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Jun 7, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 847: Lawrence Dial




Lawrence Dial

Hometown:   I grew up in a little neighborhood (South Broadview) within a slightly bigger town (Newburgh) on the out skirts of a decent –sized city (Evansville) in Southern Indiana, along the banks of the Ohio River. It was a neighborhood that sprung up instantaneously in the eighties, a sort of middle class refuge for baby boomers. Subdivisions, cul-de-sacs, green lawns, lots of gray pavement—we rode our bikes everywhere. By the nineties all of the newborns had grown to teenagers, the local cinema had converted into a Christian church, and at night we snuck out as our parents slept. There was a secret labyrinth of backyards you could cut through, winding paths between the alleys created by residential fences, often no wider than a thirteen year old’s shoulders. Here, we would run into other gangs and stalemate; we’d either threaten to fight one another (all our parents played bridge together or coached Little League) or we’d join forces in the name of vandalism. We shared cigarettes and video games, some of us started bands, we did drugs... We were not great kids. Or maybe we were.

Current Town:  It’s me, my wife, and our two daughters, and we’ve got our fingertips embedded in Carroll Gardens. We stumbled upon a sympathetic landlord who lives in and owns the brownstone she rents. Herself, her mother, and her brothers live above us, and have since the 70’s. It’s charming, it could be a play. We have a communal garden we share with our Australian/French neighbors who live below us, and our children all play together. We BBQ. We have a small plastic pool. At night, we’re considerate of the noise we make.

Our situation is emblematic of what’s happening in a lot of Brooklyn neighborhoods. The brownstone itself is worth a couple million, but shared amongst our landlord’s large family. They’re as blue-collar as we are (that’s low-low middle class by New York standards). She could sell and be rich, but then she would no longer be able to afford the neighborhood she grew up in. In some ways like us, she’s barely holding on.

Q:  Tell me about your play coming up this fall:

A:  It’s called IN THE ROOM, and it’s about a playwriting workshop, the students and their teacher, the plays each of them are writing, and the purgatorial nature of creation within an amateur workshop structure.

We’re doing an environmental production in a rehearsal room in October at Alchemical Theater Lab. We’ve embraced the limitations of that space, and are using those limitations to emerge our audience within the New York playwriting workshop and theater scene. We’re putting our audience literally in the room with our writers.

I spent so many years taking playwriting workshop classes from teachers like Brooke Berman, Padraic Lillis, Julian Sheppard, Winter Miller, Primary Stages ESPA etc., and I want to represent and honor those experiences, and the processes of the writers I’ve witnessed week after week putting their hearts on the line. They’re creating art that not perfect, that’s constantly evolving, that lives within the potential of its audience’s imagination, and most likely, it will not exist beyond the workshop.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m at that awesome point in-between plays where I’m not sure what I’m going to start next. I have a back-catalog of ideas and I’m waiting to see if one will rise. A play about cave divers trying to unearth the body of a lost friend? An art therapist who starts a band with his patients? A long distance romance made close distance through the use of VR? The best time to write a play is while rehearsing something else.

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

A:  I thought I wanted to kill myself one night during my Freshman year of college. I had learned that my two closest friends had slept with each other, and it seemed like a good idea to hitchhike to the nearby bridge that connected Indiana to Kentucky and—Idon’tknow—jump off?

I took a CD player and some headphones and walked the highway towards the bridge. It wasn’t long before a burgundy Buick Regal pulled up along the shoulder; I didn’t have my thumb out or anything he just stopped, and not exactly knowing why, I got in.

He was an over-weight man in his mid-thirties, shy with eye-contact, but willing to take me as far as Owensboro, which was where he was heading. I told him the Exxon gas station right before the embankment would be fine, I was just meeting some friends. There was Neil Young on the radio and we didn’t talk much during the short drive.

When we got to the Exxon it was closed, but the man shy with eye-contact said he would sit with me until my friends arrived. We sat there in silence for a while with nothing but the dashboard lights. And then we talked.

I told him about my friends coming together, and about how apart it made me feel, how I was going to this school to be an actor, but I wasn’t being cast, and was worried I’d never be seen how I wanted to be seen. I told him I was considering jumping off that bridge over there.

He told me he was gay, and when he had told his parents they had disowned him. He hadn’t talked to them in over a year. He told me he’d tried to kill himself with Aspirin, but unsuccessfully and now had liver complications. He made this drive from Owensborough over the bridge into Evansville every day to work his job as a manager for TCBY.

After a while it was obvious my friends weren’t coming. We were parked behind the Exxon, away from view of the bridge or any police cruisers that might roll up. When I looked down I realized we were holding hands.

He told me he wouldn’t stop me if I really wanted to kill myself, but he suggested I give it some time, to see how things worked out, to forgive my friends, to keep trying to be an actor, and always try to get seen how I wanted to be seen.

I told him to be patient with his parents. And that I would stop by TCBY sometime, maybe. I wished there was more I could’ve done for him.

I got out of his car, said good bye, and he drove over the bridge. I walked in the opposite direction, following the highway back to my dorm room, excited by this encounter, wanting to write it down, unsure to how dramatize everything that was unspoken between us.

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

A:  More women writers. More Parent writers. And more writers of varying social classes.

If we give our opportunities only to those who can financially afford them, we’re shutting out a huge section of society that deserves to be heard. Show me the thirty-five year-old mother of two who’s just been accepted into grad school for playwriting. Tell me how the quiet young girl from Bushwick without a college degree gets her play heard?

More health insurance, more sustainable wages. We have a deluge of plays about single, young people, being written by wonderful yet childless playwrights because supporting a family as a playwright is nearly impossible (unless you’re married to a doctor or lawyer). This greatly affects the type of plays being written and produced. Overall, theater these days can often feel juvenile and cursory.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  The first play I loved was Getting Out by Marsha Norman. It was set only an hour away from where I grew up, and redefined what theatre could be to me. Later, Adam Rapp, particularly the one’s with stage design by David Korins. Blackbird, the whole production, was highly influential. In my head, my plays always have a David Korins designed set.

