Featured Post

1100 Playwright Interviews

1100 Playwright Interviews A Sean Abley Rob Ackerman E.E. Adams Johnna Adams Liz Duffy Adams Tony Adams David Adjmi Keith Josef Adkins Nicc...

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.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

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.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

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/

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

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


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Books by Adam (Amazon)

Mar 3, 2016

Patreon

I started a Patreon page.  Do you all know what Patreon is?  It's a place where artists make art and people support and subscribe to see the art they make.  Writers, visual artists, bloggers, journalists, musicians.  As far as I know, playwrights haven't really done this yet.  But I'm going to try.  Check out my page.

https://www.patreon.com/aszymkowicz


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

Feb 29, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 817: Matt Herzfeld



Matt Herzfeld

Hometown: Shaker Heights, Ohio (we put the “swing” in swing state)

Current Town: Brooklyn, New York

Q:  Tell me about The Improbable Fall, Rise, & Fall of John Law.

A:  John Law is the stranger-than-fiction historical tale of a real-life 18th century Scottish economist named, you got it, John Law. Calling him an economist may be a bit misleading, however. John was no armchair intellectual. His story moves from the gambling houses of London to the royal courts of France (for a brief, glorious moment, he was the second most powerful domestic politician in the country, quite an achievement for a Scotsman in a notoriously xenophobic nation). There are countless detours along the way - we meet sadistic judges, corrupt nobles, perpetually pregnant French peasants, and terribly eccentric monarchs.

While the play is fast, funny, and irreverent, it’s also truer than you might think. It is also, in its own way, quite relevant to our current national debate about income inequality. The play attempts to peel back several layers in order to reveal the philosophies that laid the groundwork for our modern financial system.

I suppose I should also mention that eight actors play over forty parts, the play spans approximately twenty-five years over fifteen scenes, and it’s only the first part of a six-hundred page trilogy (roughly, the section we’re producing now takes us through the first fall and a bit of the rise). If you like your epics absurd and full of bawdy vaudevillian excess, this is the play for you!

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I don’t like talking too much about plays in progress, but I’ve got a handful of works in various stages of development, from completed first drafts to just a few scattered notes. They’re all quite different in form and subject - briefly, I’ve got an adaptation of The Masque of the Red Death in the works, a post-apocalyptic existential satire with a coterie of Three Stooges-like skeletons, and a play inspired by a notorious Japanese cannibal. That makes it sound like I’m just obsessed with death, which isn’t true (I write about sex a lot, as well).

Anyone interested in reading some of my past work can check out some short plays on my website (www.mattherzfeld.com) or visit my New Play Exchange profile to take a gander at my longer plays.

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

A:  Here’s a small memory that’s related to John Law, one of the first times I can really remember being conscious of class differences. This was when I was maybe 10 or 11 (the waning years of pre-pubescence). For the first time, I went over to play at the house of a school friend. I grew up in a fairly luxuriant middle-class household - four-level home, individual bedrooms, big living room, backyard, family dog, etc. Now, my friend happened to be a member of a very wealthy real estate family, and her house reflected it. A huge, cavernous entryway with white marble columns; a swimming pool inside the house (I didn’t even know this was possible outside of school and gyms); a huge winding staircase. I was impressed by all of this, but chiefly remember one major thought - everything looked so empty.

Sure, there was a lot of space between the floor and ceiling, but there wasn’t anything in it. Just a bunch of nothing; an enclosure of empty air. My friend’s bedroom was similarly big, too big for the small number of toys she had, which were carefully placed into a little chest in one corner of the room.

One might assume that the obvious conclusion of this observation is something about conspicuous consumption and waste. Actually, my 10-year old brain went somewhere quite different. I simply couldn’t fathom why, if someone had so much space, they wouldn’t fill it with comic books and action figures.

