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Apr 10, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 825: Francis Weiss Rabkin



Francis Weiss Rabkin 

Hometown: Chicago, IL

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  Tell me about Won't Be a Ghost.

A:  I've been working on Won't Be a Ghost for over two years. When I started out, Chelsea Manning (then Bradley) was on trial for leaking diplomatic cables and classified military documents to Wikileaks. I wanted to write about Chelsea Manning after reading her IM chats with the hacker who turned her in to the FBI, Adrian Lamo. Wired Magazine published the chats, and the intimate conversation gave such a powerful portrait of her motivation, her gender exploration, and her moral character. None of this nuance had made it into the mainstream media's picture of her. When she was sentenced to 35 years in an all-male prison, I wanted to make sure that her voice didn't get lost. In the play we use her own language from the chats. In Berlin last spring, an additional story line emerged. At the Berlin Jewish museum, I came across the history of Magnus Hirschfeld, a Weimar-era gay Jewish sexologist and founder of the Institute for Sexual Science. The Institute was a haven for LGBT people, and in the early 1920s the first gender-affirming surgeries were performed there for transgender people. But in 1933, the Nazis raided the institute and the archive was publicly burned in the first of the Nazi Book Burnings. I hadn't even vaguely heard of this, and as a Jewish transgender person I was so moved to learn this history.

We have this sense that there is continual progress and acceptance, but I don't think progress is at all linear. There was a doctor writing about the acceptance of LGBT people and giving extremely nuanced care to transgender people at the turn of the 20th century. In New York in 2016, I have experienced some incredibly messed up things with doctors who have no idea what to do with a trans patient. And look at what is happening with all of these bathroom bills and religious exemption laws in North Carolina, Tennessee, Mississippi, and more to come. I mean in Mississippi, transgender people can be denied mental health treatment because of religious exemption. When the suicide attempt rate in the transgender population is 10x the rate of the general population, and a state will deny mental health coverage, I don't think we can labor under the delusion that we have progressed very far.

This makes Won't Be a Ghost sound pretty intense, and it is, but there is so much beauty in it as well. We have an incredible cast and gorgeous choral music by Leslie Allison. I think in the face of so much horrific history, it's really powerful to get a group of queer and trans people together to make some beauty out of it all.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I am beginning research for a play inspired by radical feminist Marxist scholar, Silvia Federici's Caliban and the Witch. She posits that capitalism wouldn't have been possible without the European Witch Hunt, a reign of terror that decimated women's labor power and connection to their own bodies. I am particularly interested in a part of her book where she draws attention to the cultural importance of late-Feudal/early-Renaissance theater in establishing the witch archetype. I'll be a New York Theater Workshop 2050 Fellow this year, and I'm looking forward to developing this anti-capitalist witch play.

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

A:  I was always writing scripts for plays and videos with my sister and our friends as a young kid. I remember lugging around one of those 90s video cameras that recorded straight to VHS tape. But I think what most shaped my sense of self as a writer were the plays I put on as a teenager in my parents backyard in Chicago. When school ended, I got nervous that I wouldn't get to spend as much time with friends, so I wrote a play essentially to force everyone to hang out all the time. It worked out so well that we did it three summers in a row--one summer we had 25 kids working on the play--hanging lights off the garage roof, playing music, building sets and puppets. I think I still make art to get to hang out with people--collaborating is my favorite way to be intimate others. I met my partner, Leslie Allison, through collaborating and now we've started a company together, Tight Braid Group (www.tightbraidgroup.org).

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

A:  I feel like theater doesn't reflect enough of our culture. How are we still interested in hetero-family living room dramas? I think theater is way behind compared to what is happening in dance, visual art, even television.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Tennessee Williams, Suzan-Lori Parks, Mary Zimmerman, Redmoon Theater, Brecht.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Ambitious theater. Even if it's sloppy; I like seeing the labor. Interdisciplinary theater, because I think the biggest problem in theater is insularity. When theater makers are only making work for other people in "the theater" then what's the point?

