very early age, that I'd always have support, but that if I really wanted this, it was going to take work on my part. Nobody forced us to do theatre (in fact, the opposite is usually true). So if we want it, we've got to remember the legwork involved is all part of the process (though I still constantly need to remind myself of that.)

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

A:  How dismissed it is by the world at large. I wish theatre could once again be considered a crucial part of society and culture - though I do take some solace in the fact that Entertainment Weekly features it more than it used to. That's a true barometer of cultural importance, amount of page real estate in Entertainment Weekly, right?

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  (in absolutely no particular order): Chuck Mee. John Guare. Christopher Durang. Stephen Sondheim. Stephen Schwartz. Flaherty & Ahrens. William Finn. John Patrick Shanley. Tony Kushner. Tina Landau. Robert Lepage and Ex Machina. Ibsen. Michael Frayn. Margaret Edson. Ken Davenport. Signature Theatre. Playwrights Horizons. Jeremy Cohen and the Playwrights Center. All of the people at the Dramatists Guild and my fellow Regional Reps for the Guild (I'm the NJ Regional Rep) who work tirelessly on behalf of writers everywhere. Anyone that runs a young playwright's contest or festival. The writers who take the time to support and cheerlead for other writers - people like you, Adam, Donna Hoke, Patrick Gabridge, Dusty Wilson, Ken Jones, Jeff Talbott, Lia Romeo, Gwydion Suilebhan...my own students who inspire me every day to keep creating and dreaming...I'm sure there are others that I'm forgetting and that'll hit me at 2am tonight, but those are the first that come to mind.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  My two most amazing experiences in the theatre ever were Tina Landau and Expanded Arts' production of Chuck Mee's Orestes which I saw when I was in high school doing a summer program at NYU, and Robert Lepage and Ex Machina's production of The Seven Streams of the River Ota - both of which pushed me to fully lose myself in the immense worlds they were creating. I love theatre that fully engrosses me and makes me giddy and like a kid in a candy store.

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

A:  I just read (well, I actually listened to the audiobook) of Elizabeth Gilbert's Big Magic which I HIGHLY recommend. The entire book is so inspirational but her epilogue sums up all her thoughts and I think is the perfect advice for anyone involved in any kind of creative pursuit at any stage of their career:

"Creativity is sacred, and it is not sacred.

What we make matters enormously, and it doesn’t matter at all.

We toil alone, and we are accompanied by spirits.

We are terrified, and we are brave.

Art is a crushing chore and a wonderful privilege.

Only when we are at our most playful can divinity finally get serious with us.

Make space for all these paradoxes to be equally true inside your soul, and I promise – you can make anything.

So please calm down now and get back to work, okay?

The treasures that are hidden inside you are hoping you will say yes."

I mean, come on. Isn't that the best advice ever?

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  There's another reading of The Community that Playwrights Theatre of New Jersey will be doing in February in their reading series (along with some other kick-ass playwrights that I'm excited to be in the company of). A 10-minute play of mine, "For Unto Us," is being done at Exit 7 Players in Ludlow, MA in February as well, and two 1-minute plays of mine are being done by Stage Left Players in Spokane, WA the end of January. And another 10-minute play, "Tim Eless, Private Eye," is having a production in June at Bergen County Players - a community theatre that I've been involved with as an actor. Beyond that, my play A Real Boy has three productions slated for late 2016/early 2017 (in NYC, LA and Austin) which I'm very excited about and I'm also looking forward to working with The Brooklyn Generator where I'll be writing a new play in 30 days - scary, but very cool! Please visit my website, www.bystephenkaplan.com for other updates and news.

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Dec 31, 2015

My 2015 in review

I wrote 3 full length plays this year.  Two of them were commissions, one from Texas State University which will go up with them in 2017 and the other from my friends at Flux Theater Ensemble who produced both Pretty Theft and Hearts Like Fists in New York.  I also wrote one ten minute play, one five minute film, and two 30 minute plays. 