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

A:  I’ve read a lot of other answers to this question on the blog and there’s little here I disagree with. Yes, theater is too expensive (both to see and to make); yes, the larger nonprofits and regionals cater to an aging and affluent white audience that doesn’t fairly reflect the potential reach of the medium; yes, there is a distinct lack of racial, cultural, and economic diversity among frequently produced playwrights, including a persistent and pernicious gender gap; and yes, there is a problematic institutional bias that puts money into the hands of administrators instead of artists (this one isn’t called out as much as it should be; mainly, I presume, due to a reluctance on the part of the artists to anger the administrator-class whose approval they so desperately seek).

But since the last thing I want to do is appear to be too much of a grumbler, I will point out that none of these criticisms really have much to do with any of the fundamental building blocks of theater itself, which has been immensely successful for thousands for years in provoking, enlightening, moving, and entertaining audiences. Most of the problems today are systemic, particular to our time and place. As time and place change, which they always seems to do (much as some politicians try to turn back the clock), so too will the circumstances and situations of storytellers, who historically have proven themselves remarkably adept at adapting to the cultural shifts around them. Still, doesn’t hurt to give things a push in the right direction, which I wholeheartedly encourage anyone with the will and passion to do.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Beyond the holy tetralogy of Shakespeare, Chekhov, Brecht, and Beckett, I have a great love for postwar British drama. Some plays that were really important in defining for me what theater was capable of include John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger (kitchen sink realism to perfection), Peter Nichols’ A Day in the Death of Joe Egg, John Guare’s The House of Blue Leaves (which takes my vote for most heartbreakingly funny play of the later 20th century), David Rabe’s Streamers, August Wilson’s Fences, Caryl Churchill’s Serious Money (the influence of which can definitely be seen in John Law), and Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildernstern Are Dead. I must also mention the B’s, three somewhat neglected (at least in the US) British writers who never cease to amaze me with their imagination and insight - Howard Barker, Edward Bond, and Peter Barnes.

Importantly (with the exception of Rosencrantz, which I saw first as a film), I discovered all of these works as texts before I ever saw them. I’m a huge advocate of treating plays as literature in addition to performance texts, and I believe strongly that one can have as emotional and moving an experience reading a play as one can have seeing a production (sometimes more, if it’s a crap production). It’s a shame that so few people read contemporary plays for enjoyment (seems sometimes that modern plays only get read by directors looking for projects and actors looking for audition material, which is better than no one reading plays at all but still leaves something to be desired for the playwright who wants his/her work to speak to a larger segment of the populace than the slim slice that work in the theatrical world themselves).

Finally, before I take my leave of this question, I can’t neglect my teachers and peers at The New School for Drama, who had such a vital impact on how I approach everything I write. I owe eternal debts of gratitude to Chris Shinn, Laura Maria Censabella, Robbie Baitz, Stephen Karam, Michael Weller, Frank Pugliese, Nicole Burette (in whose class I wrote John Law), Sam Byron, Molly Haas-Hooven, and Dan Kitrosser.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I have pretty varied tastes, though generally I prefer narrative-based works. My favorite thing is when a playwright finds the perfect structure or form to tell their story, the right “box” for the story to fit inside that feels inseparable from the content.

I like plays that have physical boundaries but limitless ideas - plays like Annie Baker’s The Flick, which tears open the hearts of its characters without leaving its single, meticulously detailed setting, or Lucas Hnath’s The Christians, which inventively co-opts the form of an evangelical service to tell a story about faith, doubt, and compromise; Hnath’s pastor hearkens back to Arthur Miller’s morally conflicted protagonists, but he tells his story in a way I don’t think ever would have occurred to Miller. There’s a lot of other examples of these “box plays” - Rajiv Joseph’s Guards at the Taj, which is the most expansive-feeling two-hander I have ever seen (I’m in awe as to how he made a two-person play feel like an entire world), or my New School teacher Stephen Karam’s mesmerizing new play, The Humans, which begins as a fairly conventional family drama and slyly transitions into a place of raw, existential terror. Going back a bit further, two plays I admire very much are Arnold Wesker’s workplace play The Kitchen, which uses the setting of a crowded, busy West End restaurant for a story about how work changes us (without ever getting preachy or obnoxiously Marxist), and David Storey’s The Changing Room, which examines the lives of a number of Northern working class Britons through their interactions in the changing room of an amateur rugby game. At lot of these works roughly adhere to the Aristotelian unities, even while playing around at the borders of them (especially in relation to time, although they share this in common with their Greek ancestors, few of which actually adhered to the unities themselves). Another term we might give plays like this is the “microcosmic” play - big in its concerns, but confined in the scope of its dramaturgy. For me, one essential component of box plays is that their unified setting serves a metaphoric function (the movie theater in The Flick, the church in The Christians, the kitchen in The Kitchen, etc).