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

A:  Work on your friendships. Powerful theater is intimacy.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Won't Be a Ghost premieres at The Brick Theater April 14-23rd. Tickets and more info here: http://bricktheater.com?type=show&id=1234

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Apr 5, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 824: Jordan Hall


Jordan Hall

Hometown: Waterdown, Ontario

Current Town: Vancouver, British Columbia

Q:  What are you working on now? 

A:  I'm doing the final polishes on How to Survive an Apocalypse, which is premiering in Vancouver at the Firehall Arts Centre in June. I'm also researching and writing the first draft of a piece titled Rate of Loss, which is about our relationship to biodiversity, which is scheduled for production with Up in the Air Theatre in 2017 or 2018.

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 the second grade, I convinced an alarming number of my school friends that we had to prepare for an actual alien invasion. Largely, I suspect, because whenever we played "Unicorns", I was forced to play "Mommy Unicorn", which was tedious. For weeks, we stockpiled supplies (i.e. snacks) in the back of the classroom, as I was forced to come up with increasingly complex explanations for the delayed landfall of the invaders. Eventually, of course, the whole fiction collapsed in a flurry of tears, recriminations, and moldy baby carrots. I consider it a cautionary tale about the amount of effort it would take to start a cult.

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

A:  I've got two, and I consider them to be linked and of equal importance. I would like to see more theatre artists (and artists, and really everybody) making a secure living wage. And I would like to see a theatrical producing culture that represents the diversity of contemporary society--gender equity, racial diversity, LGBTQ-representation. I think we all have to do a better job being advocates for ourselves and for others.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes? 

A:  Beyond the obvious? Aphra Behn. Caryl Churchill. Naomi Wallace. Tom Stoppard. Michael Frayn. Christopher Fry.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 

A:  Anything that I can see striving to engage both my heart and my mind. Anything that wants to use form to create revelations about content. Anything that wants me to go away puzzling and thinking and wanting to do better. Anything with a female protagonist who is a fully-developed human being with her own narrative concerns. Anything that shows me a truth I knew, but in a way I didn't know to tell it. Anything full of voices I haven't heard, saying new and dangerous things. Anything that tricks me, fair and square. Also anything with superheroes or physicists or rollercoasters. I'm a sucker for rollercoasters.

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

A:  Get up every morning and crack yourself open to see if there's something in there worth a damn. If there isn't, write (and read and live) until there is.

Q:  Plugs, please: 

A:  If you're in Vancouver, you can get tickets for How to Survive an Apocalypse at: http://firehallartscentre.ca/onstage/how-to-survive-an-apocalypse/


Otherwise, I can always be found at:
web: www.jordanhall.ca
twitter: @save_my_script


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Apr 4, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 823: Ken Greller


Ken Greller

Hometown: Baltimore, MD

Current Town: The nation-state of Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY

Q:  Tell me about Troll.

A:  Troll is a play about the internet and New York City - which might be the same thing. It's also a period piece set in 2012. Here's a blurb:

It’s Halloween Weekend, 2012. A storm is brewing, a major election is on the horizon, and it’s generally a horrible time to be young and ambitious in New York—at least for Ari Jacobs, a blogger left desperate, depressed and temporarily homeless in the wake of an unusual break-up. But he’s on the brink of something serious, as he plans to reveal the identity of the biggest Troll in the history of the web, ruining the man behind the persona’s offline life. Is Ari morally capable of squashing one person’s existence in order to turn around his own?

The play is going up this month as the inaugural production of The Rushline Company, which is insanely gratifying. I'd resigned myself to the fact that nobody was ever going to do it - the act of writing it and developing it (the play was my thesis at NYU) was really big for me. It feels like the play on which I really learned how to write a play, and I'd finally gotten to the place of like "Okay, Dayenu, onto the next," and then one day I got an e-mail from two people I've never met saying they want to do my play. Life is funny.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I just got back from MacDowell (which is the best place on earth, even when its cold and every creative person of every stripe should be applying to constantly) where I finished a new play - which I think is the third in a "trilogy" about mothers and sons and the suburb of Baltimore that I grew up in.