Lately? The playwrights in the workshops. The writers working their day jobs. They might not even be that skilled, but they’re there. They’re writing, creating something, not just talking about it, and that’s heroic to me.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  For the most part it can be anything. When the lights go down, no matter the production or playwright, big or small, I’m always rooting for you with a smile on my face. It’s hard for me to dislike a piece theater. Don’t we realize it’s all just opinion and personal taste and perspective? I always see the creators’ hopes and dreams in their plays. I wouldn’t look you in the eye and tell you that’s bullshit.

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

A:  Stop thinking you’re going to make money at it. But start thinking about the type of life you want to live to support the life you someday hope to have. Do you want to write plays and be a waiter for eleven years? (Or longer, god knows…) Would you rather be a Stage Manager and write plays? Or a Technical Director? Or a Literary Manager? How can you position yourself to be exposed to theater through the potentially long process it’ll take for you to achieve the life you someday hope to have? Don’t worry about the plays. If you’re a playwright, you’ll write them.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Winter Miller and Spare Rib coming up June 16th. http://wintermiller.com/spare-rib/ (Winter’s a great no-nonsense teacher and writer.)

Lindsay Joy’s short The Cleaners is part of Samuel French’s upcoming OOB Festival. (It’s about a body disposal company, and two people falling in love amidst the limbs and gore.)

Anything Amanda Keating is writing for EST Youngblood brunches. (EST Youngblood is one of the best places for young playwrights. If you’re under 30 and live in NY, this should be what you aim for.)

My website lawrencedial.com

You can read all my plays there. xxoo

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Jun 5, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 846: Jonathan Alexandratos


Jonathan Alexandratos

Hometown: Knoxville, TN

Current Town: New York, NY (except at this very moment I'm answering these questions from Strasbourg, France)

Q:  Tell me about Duck and the French production of it.

A:  DUCK is an animal allegory about abuse. It centers around Carl, the one Duck teenager in Sheep's Meadow (everyone else is a - you guessed it - Sheep). Carl's father wants him to embrace his Duck-ness, while Carl just wants to be more like the Sheep and blend in. Ultimately, the characters learn that these identities are masks, and that revelation can have freeing or complicating results. I'm thrilled that the French company PEACE Productions decided to produce this. For one, the play intentionally uses many comic book references that relate to French literary history. It's no subtext that the use of animals and the name of Carl's best friend (Art) connects this play to Art Spiegelman and MAUS. I feel that Spiegelman's work involves France and Germany at a basic level, considering the important roles World War II and his wife, Francoise Mouly, play in the story. Therefore, to have this play go up in Strasbourg, which is on the border between France and Germany (seriously, I bought body wash in Germany today like it was nothing), feels incredibly fitting. The French have also done amazing work in the field of both comics and comix (the underground alternative comics genre) that this play values and tries to carry onto the stage. Of course, I'd love to see the play go up in America (it was, after all, still born in New York City with Mission to (dit)Mars, a Queens-based writers' lab), but it's an adventure to be here, watching my very personal work be interpreted thousands of miles away from where it was written. The play will be presented in English (there is apparently a sizable ex-pat and English-speaking population in Strasbourg) this week (June 7, 8, and 9), and I am so looking forward to it.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I'm working on revising a draft of my play WE SEE WHAT HAPPEN, the story of my grandmother's immigration to the U.S. as told by superhero action figures, for what I hope will be a production in Nashville, TN, where that piece originated. (I was lucky enough to be in Nashville Repertory Theatre's Ingram New Works Lab last year, and this was the play I wrote for them.) I'm also working on a new play about the action figure industry and the many dimensions of its sexism, but more on that is, as Maz Kanata says, "for another time."

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

A:  When I was about 10, my dad and I went to a comic shop that we frequented in Knoxville called Dragon's Lair (later it turned out that the owner of the store was a child molester, so that name turned out to be the literal, unfortunate truth, but that fact was still hidden from us at this time). My father bought me a Captain Jean-Luc Picard action figure. When I took the action figure out of the box (I was never the kind of collector that kept things in packages), I noticed the figure rattled when I shook it. It wasn't supposed to; this wasn't "Captain Picard with Real Rattling Action!" It was a mistake. Clearly a small piece of plastic had broken off inside the figure's hollow torso and just banged around in there. Since you couldn't take the figure apart without breaking it, the playful side of me started to wonder what was really in there, making all that noise. Yes, literally it was surely a piece of plastic, but my imagination said "It's his heart!" (Capt. Picard has a fake, biomechanical heart on *Star Trek: The Next Generation*) or "It's an alien taking over his body!" As I grew up, I thought more and more about this rattling action figure and began to realize that we all "rattle." We all have something inside of us that makes noise, even when it shouldn't. So my writing became a voyage to figure out what that thing is inside me, inside all of us, that makes us rattle. The image of the rattling action figure is used in DUCK for this reason. It's always stuck with me.

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

A:  Its commodification. This doesn't mean I don't think people should be paid. I do. But what I worry about is commodification - meaning the repeated translation of ideas into profit. I'm concerned by this because history has shown that commodification can bring out the worst in humanity. When you commodify the human body, you get slavery. When you commodify ideas, you get theatres that are basically conceived of as ATMs: insert stale revival of musical, take out cash. This leaves little room for writers of color, for women writers, for risky ideas, for so much that the traditional choices have excluded for years. Of course, there are productions now (FUN HOME, HAMILTON, HAND TO GOD) that might show producers that the new and the marginalized are what we need, but I'm afraid that only some New York producers are learning that, and others in the regional theatres still believe that the biggest risk they could take is August Wilson. Like I said, I worked with Nashville Repertory Theatre last season, and they're a great regional theatre that is producing new work (Nate Eppler last season, Doug Wright's new play this coming season), but we have a long way to go as a national community before we shake the idea that profit decides canon (if we can ever shake that concept).