Maybe my current obsession with and desire to write box or microcosmic plays is to some extent a reaction against John Law, which is anything but a box play. It extends out in many different directions, jumping from place to place and character to character. Seems only natural that after spending so long on an epic, one might want to try something more confined…

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

A:  Well, I’m not that far along myself, so take this with a grain of salt, but I’ve found you can never go wrong if you’re truly writing out of a desire for honest expression. That way, even if no one every produces your play, even if you have trouble merely getting people to read it, even if it’s (when you’re being honest) not very good in an objective literary sense, it was still worthwhile for you to write it because you had something to say and you got it out of your system, which is just a generally healthy thing for people to do.

Even a play like John Law which, on the surface, might not seem to be a very personal work, comes from deep questions and passionate concerns I have about our economy, from my desire to probe and deepen my understanding of the origins of the entrenched financial systems that have a very real, everyday impact on how I and billions of others live our lives. If this component wasn’t there, it wouldn’t have been worth it to write the play.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A: Dreamscape Theatre’s production of The Improbable Fall, Rise, and Fall of John Law plays as part of the IRT 3B Development Series from March 9th-26th at the IRT Theater (154 Christopher Street). Tickets and more info available here: http://irttheater.org/3b-development-series/the-improbable-fall-rise-fall-of-john-law-part1-a-new-play-about-money/

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Books by Adam (Amazon)

Feb 23, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 816: Romana Soutus



Romana Soutus

Hometown: Kyiv, Ukraine

Current Town: Brooklyn, New York

Q:  Tell me about Hyena.

A:  HYENA is interactive one-woman show about the beast within. The protagonist, Hy, examines questions of intimacy, femininity and vulnerability as she attempts to find ways to navigate the painful world in which we live while toeing the line between her public and private self. In short, HYENA is about everything we don’t want to talk about and indulging in that.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m really focusing on writing my next play, Martyrs, about female saints and shame. It’s kind of like HYENA’s sister. Where as HYENA is very much about indulging in every dark thing you’ve ever wanted to do, Martyrs is about what happens when you reject every instinct you’ve ever had in order to become pure.

I really like to let my plays marinate; it took me a year and a half to write HYENA and I’ve only been working on Martyrs for about half that time. After HYENA cools down my amazing director Rachel Levens and I are going to start revving up for staged readings and workshops for Martyrs.

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 young my parents took me to a huge retrospective of Picasso’s work. The way the exhibition was curated was going in reverse chronological order; so you walked into the big hall and saw Picasso’s mature, older work. As you walked through you’d see a technique or a phase he had perfected and move backwards and see what it took for him to get there. My mom remembers that at the time that I was the only kid there that was actually really engaged with the art. In the last room you saw all of Picasso’s college sketches and, to this day, I have this vivid memory of seeing a sketch and thinking to myself “I want to do that”. I begged my mom to give me my allowance early, ran to the gift shop, bought a pencil and a sketchbook and sat in front of that piece and tried to re-create it myself. I knew at that moment that this otherworldly thing that Picasso could evoke even in his college sketches was something I wanted to create in the world too. Luckily for me I found an artistic medium that allows me to do that. I get to go and create this otherworldly thing not only with the stroke of a pencil but with my whole body and soul.

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

A:  In The Theater and its Double the mad genius Antonin Artaud wrote “[l]et the dead poets make way for others”. Like most young theatre artists who studied theatre in college, I read Artaud and wanted to start a theatrical revolution. Over time, I believe my revolutionary streak has subsided a little, but the sentiment behind that essay and those words still ring true to me.