I had 28 productions this year of my full length plays.  Up until now, I think my best year was 11.  Productions this year included 11 Hearts Like Fists, 9 Clown Bar,  3 Pretty Theft, 3 Nerve, 1  premiere of my youthplay, Adventures of Super Margaret and 1 workshop production of Where You Can't Follow.  Five of these productions were at high schools.  Ten were at colleges or universities.
Of these productions, seven came about through some previous relationship with a theater or theater artist.  The rest were found through word of mouth or because of publications.

I had 10 productions of short plays (2 ten minute plays, 8 thirty minute plays) and a production of my night of short plays 7 Ways To Say I Love You which if I counted them individually means I actually had 17 productions of short plays.  Except one, these were all high school or middle school productions.

I taught Web Series Writing for two semesters at Primary Stages' ESPA.

In June, I started a job as the Literary Manager at The Juilliard School, supporting the playwriting program there.

This year I went to the The Poconos, San Francisco, Bennington, VT; Charlottesville, VA; Saratoga Springs, NY; Portland, OR and Orange County, CA. Wallace had his first plane ride on our California adventure.

So far there are 15 productions of my full length plays planned for 2016 and one planned for 2017.  Some of them (those with dates set) are listed here.

The interviews continue.   The first 800 are here.  I did 93 interviews this year.  So I guess in 2 or 3 more years I can get to 1000 and then that would be 10 percent of American playwrights  . . . or 6 percent if the number I heard more recently, 15K, is closer to the truth.  There's a lot of us.

So I guess this was another busy year for me.  I am always feeling like I can't do as much as I want and I never get enough sleep but things are pretty good right now.  How are you?

Hope you have a Happy New Year!

My previous year in reviews, in case you are interested:
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007

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Dec 27, 2015

UPCOMING


Hearts Like Fists


Production #24 of Hearts Like Fists
St. Francis High School
St. Francis, MN
Opens January 29, 2016

Production #25 of Hearts Like Fists
La Feria High School
La Feria, TX
Opens March 10, 2016

Production #26 of Hearts Like Fists
Theatre Threshold, Cal State University, Long Beach
Opens April 6, 2016

Production #27 of Hearts Like Fists
Adirondack Community College
Queensbury, NY
Opens April 7, 2016

Production #28 of Hearts Like Fists
University of Findlay
Findlay, OH
Opens April 13, 2016

Production #29 of Hearts Like Fists
Muskingum University
New Concord, OH 
Opens April 14, 2016

Production #30 of Hearts Like Fists
Shadow Horse Theater
Minneapolis, MN
Opens May 27, 2016

Clown Bar

Production #13 of Clown Bar
Springs Ensemble Theatre
Colorado Springs, CO
Opens May 13, 2016


Production #11 of Pretty Theft
James Madison University
Harrisonburg, VA
Opens April 26, 2016

TBA (workshop production)

The Chance Theater
Anaheim, CA
August 4, 6, 7, 2016.


7 Ways to Say I Love You 
(a night of short plays)

Production #2 of 7 Ways to Say I Love You
Rolling Meadows High School
Rolling Meadows, IL
Opens Feb 11, 2016

Production #3 of 7 Ways to Say I Love You
Natomas Pacific Pathways Prep HS
Sacramento, CA
Opens May 11, 2016

PUBLISHED PLAYS



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Dec 18, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 807: Tatiana Suarez-Pico



Tatiana Suarez-Pico

Current Town:  Los Angeles, CA and Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  A play about a woman who finds a dead child in a trash bag-- that's not what the play's about but it's the starting point. I'm also writing for Netflix’s TV adaption of "A Series of Unfortunate Events."

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 7-years-old (3rd grade), one of our teachers took us to see a children's play-- an adaption of the myth of Icarus. There was a Greek chorus, which I thought was one of the most beautiful things I'd ever seen. Then there was Icarus with his melting wings and the Greek chorus saying everything in perfect unison. I walked out of the theater, and this is the moment I remember the most, with my head in the clouds. I wanted to be both Icarus and, I wanted to be a part of that beautiful chorus. I wanted to be the stage, the words, the costumes. I couldn't speak about how much I loved it all. I couldn’t speak at all. My head had exploded. And, I have never looked back.