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I'm continually inspired by Anne Carson, Sarah Ruhl, Tina Howe, Rebecca Gilman, Noah Haidle, Paula Vogel, Sarah Kane, David Henry Hwang, Vern Thiessen, Euripides, [insert obligatory nod to Shakespeare], Christina Masciotti, Lisa Kron, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Nate Eppler, and, frankly and honestly and not at all in a fake ass-kissy way, that cadre of amazing Geek Theatre artists that includes you, Adam, Crystal Skillman, Qui Nguyen, Mac Rogers, et many al., as Geek Theatre is the theatrical genre that I'm hoping to add to. And, on top of this, my hero is also the writer I haven't heard of yet, who went through something she feels is unique, and is just about to pour it out onto a page.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theatre that's theatrical. I know: that shouldn't even be an answer, right? "Theatre" and "theatrical" sound so much alike that, surely, all theatre is theatrical, no? I don't think so. There's some theatre that I watch and can go, "Ahh, I know what TV show this writer wants to write for," because the play looks just like a TV show or a movie. And then I see other theatre and I go, "This was clearly built for the stage. This has to be a play." Usually I say that because the play contains an aspect of the magical. I get most excited when that moment of magic comes after the breakdown of spoken language, like when a conversation descends into a dance, or when a monologue unfolds into gibberish. That's the type of magic that the stage lets us explore, and I love it when plays take advantage of that.

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

A:  Write the story only you can tell, write it from the heart, and write it honestly. That doesn't mean it has to be a facsimile of events, but that does mean shoot for having the audience break through into the same feelings you felt while thinking about or going through what you're writing. In the process of doing this, don't be afraid to imitate, to experiment, to get it wrong, and to make stuff that is just downright bad. Your play is in there, just don't give up on it.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Come see DUCK in Strasbourg! Seriously just get on a plane right now for lots of money and come. You'd probably still spend more on HAMILTON, right? And that doesn't even come with Strasbourg! But, beyond that, you can check out WE SEE WHAT HAPPEN on YouTube in full (Nashville Rep uploaded one of the performances - with permission!). If you'd like to see a chunk of it live, the first ten minutes of it will be presented on June 20th at 7pm at the Astoria Performing Arts Center (APAC) as part of Mission to (dit)Mars' All Systems Go! series, which showcases the work of the writers' lab. And, coming soon is my play on the action figure industry (which doesn't even have a title yet!).

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Jun 4, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 845: Charles Morey



Charles Morey

Hometown:

Well, that’s modestly complicated. I’m never quite sure what the answer should be. Born in Oakland, CA., lived in the San Francisco Bay area in a variety of communities (Diablo, Antioch but mostly Berkeley) until I was nine when we moved to Portland, Oregon, then at thirteen, moved to Tacoma, Washington where I went to High School. Left there to go to college in New Hampshire, then straight to Graduate School in New York. So, sometimes I say Berkeley, sometimes I say Tacoma, sometimes I just say “the west coast.”

Current Town:

Upper West Side, Manhattan at the moment – but that’s also modestly complicated – as my wife and I still spend time in Salt Lake City and own a home there. (I call it the most expensive storage unit west of the Rockies as most of our “stuff” lives there and not in our nice but tiny New York apartment.) We lived in Salt Lake City for twenty-eight years while I was artistic director of the Pioneer Theatre Company. When I stepped down four years ago, we started splitting our time between NYC and Utah – mostly NYC these days.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I’ve got two un-produced plays that I think are ready for production or a serious workshop so my agent and I are trying to push those. And I have a third that I’m currently in the middle of and trying to figure out exactly where it is going to lead me.

The first of the unproduced plays is “The Salamander’s Tale”. I only somewhat facetiously call it “the play I couldn’t write while living in Utah.” It is based on a true story of fraud, forgery, murder and the Mormon Church that happened shortly after we moved to Utah in 1984. Mark Hofmann, on the surface a faithful, mission serving Mormon, forged and sold hundreds of documents to collectors all over the country. His creations included letters and autographs of Washington, Lincoln, Mark Twain and even an “unpublished” poem by Emily Dickinson. All were authenticated by acknowledged experts in their fields. Principal among his forgeries were documents relating to the early history of the Mormon Church, some of which were embarrassing to the Church as they cast doubt upon the motives of its founder, Joseph Smith, and the official origin stories. Church leaders purchased some of these documents in an attempt to conceal their contents from the public. Hofmann had found the perfect victim, an institution so defensive about its past that it sought to acquire and bury, almost without question, any document that seemed to contradict official beliefs. When Hofmann’s schemes began to unravel, he killed two people with pipe bombs in an attempt to conceal his crimes. This play is part “who did it"; part “how he did it”; but mostly “why did he do it"? At its core it is a play about the relationship of faith to fact, the very nature of religious faith itself and an investigation into the psychology of an individual who is utterly without faith while wearing all the outward trappings. “The Salamander’s Tale” had a week long workshop and reading in Salt Lake City in the fall of 2015 and another reading in New York at the 13th Street Repertory Theatre in February of 2016.

The second is “Crotched Mountain”. It is a “pre-quel” to “The Granite State” (produced in 2014 by the Peterborough Players) utilizing four of the characters from the latter play. Both plays stand alone and can be produced entirely independently of the other. They will eventually form two-thirds of a projected trilogy (or cycle of three related plays might be a more accurate way to describe it), the third play of which is tentatively titled “Monadnock” – and that’s the play I’m currently trying to write.