I'm also writing a screenplay, which is a romcom that's kind of sort of inspired by Vanderpump Rules.

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 grandparents got me started on theatre at an early age - they're the reason I'm a playwright. We would listen to cast albums together all the time - that PBS documentary Broadway: The American Musical was very big for my grandma (Grammy) and I. And then when I was a little older we started going to play-plays, and something clicked (probably because I can't carry a tune so I felt relegated to forever be an audience member when it came to musicals.)

Anyway, when I was five, they took me to my first Broadway show, which was the 1996 revival of The King and I. When the king died (spoiler, I’m sorry) I was BESIDE myself, because I thought he was really dead. I’m five years old and a man just died in front of me onstage. My grandparents tried to reassure me that it was just pretend, but I didn’t buy it until the king came out for curtain call – so I guess that’s how the conceit of live theatre/fictional storytelling got instilled in me.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My partner Jeff Augustin, the astonishing literary manager/dramaturg/force of nature Sarah Lunnie, my pal Charlie O'Leary (who reads all of my plays before I do) - These are people who constantly remind me that theatre is a compulsion more than its a career, and that you have to allow yourself to be led by your curiosity, and be a good watcher/reader of things, and generally operate with kindness and decency and excitement and love.

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

A:  Ticketing. And not just making tickets cheaper, but making cheaper tickets easier to come by - I know there are ways to get into almost any show without breaking the bank, but I'm sick of it being such a hassle. I don't think that millennials are lazy, but we do like it when things are streamlined. It’s not a matter of being “willing” to spend the money on entertainment. I have plenty of friends who go to movies a few times a week, pay whatever they have to for Netflix and Hulu Plus and HBO Now and whatever else, go to the museum, etc – they would love to go to the theatre, but we live in a world where $40 is a “cheap” ticket, and even to snag that there can be a million steps.

We’re not losing generations of theatre fans this way – where there are high schools letting students direct productions of Spike Heels (true story - shoutout to Peter King and the Park School) there will always be theatre fans – but we’re losing fans of specific writers.We need to cultivate audiences who pay $25 to see John at the Signature, fall in love with Annie Baker and can afford to go see all of her plays wherever they happen.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  The first thing that comes to mind is the wall that crashes to the ground and sends cotton balls flying into the audience in Branden Jacobs-Jenkins' An Octoroon. It's such a perfect meeting point of script and direction and design. And it's legitimately surprising - here's this play laden with these disturbing images that are all about this country's and this art form's history of racism, but then simultaneously, he's making a play about the nature of plays, about how a play by nature is a story that falls apart. I was Branden's assistant when the show first went up at Soho Rep, so I saw that wall fall a lot and it got me every time.

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

A:  There’s this line in Sondheim’s Merrily We Roll Along – “Pick yourself a road / get to know the countryside.” I try very hard to take that to heart, because patience is hard for me and I’m always like, how can I enjoy the time between point A and B? But I guess I’m realizing more and more that everything that’s happened for me has been a new kind of “road” – I'm very much still starting out, and the more I accept that the more it feels like I'll be starting out forever -
if you try to make any new experience like some experience before it, you’re kinda bound to fail.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  TROLL runs April 8-24 at the Secret Theater in LIC, which is SUSPICIOUSLY easy to get to. Come!

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Mar 31, 2016

Productions of My Plays



Hearts Like Fists

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

Production #27 of Hearts Like Fists
SUNY Adirondack
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 #15 of Clown Bar
Theatre-on-the-Hill
Bolingbrook, IL
Opens April 1, 2016

Production #16 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

Rare Birds (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 #3 of 7 Ways to Say I Love You
Chaparral High School
Las Vegas, NV
Opens April 21, 2016

Production #4 of 7 Ways to Say I Love You
Natomas Pacific Pathways Prep HS
Sacramento, CA
Opens May 11, 2016

Production #5 of 7 Ways to Say I Love You
Portland High School
Portland, ME
Opens May 12, 2016


PUBLISHED PLAYS

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Mar 30, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 822: McFeely Sam Goodman



McFeely Sam Goodman

Hometown: New York, NY, by way of Princeton, NJ and Brookline and Cambridge, MA

Current Town: Jersey City, NJ

Q:  Tell me about Afterward.