I’ve noticed this trend of “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”. I see artists of all generations, including my own, making the same kind of theatre today that I saw in old video recordings I watched in the La MaMa Archives from the ‘70s. I’ve seen too many productions of Twelfth Night and, to be perfectly honest, not a single one has shed a new light or given me new insight that I didn’t get from reading the play alone in my apartment.

Yes, young theatre artists need to know and respect their history. We should know it better than the people who had the opportunity to live it. But as young artists, it is our responsibility to change the way stories are told. I want to be a part of a community where we’re all challenging each other to be better than what came before. We’ll fail countless times. I’m frustrated with the fact that we’re all afraid of failing, including myself.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Ellen Stewart, beyond a doubt. Although Ellen passed almost 5 years ago, her spirit is embedded in everything. The people, the walls, and the air you breathe when you walk into any one of the spaces. She created a home for artists. She gave them space and time in order to grow and mature in an environment where they were supported. Ellen took risks with young weirdos and misfits who didn’t fit in anywhere else and gave them a room to create some of the most revolutionary art of the last century.

HYENA is a homegrown La MaMa production and I am incredibly lucky that I have become a part of the family. I got the inspiration and started writing the piece while I was at La MaMa Umbria, I did my workshops in the Great Jones rehearsal studios and got feedback from La MaMa staff and artists and now I’m performing the piece at the Club. No place in New York feels more like home than when I walk into the office, and I thank Ellen for that. If Ellen Stewart hadn’t created such a magical place, countless artists wouldn’t be where they are today. That is an amazing gift that an incredibly generous theatre artist gave us all.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love theatre that challenges me. It’s a pretty broad thing to say, but genuinely challenging shows are few and far between. I don’t want to be comfortable in a theatre. If I wanted to be safe and cozy I’d rather stay at home, drink a nice cup of decaf coffee and watch Netflix till 1am while playing with my roommate’s cats and cuddling with my partner.

When I get to the theatre I want all of my values questioned! I took a chance by leaving my house and going into a new space with new people I don’t know. I want to go on this journey and I want to go to the dark depths with the actors. Theatre is special; it’s intimate and vulnerable in a way that I feel no other art can really mimic. Theatre that respects that and goes full throttle excites me.

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

A:  If there is a story that you wish was being told, you’re the one to tell it. Also, that thing, that you think no one else feels that makes you blush and worried; write about that, that’s the good stuff.

Q:  Plug your upcoming projects:

A:  La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club will present the World Premiere of HYENA, directed by Rachel Levens for a limited engagement March 18-27 at The Club at La MaMa (74A East 4th Street between 2nd Avenue and Bowery) with performances on Friday and Saturday at 10pm and Sunday at 6pm. Tickets ($18/$13 students & seniors) are available online at www.lamama.org

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Books by Adam (Amazon)

Feb 20, 2016

UPCOMING SZYMKOWICZ SHOWS


Hearts Like Fists

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
Rogers High School
Rogers, TX
Opens March 23, 2016

Production #14 of Clown Bar
Theatre-on-the-Hill
Bolingbrook, IL
Opens April 1, 2016

Production #15 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 #3 of 7 Ways to Say I Love You
Natomas Pacific Pathways Prep HS
Sacramento, CA
Opens May 11, 2016


PUBLISHED PLAYS


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Books by Adam (Amazon)

Feb 18, 2016

This Beautiful Thing


My wife wrote an essay about her father dying when she was 17 while she was playing Emily in Our Town.  It's all about why we do what we do.  The escapism and the catharsis.  It will probably make you cry.  In a good way though.

https://medium.com/@kristenpalmer/our-town-north-stafford-high-42532a8cd1a#.8j4ubltem



-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Books by Adam (Amazon)

I Interview Playwrights Part 815: Jenny Rachel Weiner



Jenny Rachel Weiner

Hometown: I grew up in South Florida, or as I affectionately call it “Hot New York”.  It’s the part of Florida where all the Jews from the Northeast retire to.

Current Town: New York City! I found my way home!

Q:  Tell me about your upcoming Roundabout Underground show.