CROTCHED MOUNTAIN is a comedy about death, loss, literary ethics, old love, new romance, acceptance and redemption. The play takes place over the course of one day and night in January of a recent year in Hancock, New Hampshire, somewhat in the shadow of Crotched Mountain.

George is an aging novelist who has recently lost his younger wife, Kate, also a writer, to cancer at an early age. Essentially unable to function, he retreats to an attic bedroom emerging only to replenish his supply of vodka. His son, Tom, concerned about his father for good reason, enlists his mother, George’s ex-wife Anna, to try to take care of George while Tom returns to L.A. where he is scheduled to direct his first low-budget feature film. Carrie, the assistant to George’s and Kate’s agent, unexpectedly arrives with contracts and galleys for Kate’s last book. Carrie asserts that the contracts must be signed immediately despite the fact George has yet to read Kate’s book which deals unsparingly with the months that lead up to her death. As the first act ends, it is revealed that Carrie is operating solely on her own, without the knowledge of her boss (George’s and Kate’s agent) and has her own desperate agenda in wanting to see Kate’s work published.

Also, making a first appearance in George’s household on this January day is Louise, a pot-smoking, aging hippie born again Pentecostal who found Jesus while vacuuming and quotes the Grateful Dead and Dante with equal ease. The plot swirls around literary ethics (or the lack thereof) while, despite initial antagonism, Tom and Carrie find themselves falling in love and eventually into bed and George and Anna explore an old relationship and perhaps re-kindle lost love. All comes to a head in a 3:00 AM impromptu meal in which Anna’s perception’s, Tom and Carrie’s embarrassment, Louise’s knowledge of The Grateful Dead and Dante, and the un-expected appearance of the Northern Lights bring George to his own small epiphany.

“Crotched Mountain” had a reading in New York at the Players Club and has been a finalist for several reading series and workshops and was a semi-finalist for the 2016 O’Neill Conference – but is still looking for a first production.

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

A:  I don’t have anything resembling a transcendent moment where I realized I would be a writer, nor is there any one experience that struck me like Saul on the Road to Tarsus and committed me to a life in the theatre. But from a very early age – maybe nine or so – I knew I wanted to write. I don’t know how I knew that. But I liked the doing of it and my teachers and parents and classmates seemed to react positively. So, as I cruised into adolescence when I didn’t dream of playing quarterback for the 49ers I thought I would write novels and poetry. I had no notion of ever going into the theatre. But as a junior and senior in High School, I had one of those great teachers who, in a sense, gave me permission to imagine myself as a writer. So, of course, I dumped every scrap of paper filled with my adolescent poetry and prose on his overly-supportive head and at one point my efforts included a couple of excruciatingly bad one act plays. If my memory serves me correctly, they were kind of ersatz teen-age Samuel Becket. Can you imagine anything much worse? I cringe at the memory. But Jack Coogan, this wonderful teacher, very gently responded to these plays by saying something along the lines that he thought I had promise and maybe some talent as a writer but obviously I knew absolutely nothing about the theatre. I had to acknowledge he was right about that. He suggested that if I were serious about writing for the theatre, when I went off to Dartmouth the next fall, I should get involved in the theatre department and be in a play or two, build scenery, hang lights, take a couple of classes and maybe I’d learn something about what it was that made a play. I took him at his word and did just that. As a freshman, after quickly discovering I wasn’t good enough to be a fourth string quarterback at Dartmouth, much less for the 49ers, I auditioned for a production of Racine’s “Phaedra” and was cast as (literally) a spear carrier; no lines, one scene, full body paint. I thought it was pretty cool, the lights, the sets, the older “real” actors – not to mention… the parties! Definitely the best parties on campus. And at the time Dartmouth was all male and the only place there were any women was around the Drama Department, so that had its own distinct lure. And I was rapidly seduced to “the dark side” of performing. At the end of my freshman year I was cast in a student written play about the assassination at Sarajevo which instigated World War I. I didn’t have much to do, but I was an extra in a bar scene at one point during which I passed the time by making out with a very attractive Hanover High School Senior. (Sidebar: I very rarely ever got to kiss the girl again in my rather pedestrian career as an actor.) But, I distinctly remember thinking, “this would be a dandy way to make a living.” So, I abandoned my English major and switched to the newly formed Department of Drama – which was essentially dramatic literature with a few practical classes tossed in here and there and a lot of simply “the doing of plays.” After graduation I managed to escape being drafted into the Vietnam War at the very last possible moment (that’s a whole other story) and went to Columbia for a M.F.A. in acting. After banging around Off and Off-Off Broadway and regional theatre for much of the 1970s, I began to transition into directing and in a perfect serendipity of timing and good luck became the artistic director of a small summer theatre in New Hampshire, The Peterborough Players, at a time when no one in their right mind should have given me that job. Seven years later I went to Pioneer Theatre Company as artistic director for what I thought might be three to five years. And twenty-eight years later, I said, “I think I’m done with running theatres – thirty five years is enough.” BUT, through all that time I never stopped writing. And I guess my High School teacher was right – by the time I went back to writing plays in earnest in the late eighties – I had hung around the theatre long enough to kind of know what makes a play. I started by writing adaptations of 19th century novels very specifically for production at PTC because I knew I could sell these known titles and they would fill our Broadway sized stage (932 seats, 46’ proscenium). So my first five plays, over a period of eight years, were adaptations of “The Three Musketeers”, “Dracula”, “The Hunchback of Notre Dame”, “A Tale of Two Cities” and “The Count of Monte Cristo”. All of them did blockbuster business for us at PTC and all but “…Two Cities” went on to have successful lives in other professional theatres. (Always been frustrated that “A Tale of Two Cities” never even got that second production!) After that, while continuing to mine the adaptation fields, I branched off into writing original plays as well. But, I guess I’d have to say, that in a sense, I taught myself to write plays by adapting 19th century novels to the stage. In retrospect, not a bad way to go about it, maybe?