A:  Afterward is my MFA thesis at Columbia University. The piece tells the story of my experience as a childhood cancer survivor through a series of monologues in my own voice. Interspersed with the monologues are scenes from an unfinished screenplay for a superhero movie which would have explored the same themes of anxiety, vulnerability, and survivorship through a very different lens.

The whole thing is performed by five performers who share the text and play the roles in the movie. It’s set on the movie set, so that the conceit is that all of the people working on the movie are telling each other their stories which are all actually my story.

It’s being performed April 21st-24th in The Pershing Square Signature Center’s Ford Studio as part of the Columbia New Plays Festival.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I have a couple of projects that are in their early stages. One is about the prehistoric women who invented math. Another is about the way that late 20th/early 21st century US capitalism has shaped our ideas about worth and what we might be able to do to change that.

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 kid, every time we visited my grandparents, my brother and I would watch the Marx Brothers’ A Night At The Opera which my grandparents had taped off of a WGBH telethon. At the end of the tape, after the movie ended, if no one stopped the tape, the next thing to come on WGBH was Allen Ginsberg reciting a poem. I probably watched that tape at least a dozen times between the ages of eight and eighteen.

Afterward is also a story from my childhood that explains who I am as a person and as a writer.

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

A:  I think the not-for-profit theater model is no longer serving us. Almost all of the money going into theater is going into the running of these institutions that then become too big too fail. A theater company can’t take the same kinds of risks when it has employees who count on it for salaries and benefits. So we end up with companies that become more cautious as they grow. And when they do take risks, there’s this sense that failure can’t be acknowledged, that if a company tries something and it doesn’t work we have to pretend it did or else the company won’t be able to survive. But I think failure is a really vital part of art making. We have to let artists fail without it endangering people’s livelihoods and so I think we need a new system, one that doesn’t work on a corporate model (not-for-profit corporations are still corporations).

I think we have other models emerging. 13P is one of the more prominent examples. There are also artist who are just making their work without incorporating. I think that things that don’t seem related to theater, like single-payer healthcare and saving and strengthening social security and other social safety nets, are also really important in this context. If every artist had healthcare, for example, the cost of making theater would plummet.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I’m not crazy about the term hero, but Elevator Repair Service has had a huge influence on my work. Sibyl Kempson, Julia Jarcho, and Toshiki Okada are playwrights who have inspired and influenced me. Fences, Waiting for Godot, and True West were all at different times my favorite play. And not to get cheesy, but the artists I work with are pretty inspiring.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I get excited by theater that couldn’t possibly be tv or film. I’m a homebody, so I think theater that’s based in character or plot has to be so good and so electric for me to not to feel like I could have enjoyed what I’m seeing much more at home on my couch on Netflix. So, I like theater where the appeal is that what’s happening is happening live in front of me. That could mean dynamic design that needs to be experienced in person, but it could also mean the pleasure of watching a human body or listening to a human voice.

I like theater that wears its ideas on its sleeve, that has a conversation with its audience rather than having a conversation in front of an audience. I like theater that makes me think, theater that keeps bugging me a week later or a month later. I’m also a sucker for talking animals, especially rabbits.

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

A:  Keep writing. It’s the only way to get better.

If you’re not satisfied, don’t be afraid to start from scratch, but get to the end first. You’ll learn more from a draft that you finish, even if you know it’s not right, than from a draft that’s incomplete.

Imitate writers you admire and not just playwrights. Steal their style and make it your own. Don’t steal their plots or their ideas; you don’t need those. Use the things you steal to say the things that only you can say and tell the stories only you can tell.