A:  My play Kingdom Come will receive its World Premiere at the Roundabout Underground in Fall 2016. Here’s the lil blurb: Samantha is lonely and confined to her bed. Layne is shy and too afraid of the world to journey into it. When both women decide that online dating might be the outlet they need, they venture into the wilds of the Internet and find deep connection in each other. The only problem: they’re each pretending to be someone else. What happens when the feelings are real but the people are not?

This play is my musing on modern day loneliness, how we hide behind the cultivated persona we choose to display online, and the ways in which this affects our projections of love, intimacy, and connection in our “real” lives.

I’m also the Tow Foundation 2016 Playwright-in-Residence at the Roundabout Theatre and couldn’t be more excited to get to spend my time writing and focusing on my production this year.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m working on a folk music play about a small town in New Mexico obsessed with pie, a paranoid thriller that takes place at a theatre sleep away camp in the Catskills, and a comedy about a dying mall in Florida that relies on 90’s actor Luke Perry to save it.

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

A:  One time, when I was nine, I was playing “Ballet Instructor and Her Disciples” with my twin sisters, who are five years my junior. This game entailed me dressing them up in full ballet gear—pink tights, tutus, blue eye shadow, I probably wanted to Vaseline their teeth but this was, obviously, refuted—and then just shouting directives at them while wearing a long draping caftan. After two hours of hair and make-up (it was probably ten minutes), I was over this game, but we were too far in it for me to back out now. I had gotten Twin 1’s hair up in a perfect bun and then set her aside. One down, one to go. I had finally mastered Twin 2’s bun, and was just making finishing touches, when a stubborn section of hair delicately fell from its form, now grazing her neck. Instead of re-doing the bun, I did what every nine year would do​: ​I led her upstairs, ​told her to close her eyes, and I cut the few strands* (*very large chunk) from the base of her neck. We played our game that afternoon, my family none the wiser. Until my Mom found the evidence—a clump of red locks in the bathroom cabinet. My sister tells me she still has problems growing hair in that spot.

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

A:  It’s two fold: more resources and support for artists so that we can make a​n actual​ living writing for the theatre (I know this is, obviously, a huge and deeply fraught issue) and more resources and support for plays leading to production opportunities. I’m lucky to be getting this at the Roundabout and through the Tow Foundation this year, but so many plays are lost in the reading circuit and never get the opportunity to have a life. My dear friend Norah Elges in Seattle is trying to change the play development game with her organization Umbrella Project—you can check them out here: http://www.umbrellaprojectnw.org/about.html

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Tennessee Williams, Augusto Boal, Annie Baker, John Belluso, Bertolt Brecht, Sheila Callaghan, Wendy Wasserstein, Paula Vogel, Tony Kushner, Lisa Kron, Daniel Alexander Jones. ​

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  The bold, brave, belly-laughs that turn to tears kind ​of ​theatre.

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

A:  Make your own work and put it up wherever you can with whatever resources you can gather, beg for, borrow. Take it seriously, work tirelessly, and have fun. Get your friends and tribe in your living room and provide snacks (snacks are key) and read your plays ​out loud​. ​Keep writing even though the rejection letters keep coming. ​Keep yourself engaged in the world--there are potential plays almost everywhere. Try to stop comparing yourself to other writers—nobody will write YOU better than YOU, so do that! I promise, from personal experience, it’s much more delicious to indulge your unique voice than to try to emulate someone else’s.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  My theatre company, Story Pirates! We are a theatre education/media/performance based company that ​take stories kids write and turn them into performance. We ​have programs ​​all around the country, but there is ​a Flagship show at the Drama Bookshop most Saturday afternoons, so you can catch us there. I’m ​in the show often, ​usually wearing a wig and enthusiastically singing. You can find​ ​more info at storypirates.org.

My play Horse Girls was also just published by Samuel French, and you can snag a copy at the Drama Bookshop or at www.samuelfrench.com.

Also, you can find more info about me, my plays, and see some weird pictures
​from my childhood at www.jennyrachelweiner.com

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Books by Adam (Amazon)