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

A:  Ticket prices. We are pricing ourselves out of existence. But that is way too simplistic. The economics of producing live theatre have become very difficult at almost every professional level. And I have no solutions other than the utterly naïve and it-ain’t- gonna-happen remedy of “more public funding for the arts.” But we are compounding that within the theatre by two things that CAN be changed. First, the work we are producing is becoming less and less accessible to the average audience member, more and more esoteric and solipsistic. We can change that. Also, INCOME INEQUALITY has become an issue in the non-profit theatre as well as our society at large. I’m not pointing any fingers – but when you have a theatre where the senior management is being paid in the low to mid six figures annually and the actor is receiving six hundred dollars a week – I think you’ve got a problem, an economic injustice. Similarly, when you see a theatre with an administrative staff of thirty that only hires twenty actors a year for five plays – you’ve got a problem. And finally, the ever declining cast size. A theatre runs in the red one season, so they cut the budget for the next and what is the most easily cut-able line item? – the number of actors in their season. And each season thereafter, they lose money and the cast sizes keep getting smaller and smaller. So, now they open and close with one actor plays and do two three character and one four character play to fill out the season. It’s a vicious circle. The plays get smaller, therefore the audiences get smaller, therefore the plays get smaller. There is nothing wrong with small cast plays – there are a lot of truly GREAT small cast plays – but a steady diet is like never hearing anything but string quartets. And audiences WANT to hear “Hamlet” and “Lear” with a full symphony orchestra of voices and “Henry V” with a Battle of Agincourt that fills the stage and “Our Town” peopled by an entire community and yes, “My Fair Lady” with a string section and a real singing and dancing chorus, not ten actors, doubling like crazy and two pianos or actors accompanying themselves on cello. (Sorry, the first time was unique and exhilarating, the fifth time was annoying!) The only thing that doesn’t get smaller are the ticket prices. At one time, not so few years ago, going to see a one person play was an EVENT. The one time you could really ask “How did they learn all those lines?!” Now, they are so commonplace it is hard to find an actor who hasn’t done a one person play. I have made a vow that I won’t see another one person play unless the theatre charges me 10% of what they charge me for a ten person cast. (I confess to have broken this vow from time to time.)

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I learned much of what I know as a theatre person from Sally Stearns Brown, the enormously supportive Producing Director of the Peterborough Players who gave me my start. She died over thirty years ago and I still think of her all the time. I learned most of what I know about directing and what it means to be an artistic director in one summer working with Tom Moore, who was one of my predecessors as artistic director of the Peterborough Players and who went on to direct the original productions of “’Night Mother”, “Grease” and so many more. And of course: Shakespeare and Wilder and Tom Stoppard.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A: My tastes are very eclectic: from the classics to musical theatre. But mostly, I suppose, I am excited by a theatre of ideas; by plays that are language driven; by stories that can be best told on a stage in front of a live audience; by theatre that makes us laugh, feel and think. And “LAUGH” is very important to me. I want to laugh in the theatre. And I think that’s one of the things we do best. There is no opiate stronger or more addictive than rolling, continuous laughter in a theatre. I love farce. I think it is generally under-rated as a form and frequently poorly done. I think farce is maybe the most difficult AND ultimately the most truly THEATRICAL of all forms.

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

A:  Get involved in the making of theatre and learn what it is that makes a play a play. I guess I’d have to give that advice, wouldn’t I? Also, don’t get pushed into the, “I have to write plays with no more than four characters if I ever want to get produced” box. There are some theatres that will produce big plays. Big ideas, big themes often demand big casts. And big ideas and big themes are what make theatre worth doing in the first place. Not every piece of music can be reduced to a string quartet or, God forbid, a solo violin. Some music needs a brass section, winds, timpani, a xylophone and a Kazoo chorus in addition to the strings. Also: big theatres that produce big plays pay big royalties. Small theatres that produce small plays pay small royalties. One big production in a LORT B house may very well pay you the equivalent of ten productions or more in 100 seat SPTs.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  OK! You asked for it!

Both “The Salamander’s Tale” (cast of 7) and “Crotched Mountain” (cast of 5) are looking for first productions and I think are pretty much ready to go. (Though I confess to being an inveterate RE-writer, a devotee of the Paul Valery statement: “A poem is never finished, it is abandoned.”) “The Granite State” (cast of 6) has had one very successful production; is funny and smart and touching (if I do say so myself) and I think would do very well at many theatres.

As to productions of older plays that are current or in the works:

“The Ladies Man”, my adaptation of Feydeau’s “Tailleur Pour Dames” will be produced this August by the Peterborough Players under my direction. It has had about sixty productions total, including major regional theatre productions at Indiana Rep., Geva Theatre Center, Shakespeare and Company, Pioneer, Centenary Stage, Sierra Rep. Arvada Center, Creede Rep., Theatre in the Square and many more. It is published by Dramatists Play Service and has multiple amateur productions scheduled in the coming months

“Bram Stoker’s Dracula” will be produced this fall by the Hilberry Repertory Theatre in Detroit in October/November, also under my direction. It has also had numerous regional theatre and amateur productions, notably Denver Center Theatre Company, Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, L.A. Theatreworks (a recently concluded National Tour), The Stage Company in Singapore and twice at Pioneer Theatre Co.

“Laughing Stock” has been running for the past three years in the repertory of the Arcadia Theatre in Moscow in Russian translation, titled “Balagan” and is also in the repertoire of three other Russian regional theatres. “Laughing Stock” has received over a hundred and twenty productions and has been produced professionally by Milwaukee Rep., Asolo Theatre Company, Pioneer (twice), Peterborough Players (twice) and many more. It is published by Dramatists Play Service and has multiple amateur productions scheduled in coming months.