Don’t be afraid to break rules, but know why you’re breaking them.

A writer is someone who writes. As long as you keep writing, you will be a writer.

When someone asks you to give advice to playwrights just starting out, repeat things other writers have told you that have worked for you. When reading advice for playwrights just starting out, try everything and figure out which advice is the right advice for you. Ignore the rest.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Afterward is at The Signature’s Ford Studio April 21st at 3pm, April 23rd at 7:30pm, and April 24th at 2:30 pm. Tickets are available here and are FREE (ticket prices listed are for directing thesis projects): http://columbiastages.org/tickets.html

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Mar 28, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 821: Laura Zlatos



Laura Zlatos

Hometown:  Pittsburgh, PA

Current Town:  Brooklyn, NY

Q:  Tell me about Happily After Ever.

A:  Happily After Ever is a screwball comedy that unfolds as a gender-bending sitcom and fervently disarms its audience. Yet, underneath the rapid-fire dialogue and physical comedy lurks a biting examination of gender identity in America. Confronted with the choice of gender for their intersex child, a couple struggles--baring their prejudices and those of society. Happily After Ever wears the guise of a modern sitcom to subvert society's construction of boy, girl, and the nuclear family that upholds America's ideals.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I'm writing a companion play to Happily After Ever starring its supporting characters and titled Dharma and Jerry Get Pregnant. Because Dharma is such a dynamic character and an audience favorite, I want to delve into her story and explore her struggles. I'm also writing for the Exquisite Corpse Company's 24 hour play festival at the beginning of April and one of their larger works later in the year.

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, my parents took me to Chincoteague to see the famous pony run. I became infatuated with a horse named Misty, who was the subject of one of my favorite books. I wrote Misty a letter that I left on her tombstone, and when my dad wrote an article about the trip for his newspaper, he published my letter. I'm still waiting to be published again so hopefully I didn't peak at 7.

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

A:  I wish that there were more and equal opportunities in theater for women, people of color, and trans people.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Sarah Kane, Suzan-Lori Parks, Adrienne Kennedy, Jean Genet, Eugene Ionesco.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I am excited by theater that challenges me, surprises me, and inspires me. I am excited by theater that shakes up the status quo and theater that takes risks. I am excited by theater that gives a voice to those less heard.

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

A:  Find people who you love working with and help each other out.

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Mar 18, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 820: Tom Horan




Tom Horan

Hometown:  I’ve gathered a few Hometowns over the years: Northern California, Chicago, San Diego, and Austin

Current Town: Indianapolis

Q:  Tell me about your upcoming shows.

A:  I have two projects this season at The Phoenix Theater in Indianapolis, where I am the Playwright-in-Residence. The first is Leyenda, which I’m creating in collaboration with the Producing Artistic Director Bryan Fonseca. We began by interviewing local latina/os about the folk stories they heard growing up, and then weaved the stories into a fantastical all ages show. The second is Acid Dolphin Experiment, about the real life of neuroscientist Dr. John C. Lilly, who invented the sensory deprivation chamber, tried to teach dolphins to speak, and ingested epic amounts of psychedelic drugs.

Outside of the Phoenix, I will be premiering my play Static at the Source Festival in D.C. this summer. It’s a looping ghost story about a woman named Emma who discovers her neighbors boarded-up house is chock-full of objects they hoarded - and she finds, among the jars of buttons and tubs of forks, a box full of cassette tapes filled with secrets. The play moves back and forth through time and uses the tapes as a bridge. I do sound design as well as write and this play came out of an obsession with sound and place.

Lastly, I have a workshop production a play called Elsie & Frances & Fairies at Earlham College where I teach. It tells the story of the Cottingley Fairy Hoax, where two young cousins in 1917 borrowed a camera to take photographs of themselves with cut-out paper fairies. These photos were taken as proof of the existence of fairies by the British spiritualist community, including Sir Arthur Conon Doyle.

I’ve been working on all these projects for years, and they all seem to be coming together in the same handful of months.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I have a couple plays about Indiana history that I’ve been mulling over since I came to Indianapolis three years ago.