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

A:  If we could just get more writers who do not identify as “white” and more writers who are women produced that would be… FAIR. I read some quote about a theater in New York, "Oh, they're producing the classics of the future," or something akin to that. My heart broke again and again and again. The theater company that they were talking about only produces writers who identify as "white." I thought, "So there will be another 140 years of theater history with writers who by and large identify the same way?" This has to be a joke. It has to be. You can’t be that exclusionary and not be doing it on purpose. You can’t be that “selective” and not know that the theater community is aware that they (the theaters) are aware of the exclusion. I would change that.

Theater-makers don’t get better at their craft if they don’t get their art on stage. That’s where the real honing of the craft happens and if so many of us are barred from more commercial theaters, from reaching wider audiences, then once again, we’re being purposely written out of history.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  There are many. My mom is a teacher and let me tell you, she puts on a show for her students. Some of my other heroes include (not listed in any particular order): Cherrie Moraga, Lynn Nottage, Albert Camus, Lisa Kron, Rogelio Martinez, Paddy Chayefsky, Diana Son, Suzan-Lori Parks, Fernanda Coppel, Marga Gomez, Katori Hall, etc. etc. The list goes on.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  The kind that makes you pay attention and has something to say. I enjoy works that show me different ways of looking at the world, at life. I want to lean in… I want to be smacked by the truth? I like theater experiences like that.

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

A:  You know, I can’t tell if I’m just starting out myself or if I’ve been doing this for too long. I’ve had a life as an actor as well so it all melds into one big life of creating characters.

The only advice I can think of is, you better love this theater thing. And I mean, you better love it with all your might, like if someone took it away from you, you’ll want to die. Or you’re going to be sorely disappointed.

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Dec 14, 2015

I Interview Playwrights Part 806: Kevin Mullins



Kevin Mullins

Hometown: Watertown, Massachusetts.

Current Town: Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Q:  Tell me about your upcoming shows.

A:  I have two shows coming up this year in Boston. Citizens of the Empire (with Boston Public Works) and A Southern Victory (a trilogy of plays being produced in rep by Vagabond Theatre Group).

Citizens of the Empire, is a space opera that takes place 800 years in the future. It’s about a nobleman who leads an uprising to free his planet from imperial rule and in doing so goes to war with his friends and the people with whom he grew up. It has union organizing robots, the Madame of a space brothel, an intergalactic garbage-woman, lords, ladies, hackers, spies and despots, and it ends with a giant space battle.

A Southern Victory is a trilogy of plays that take place in the 1920’s, but in a world where the south won the American Civil War. We’re still two separate countries, slavery still exists in the Confederacy and there’s a militarized border with the United States. We follow a young man from a wealthy planting family in Atlanta who goes to Harvard as an international student and slowly gets sucked into the terrorist underground of the abolitionist movement.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I just finished the first draft of a play about a Lovecraftian monster that lives in the basement of a bookstore that’s about to go out of business.

I’m also working on a re-imagining of The Oresteia set in Jerusalem during the final years of the British Mandate, from 1945-1948. We’ll watch a British officer’s family get drawn into the quagmire of national and religious politics, and eventually destroy themselves in a very Greek fashion.

I’m also working on a play about spies during the early years of human colonization on the Moon and Mars.

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

A:  The money. The price of space, the price of tickets, and the lack of money that we all get paid to do what we love.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Naomi Wallace, Howard Barker, Eugene O’Neill, Susan Glaspell, Tony Kushner, Rob Handel, Connie Congdon, Mac Rogers, Sharron Pollock, J. T. Rogers, Migdalia Cruz, Yael Farber, Jennifer Haley, Caryl Churchill, Chay Yew, Jan Kott, Harold Pinter, Catherine Filloux, Christopher Shinn, Qui Nguyen, Hallie Flanagan, Karel Capek, and all the playwrights of 13P, Boston Public Works and The Welders.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love big epic plays. It doesn’t have to be a ten person cast. You can deal with big ideas with two people in a living room, but the scope should be there.