My adaptations of “The Three Musketeers” and “The Count of Monte Cristo” are both published by Playscripts and have multiple amateur productions currently scheduled or recently concluded. “Musketeers” has been produced professionally by Rep. Theatre of St. Louis, The Meadowbrook, PCPA Theatrefest, Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Elm Shakespeare Festival and Pioneer Theatre Co. and many others. “Monte Cristo” has been produced by Alabama Shakespeare Festival and Pioneer as well as dozens of amateur productions.

“Figaro” is currently being produced in L.A. by an amateur company and has received several other amateur productions in recent months. It was commissioned and originally produced by the Pearl Theatre Company, Off-Broadway where it was a NY Times “Critic’s Pick” and was produced professionally in L.A. last year by A Noise Within where it was a L.A. Times’ “Critic’s Choice” and nominated for multiple awards.

And I have a few plays that have only received one production that I would love to see somebody else do: “The Granite State” which I mentioned before. “The Yellow Leaf” about Byron, Shelly, Mary Shelley and the summer of 1816. “Dumas Camille” about Alexandre Dumas fils and his relationship to the creation of his novel and play “The Lady of the Camelias” and the opera “La Traviata”. And of course, there’s that “A Tale of Two Cities” that’s never been done since a hugely successful production in 1995! You can learn about all of them at www.charlesmorey.com

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Jun 1, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 844: Clint Snyder



Clint Snyder

Interview questions below. Feel free to ignore questions you don't want to answer or add questions you do want to answer. Thanks!

Hometown: Chicago, Illinois

Current Town: Portland, Maine

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  A One Act Comedy Called The Shiner. It's about a group of high school students that gets trapped in a ski lodge. It plays off some themes of The Shining. One of the trapped girls thinks a bruise gives her psychic powers.

I'm also working on a young adult fiction novel series called The Absurd Afterlife Trilogy about a girl who dies and has to fight her way through a re-imagined afterlife.

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

A:  I have always had a dark sense of humor, even as a child. I remember throwing up all over my class during story time in kindergarten. I found the explosive reactions and chaos of the situation completely fascinating. I think I try to bring those same chaotically absurd situations to unique characters in my writing and just watch the action unfold.

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

A:  The lack of funding, particularly to student organizations. I think the lack of funding from schools places a lot of younger drama groups in a position that they have to fight just to get the basic materials they need to perform in a well developed production. It also causes many production groups to go after more commercially successful material, rather than material that is thought provoking.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Christopher Durang is my biggest role model. I think he takes the concept of absurd theater and makes an audience able to relate to it as long as the acting is realistic. As a gay playwright, I have to say I think that Edward Albee and William Hoffman's works have been quintessential to my personal journey of acceptance. I think Rupaul, although not a playwright, embodies theatricality and inspires me daily.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I really like theater that shakes people up. The golden rule of showbiz is to not be boring, as long as the production is making the audience feel something then it has my full support. I also think that productions set in strange non-traditional places have always fascinated me. I had my introduction to theater through speech team and as a result have had some of my most powerful acting and writing experiences in a classroom or band room. Because of this, I recently started a line of speech team tailored performance material called Interp Script House available on the Speech Geek Market.

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

A:  To not be discouraged or embarrassed by rejection. Writing is such a personal process that it is so easy to become offended when everyone doesn't find your play riveting. If you put yourself into the play and really gave the audience a part of your soul then you have nothing to apologize for. Just because the first play you write doesn't end up on Broadway that is no reason to quit, keep digging deep and staying positive. Every play, success or failure, is an opportunity to learn more about yourself and develop your personal style.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  A brief synopsis of all my work is available here.

My popular flexible cast post-apocalyptic parody play Lord of the Pies is available for production through Theatrefolk. I also have another wild comedy called To Kill a Mocking Birdie through them.

I also have a simple set zany one act comedy about life at a cable company call center called Please Hold available here.

I have my own spin on a Mad Hatter centric version of a Alice in Wonderland script called The Mad Tea Party

Lastly I just wanted to mention again my new line of Speech Team tailored material Interp Script House

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May 27, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 843: Jason Tseng



Jason Tseng

Hometown: Potomac, MD

Current Town: Long Island City, NY

Q:  Tell me about Rizing.

A:  Rizing is set many years after the zombie apocalypse in Shelter, the last living city on Earth. Infected family members, friends, and lovers have been rehabilitated thanks to a daily regimen of drugs and therapy, but the uninfected that have brought them back do not trust them. Now the drugs are starting to wear off, and Shelter’s two-tiered society is poised on the verge of all-out war. Characters on both sides must choose between rebuilding the world as it was and creating a new one by force.

I've been describing it as "The Walking Dead meets Octavia Butler," specifically because I love the way that Octavia Butler puts a whole new spin on bedrocks of the genre. That's what I'm trying to do with Rizing. Take a new approach to zombies, mainly by making zombies protagonists of the story. In most zombie stories, the first thing the characters have to do is to deny the humanity of the zombies. From the moment of infection, they become monsters worthy of violence. I thought that this is often the same thing that happens to people of color with law enforcement, Muslims and refugees with the Homeland Security, or Gay people during the AIDS crisis. I wanted to explore the humanity of the zombie experience, and how much it might resonate with experience of oppressed communities around the world.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I have a queer Asian rom com that I've been working on called AirBnB. It's inspired by my experience dealing with my partner's coming out to his family. The story is about a gay Asian couple decide to rent an apartment on AirBnB as a cover when one of their parents makes an impromptu visit. It's more than a little melodramatic (two different love triangles!) but it has a heart of gold. It's also a little bit of an homage to The Wedding Banquet but for the 21st century.