I would love to create a play about the Terre Haute folk hero Eugene Debbs, who went from union leader to Socialist candidate running for President from jail. I would like to focus on his efforts during the Pullman Strike, that shifted his ideology. I want the play to be in the style of Arthur Miller or August Wilson, but it’s outside my comfort zone, so I’m going to need to become a better writer to finish this play.

I’ve also written three complete different versions of a play about Diana of the Dunes. A legend about a woman whose ghost has been seen at the Indiana Dunes, swimming naked in Lake Michigan, reliving her happiest memories. In real life, Diana had came to the Dunes to leave society which she felt was limiting to woman and used the newspapers fascination with her and her skinny dipping to gain attention for ecological efforts at the lakeshore.

I’ve developed selections of each of these as part of Indiana Repertory Theater’s bicentennial celebration of Indiana’s founding.

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

A:  I was a lego kid, a doodler, a story writer, a crayon and paper kid, the kind of kid who would take apart a toy to see how it worked and then see if I could make something new out of it. I’ve always been driven to make things, but for a long time I was all potential energy. Had my Art teacher been as inspiring as my Drama teacher and my Creative Writing teacher, I might be making found object sculptures instead of plays.

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

A:  In the last few years the efforts around making our theaters feel welcome and include everyone have been a good start. But I want it to go farther, faster. I’m constantly thinking about who I am making theater for, and what other artists I bring in the room with me. And every day I feel I can do better.

If I could bestow a gift on the general public, it would be my love of new work. Let us keep a reverence for the past, but clear some room for where we might go. Let new plays not be seen as a risk, but as a necessary part of our cultures and our lives. When I think back to all the theater experiences that have stuck with me, all have been wildly different, but all have them have been new work.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My theater world was rocked at age 15, when a fellow actor took me to a book store and helped me pick out new plays to read. I got used copies of Zoo Story and Sam Shepherd’s early work. It was so radically different from Shakespeare and Arsenic and Old Lace. Since then, I’ve collected heroes. I’m fascinated by how Anne Washburn’s Mr. Burns and Jenifer Haley’s The Nether put Sci-Fi on stage. And I’m enamored how Lisa D’Amour approaches history and place in Cataract. And the aggressive storytelling of Martin McDonough and Tracy Letts. And the language of Steven Dietz, José Rivera and Oscar Wilde. And the wild experimentation of companies like the Rude Mechs and Mabou Mines and whatever Young Jean Lee is doing. And I keep coming back to Chuck Mee’s thoughts on theater and inclusion. And I’m re-reading Sarah Ruhl’s new book of essays. And the whole generation of regional theater artistic directors who have changed the entire culture of American Theater with risk after risk, like Jack Rueler and his radical hospitality, and like my buddy Bryan Fonseca, who for over 30 years has produced 10 shows a season, because he believes that his community deserves to see that much new work every year.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I like theater where people are working on the edge of their ability.

If on one side of the spectrum is theater you can do in your sleep and on the other side is theater where you wouldn’t even know where to begin, I look for theater where the artists are trying something just beyond what they’ve tried before. That is where the real risk is, when the artists are making discoveries in front of an audience.

I certainly can feel when this is happening in theater I’m making, but I think I can also sense it as an audience member – the kind of excitement that so permeates a rehearsal room it can’t help but be reflected on stage.

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

A:  Keep insisting you are a playwright for long enough and other people will believe you. That’s how it worked for me. Meanwhile, I kept working on my craft, just trying to make one thing better than it was yesterday. Being a successful artist seems to be a matter of sticking around until luck finds you. It may come sooner for some, later for others. But eventually you will find someone who understands where you are coming from. Hang onto those people as long as you can.

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Mar 13, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 819: Gracie Gardner



Gracie Gardner

Hometown: I’m from a town in Connecticut where a disproportionate number of families give their kids last names for first names.

Current Town: Brooklyn

Q:  Tell me about Primary.