I want to lose myself in the play. I want to turn around and have two and half hours go by and have it feel like I just sat down.

A few years ago I took my husband to see Long Day’s Journey into Night. It’s a long play. Ushers were going around and reminding some of the older audience members that the run time was pushing four hours. He was horribly sick and was coughing throughout most of the first act. At intermission I turned to him and said “Hey, let’s go home and put you to bed.” He looked at me and said “Are you crazy, we can’t go. I have to find out what happens.”…..”Nothing good,” I told him. But that is how all of our shows should be. Time should stop.

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

A:  I feel like I’m just starting out myself, but I would say:

Write! Don’t stop. Write one play and then another, and then another. The more you do it, the more you’ll get a feel for it. Don’t try and write what you think theaters will produce, write the play you feel you have to write this very second.

Seek out the people who share your sensibilities as an artist. Find the writers who you respect and admire. Self-produce. Don’t wait for someone to tell you your work is good enough. Perform it yourself. Productions are development. Find directors who understand what you’re trying to do. A good director is a real treasure.

Don’t get too attached to the first few plays you write. Those are the plays you write when you’re learning how plays work. More often than not they’re better left in the drawer. I see some playwrights trying to workshop their first plays when they should be finishing their new play that’s ten times better than what they wrote four years ago.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Citizens of the Empire runs at the Calderwood Pavilion at the Boston Center for the Arts, January 8th -23rd:

http://www.bostontheatrescene.com/season/iCitizens-of-the-Empirei/

And A Southern Victory runs March 4th -26th at the Boston Playwrights Theatre:

https://vagabondtheatregroup.wordpress.com/


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Dec 3, 2015

Some of My Playwriting Numbers

Year I started writing plays:  1997
Number of long one acts and full lengths written: 40  (Well, I almost have the 40th written)
Number of long one acts or full lengths produced at least once: 18
Number of total productions of these plays (including upcoming): 108
Number of long one acts and full lengths published:  7
Collection of short plays published: 1
Number of half hour plays published under another name: 5
Number of long one acts and full lengths that I wrote that I no longer show to anyone: 17
Number of long one acts and full lengths I'm actively trying to get a first production of:  8
Number of long one acts and full lengths I'm trying to get a second production of which aren't published: 3
Plays that need some work/development before I show anyone: 2 or 3

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Nov 30, 2015

next up


Hearts Like Fists

Production #23 of Hearts Like Fists
Maxwell Heights Secondary School
Oshawa, Ontario, Canada
Opens December 9, 2015

Production #24 of Hearts Like Fists
St. Francis High School
St. Francis, MN
Opens January 29, 2016

Production #25 of Hearts Like Fists
La Feria High School
La Feria, TX
Opens March 10, 2016

Production #26 of Hearts Like Fists
Adirondack Community College
Queensbury, NY
Opens April 7, 2016

Production #27 of Hearts Like Fists
University of Findlay
Findlay, OH
Opens April 13, 2016

Production #28 of Hearts Like Fists
Muskingum University
New Concord, OH 
Opens April 14, 2016

Production #29 of Hearts Like Fists
Shadow Horse Theater
Minneapolis, MN
Opens May 27, 2016

Clown Bar

Production #13 of Clown Bar
Springs Ensemble Theatre
Colorado Springs, CO
Opens May 13, 2016


Production #11 of Pretty Theft
James Madison University
Harrisonburg, VA
Opens April 26, 2016

TBA workshop

The Chance Theater
Anaheim, CA
August 4, 6, 7, 2016.


7 Ways to Say I Love You 
(a night of short plays)

Production #2 of 7 Ways to Say I Love You
Natomas Pacific Pathways Prep HS
Sacramento, CA 
Opens May 11, 2016


PUBLISHED PLAYS


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