I've also been doing research for another play that I've been prepping for. It's like Downton Abbey but set in colonial Hong Kong during the early 1900s. It deals with colonialism, nationalism, identity, and (surprise!) queer love. It's a super fascinating time period, especially because there has been hardly any media set in that specific time period. Most stuff I can find in Hong Kong is set in the 1980s during the economic boom, and during 1997 for the handover between the British and the People's Republic.

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 old AOL Instant Messenger screen name was kweenbtchgddess1. I got that nickname while serving as dance captain of my show choir. I was that kid in high school.

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

A:  Just like Bernie wants to break up the Big Banks. I'd break up the Big Theaters. And it's not that they're too big to fail (because they fail all the time)... it's that the way that way assets are distributed in the theater reinforces the exclusionary/racist/sexist/homophobic/transphobic/ableist/etc theater-making system that we have today. When the gatekeepers are all old rich white dudes, no wonder the rest of us get shut out. I wrote a whole piece on that back during the whole LA 99 Seat Plan controversy.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  If you asked me this 10 years ago, I would say Tony Kushner, David Henry Hwang, and Matthew Bourne. But nowadays my heroes are decidedly less famous... and I'm too bashful to namecheck them here... but I'll simply quote June Jordan's famous line, "We are the ones we have been waiting for."

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theater that isn't afraid of bodies. I love physical theater, dance theater, movement theater, however you like to call it. I started out in dance, so I really resonate with theatre making that really relishes in that ephemeral experience of bodies in motion. I'm also a sucker for a good costume drama. I know that those two things seem worlds apart... but I did say that I liked Matthew Bourne...

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

A:  I mean... I'm just starting out... so it feels a little strange to give advice. But if I could give myself advice eight years ago when I was toying with the idea of writing plays: Don't wait. Don't wait for gatekeepers. Don't wait for someone to discover you. Don't wait for the perfect idea. Just go and do! Even if it's grabbing ten minutes at a time on the subway, just start writing. I walked away from playwriting for close to five years shortly after first trying it out because I didn't see a place for my voice in what was being produced. It felt like such an impossibility that anyone would notice me that investing time in writing plays just felt like a bad investment. But when I started writing stories just for me... without any expectation that anyone would see them other than the audiences in my imagination, that was when I started writing shit that people actually liked.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Come see my show! Rizing is produced by Flux Theatre Ensemble and runs at the Access Theatre Wednesdays-Sundays through June 4th. Tickets at www.fluxtheatre.org/rizing

You can find more info at JasonTseng.com. I post my drawings and stuff at tsengsational.tumblr.com, and I have a monthly column where I talk and cartoon about the arts, politics, and stuff at The Clyde Fitch Report.

I also run two podcasts: I produce Play x Play-- the best plays you've never heard of-- (www.playxplay.org). We take unpublished plays and release them as radio dramas for free in a serialized format. I also run a podcast with my friend Anthony called Queer and Present Danger which is a queer nerd pop culture podcast and is available on iTunes.

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May 26, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 842: Jason Gray Platt



Photo by Michele Crowe.

Jason Gray Platt

Hometown: Phoenix, AZ

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  -An immersive children's show about neurology, birds, and jungle gyms as part of the LabWorks program at New Victory theater in New York City.


-A preposterously long play about the first performance of theater in the American Colonies that I'll be researching at the Folger Library in Washington D.C. on a fellowship this fall.


-A new large-scale immersive work with my theater company Woodshed Collective that is so interesting we don't even know what it is yet but it definitely will be once it has been.


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 wrote my first play, in high school, out of unrequited love.
(For a human.)
She was an actress, I wrote fiction, she wanted to something to work on, and she said, in jest, "Why don't you write me a play?"
"I'll do anything you want," I whispered to her shadow as it rounded the corner.
(In this memory I look and act vaguely like Gollum)
The play was very bad, but the process of writing it was very good.
"Good" being an understatement - it was more like having an awareness that the poured concrete foundation of my life, which I had been waiting for seventeen years to set, had finally done just that, and I could at last begin to build on it.
But I suppose that scenario could describe all of my plays.
Since every act of creation is an act of desire.
Willing into being that which is not, but (for whatever as-yet-undiagnosed reason) which the artist believes should be.
Like an unrequited relationship.
(Oh and that first play? It didn't make a bit of difference)

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

A:  Funding models.
It all comes back to funding models.
Will that change in this country any time soon?
Nah.
But dream big.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Ooooo "heroes" makes me uncomfortable.
Inspirations?
Let's do inspirations.
Caryl Churchill, Martin Crimp, Suzan-Lori Parks, Robert Wilson, Tony Kushner, Samuel Beckett, Edward Bond, Brecht, Young Jean Lee, Paula Vogel, Richard Maxwell, Ivo van Hove, Elizabeth LeCompte, Ariane Mnouchkine, Thomas Bernhard, Joe Orton, Enda Walsh, Chuck Mee, Pina Bausch, Anne Bogart, &c.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Big gestures.
The big gesture takes many forms. Textual, chronological, choreographic, experiential, design-ical, to name a few.
Go big or go home.
Then just go home.
Because by now the play is over and you look weird sitting in a dark theater by yourself.

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

A:  Meet, love, and work with your peers.
Who are also just starting out.
Naturally when you're young you want to work with people who have established themselves, with "names," as it were. People generally older than you.
But A: Those people are working with their own people (their peers),
And B: In time those people will retire/die/transmigrate/sublimate/what-have-you and be replaced by you and your peers.The people I met just out of college are now -- [REDACTED] years later -- established and working, and because we have worked together for so long we have strong collaborative relationships in place.

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May 25, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 841: Padraic Lillis


Padraic Lillis

Hometown: Fairport, NY

Current Town: Ditmas Park, Brooklyn, NY

Q:  Tell me about Hope You Get To Eleven or ...