A:  This play is about the difference between who people think they are versus what other people decide they are. It takes place during the nineties. There’s a family, an intruder, Sailor Moon mythos, and a primary campaign for local office.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  A show about fencers and a show about hunters.

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 read a book on parenting before I was born. It told them to call my infant poops “nice.” Apparently, every babysitter I had during my sensorimotor development was instructed to change my diapers while saying “nice poochies” and “wonderful poochies.” This story has haunted me. I’m worried it made me permanently complacent. So to compensate I’m hypercritical. I get suspicious when I feel precious about my scripts.

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

A:  Once I was at a show where an older woman in the audience, bless her, yelled out, “Whyyyy??” It was like, this woman with a walker comes out to a play and she sees right through you and she’s having none of it. That breaks my heart. I think theater has a moral obligation to make some kind of argument for being alive.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Lately my heroes are my pals who are working their tushes off making and putting up meaningful work. For a long time I’ve admired the Forsythe Company and Meredith Monk.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A: It’s great to see vivid perspectives, and it’s definitely exciting when I think, “I didn’t know you could do that…”

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

A:  Get actors you like to read new work out loud.

Q:  Plug your upcoming projects:

A:  Come see Sanguine Theater Co.’s production of PRIMARY at IRT April 6th-24th! Tickets here: http://irttheater.org/3b-development-series/winner-of-project-playwright-2016/

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Mar 5, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 818: David Jacobi



David Jacobi

Hometown: Ronkonkoma, NY

Current Town: Philadelphia, PA

Q:  Tell me about your upcoming show.

A:  Mai Dang Lao is loosely based off of a crime that occurred at a McDonalds in Mount Washington, KY in 2006. It’s also loosely based on the time I was working at McDonalds, and didn’t know what I was going to do with my life. The play follows Sophie, a young woman who just gave her two-weeks notice to McDonalds in the hopes she can move on to bigger and better things. But when she’s accused of theft, she’s forced to undergo a pretty horrifying exit procedure. The amazing Marti Lyons is directing. The generous Connie Congdon once described the play as “Kevin Smith meets Kafka.” I’ve never been able to put it better than that.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m currently an imbedded playwright at Pig Iron Theatre Company through the Shank Fellowship. In a few months, I’m going to workshop a devised piece with Pig Iron. After that, I’m heading to UCross Foundation to work on The World Tree, a one-man musical. It’s about a beloved, Mr. Rogers-esque public figure who creates a media uproar when it’s discovered that he’s looking into undergoing Physician Assisted Suicide after being diagnosed with a degenerative disease. I’m collaborating with Tommy Crawford of The Lobbyists and director Sarah Wansley.

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

A:  I was a latchkey kid who often lost his housekeys, so I was forced to spend a lot of time outdoors. One day, I converted a line of half-dead bushes into a haunted house/hedge maze thing. It wasn’t really a maze, though; you had to pretty much climb through dry branches to get to the other side. I wrote short, Poe-derivative poems and stuck them in random places. When someone went through the bushes, I was situated above them, making creepy sound effects and dropping bricks near where they were. It wasn’t the safest thing in the world, but I had so much fun, I forgot that I planned on charging admission.

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

A:  Maybe it’s risk aversion. Theatre has this incredible potential to be timely, to be powerfully current. But when an event worth commenting on occurs, theatre is usually the last on the scene. The film adaptation is already out on DVD and we’re still workshopping the script, holding out for the masterpiece. I think theatre could embrace the impulsive a little more.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Samuel Beckett, Eugene Ionesco, David Bowie, Annie Baker, Jeff Augustin, Oliver Queen.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theatre that isn’t ashamed to be earnest. Plays that unravel in your brain while you try to sleep days after seeing them.

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

A:  Rejection letters are easy to take if you were too inebriated to remember applying.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Mai Dang Lao runs at Richard Christiansen Theatre at Victory Gardens

March 6-April 10th. Tickets available at http://www.sideshowtheatre.org/performances/productions/mai-dang-lao


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