A:  The full title is: Hope You Get To Eleven or What are we going to do about Sally? It's a solo show on the topic of suicide. It's a two part title because the first part addresses the individual considering suicide and the second part focuses on friends and family of people that are struggling. This past fall I was a guest artist at a university where a student that was charming, bright, witty, and warm, a person that no one could say a negative word about, committed suicide. It was a shock to everyone. 105 people die from suicide each day in the United States and that rate is rising. One reason is because we don't talk about it. That's what inspired me to create this solo show. It is an honest, intimate, slightly humorous sharing of my experiences in the hopes of opening up the conversation on the topic of suicide. I'm nervous about performing it because it's very honest and vulnerable. Also, I don't usually act. I primarily direct and write. However, it is an important conversation and if I'm going to ask others to talk about it - I should start with myself. When I shared on social media that I was performing the play to benefit the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and why, some of 'Sally's' classmates and her family reached out with appreciation that the play was happening. Hearing from each of them reminds me that it is not just my story...it's a lot of people's story - and with that comes a sense of responsibility that forces me to be honest and thorough in the process of creating and sharing the play.

Q:  What else are you working on right now?

A:  I'm writing my first t.v. pilot. I hope something comes of it. It is about the first female to play professional baseball. I'm loving the process of learning t.v. structure and writing the script. It's a challenge to confront my own habits and shortcomings, as well as being able to look at the barriers that reside in society to fully addressing gendering inequality. It seems like it should be a no brainer - but we all have too much invested in a system that already exists. I made it about baseball for a lot of reasons, it's America's past time, etc...but the primary reason is that I love baseball and it's fun to write about.

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

A:  I'm not sure I can explain who I am as a writer or a person in one story. However, the story that came to mind is that when my brother and I were around ten and twelve years old, we would come home from our Little League games and act them out for our mom. Each story would start with, "You should've seen me." - set up is key, make the story feel important. I learned that from my brother. He's two years older than me. He's bigger than I am and in my mind, and his, he was a great athlete. I would let him tell his story first. So I could learn structure of how to frame the story and what needed to be in there. Also, if I went first there wouldn't be nearly as many spectacular moments as in his story. One night when he was talking about an amazing defensive play he made, with all the enthusiasm in the world, he starts, "the ball was hit, like a shot, it goes flying up the middle, I dove -", extending his right arm as far as he can, "and just as it's going past the infield, I caught it." From the kitchen table, I quietly interjected, "That must've hurt like a bitch." He stopped mid story and asked, "Why?" I pointed out that his glove was on his other hand. My mother laughed, and so did he. Those recaps were formative in my beliefs of story telling - what really happened is not necessarily good theater and it's the details that ground the audience in the world of the play.

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

A:  The perception of exclusivity.

Theater is for everyone. That statement is true for our audiences as well as those who desire to make it. We need to make sure everyone feels welcome and is invited to participate. The theater is where we go to feel less alone in the world. To hear our stories and to feel seen and heard by others. And to learn about our neighbors.

A lot of amazing things are happening right now in the theater. We are having exciting conversations through incredible plays by artists such as Stephen Adly Guirgis, Suzan Lori Parks, Lin Manuel Miranda, Tony Kushner, Annie Baker, Rajiv Joseph, Lynn Nottage, Lucas Hnath, Anne Washburn, and many more. It feels as vibrant a time in the theater as any with a lot of different voices being shared.

Most of those playwrights were creating vibrant work well before they were invited into the well established institutions that are presenting their work for audiences today. Their plays were being produced on almost no budget - and the ticket price was a lot lower. I mention this because money isn't the barrier for participating in the theater. Theater's perceived value to the individual is the barrier.

I want the theater's value to be recognized by everyone but more importantly I want everyone to feel that their value is recognized in the theater.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Peter Brook for a couple of reasons. The Empty Space was the first important theater book I ever read and then the more I learned about his work - I appreciated his commitment to the art form and authenticity and exploration.

Arthur Miller. I was fortunate enough to be in a production of Death of a Salesman in high school. I have to say that statement always sounds absurd until it's followed by the fact that Philip Seymour Hoffman played Willy Loman. He was as brilliant then as he was twenty eight years later on Broadway. That play opened my eyes to everything I wanted theater to be. It is personal, it's about family, it's about fathers and sons - and it's about the humanity of us all trying to live up to mythology that is almost impossible to achieve. I want to write political plays like Brecht but I when I sit down to write - what comes out are family and personal dramas. Arthur Miller shows that the personal is political. 

After that my heroes are everyone who get up every day and try to do a little bit more than they thought they were capable of doing yesterday. That's what inspires me. That's what keeps me going.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I have a visceral reaction to smart, funny, vibrant, emotional theater that engages me on many levels; and opens me up to worlds and perspectives that may be different than my own. Hamilton is a prime example of this. Also, I get excited by theater where I can feel that the artists involved are fully investing and sharing themselves in the work.

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

A:  Write for yourself. Write as if no one is every going to see it. Write your truth. And challenge yourself to learn something about yourself and the people you are writing about.

When you finish a draft - get the best group of actors you know together to read your play. Hear it out loud - listen to their thoughts, trust your gut. Rewrite. When it feels important and you have to share it. Get it put up somewhere. Anywhere. Your voice is important. Share it with us.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  I am preparing to direct two shows:
The Pink Hulk written and performed by Valerie David. It is a solo show about a two time cancer survivor finding her inner super hero. It is also part of the Planet Connections Theatre Festivity.http://pinkhulkplay.com

In the Event of My Death by Lindsay Joy, produced by Stable Cable Lab Co. at IRT in August. I'm very proud of this show because it is the first play that was developed by The Farm Theater's College Collaboration Project. Also, coincidentally it confronts the issue of suicide - so I'm to proud to be able to continue the conversation throughout the summer. www.thefarmtheater.org

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