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Oct 16, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 884: Jim Knable



Jim Knable

Hometown: Sacramento, CA

Current Town: Brooklyn, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I just finished a first draft of a play about Thornton Wilder’s writing of his first novel when he was nearly 30 and “stuck in the quicksand of teaching.” It shows how he discovered his voice as an artist and is also a sort of adaptation of the novel itself with characters in his life morphing into characters in the book’s episodic chapters. Meanwhile, I’m diving back into a slightly older play called The Reverend’s Daughter, about Civil War era college roommates from the North and South, based on a true story about a group of Southern students at Yale who raised a flag of secession on the college chapel spire. I’ve also got a TV pilot that I’m working on inspired by actress Amanda Quaid’s day job of teaching immigrants how to lose their accents. I continually return to other plays that I’ve written in the last ten years that haven’t received productions and/or been published yet.

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

A:  When I was 7 and my second grade teacher called my name for roll the first day, I answered her by saying, “I prefer to be called Jim.” Jim wasn’t my given name, or even a legitimate nickname variation on James (no variation of “James” is in my legal name). Weirdly, Mrs. Yee, every subsequent teacher, my parents, my grandparents, all the rest of my relatives, my friends, and then, loosely speaking, the world agreed to call me Jim. I’ve heard 7 is a typical age for such attempts at name changes. Mine stuck. It was my first act of friendly defiance that explains not only why I still go by Jim to everyone except for the government, but also why I became a writer. I wrote “Jim” into my identity.

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

A:  It would be spelled “theatre” consistently. I’m not an Anglophile, but there’s something nice about how the word looks when it’s spelled that way and, in this country, it distinguishes it from the movie theater. Also, I want all my plays to be produced and to be suddenly understood by all critics.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  When I was about 5, my mom brought me along to a city college acting class she was taking. Students were taking turns standing in front of the class and “making themselves vulnerable.” One man very calmly stripped off all of his clothes. I still remember the joy with which he pulled off his socks to fling them into the audience and the applause he received for it. He has been heroic to me ever since, even though I now think that getting naked in acting class is a little obvious. As for playwrights who influence me, Sam Shepard always has and always will. I emulate him in the way his characters’ speak in constant spirals towards a painfully indefinite center. When I was much younger, I imitated Mamet’s economy, too, though I have mixed feelings about him personally. I studied Arthur Miller, Eugene O’Neill, and Tennessee Williams, and felt their structural influence though none of them ever read one of my plays and Edward Albee did. He even wrote me a nice letter about it, which I photocopied and used to get into college. I like Edward Albee’s plays. I think Three Tall Women is the best Beckett play Albee wrote—which I mean as a sincere compliment to both writers. I also like Maria Irene Fornes, Caryl Churchill, and Suzanne Lori-Parks a lot and think of them as heroes because they manage to be precise yet lyrical with their power and style, and they take exciting risks that often pay off. I think of Tony Kushner as a hero, not just for Angels in America, but because he’s a great teacher of Brecht and an astute political speaker. I love Wallace Shawn. I got to sit next to him completely by accident, watching Mandy Patinkin in Rinne Groff’s play Compulsion at the Public. It was like My Dinner with Andre at the Princess Bride Reunion about Anne Frank. I still try to engage people in conversations like Wallace Shawn after that experience. He’s a great listener. It’s all in the head-tilt. I had a dream once in which I had to list my theatrical heroes and I talked about all those people above… and Schikaneder. I woke up wondering who “Schikaneder” was. Then I remembered. Emanuel Schikaneder wrote the libretto for Mozart’s Magic Flute. Papageno? The Queen of the Night? Zu hilfe, zu hilfe! He’s an unsung hero. Strike that. He is sung. Mozart just gets all the credit. Let’s hear it for the librettist!

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I am excited by overtly theatrical adult theatre in which characters manage to be both human and godlike. I like children’s theatre that isn’t condescending. Theatre presents an opportunity to be in an utterly unique relationship with living human beings, who are enacting a rehearsed ritual that is constantly adjusting depending on the audience, but it isn’t a religious rite, or a speech, or a presentation; it is a reflection of life itself as we live it, however distorted that reflection or disjointed our lives. I like theatre that takes full advantage of this opportunity.

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

A:  Don’t get too comfortable.
Take breaks when you’re tired.
Listen to people talking as much as possible. If you don’t enjoy that, don’t write plays. If you do, try to be anywhere near as amazing as that—and I don’t necessarily mean write naturalistically, just be true to the music of human speech in its essence.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  The Reverend’s Daughter has a staged reading coming up December 15 at Judson Memorial Church for their Magic Time series, directed by Rosemary Andress. Another play of mine, which shall be named when I decide which one to do, will have a staged reading through the Writers Theatre of New Jersey in their Soundings Reading Series at Fairleigh Dickenson University in January. Master Wilder and the Cabala will have a workshop and staged reading at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign this April with Henry Wishcamper directing. I also write and sing songs. Right now the fanciest recordings of those songs are available on the albums I made with my band The Randy Bandits, which can be found on iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, Amazon, and so on. Lately, I’ve been writing and singing songs as “The Jewbadour” for Tablet Magazine’s Unorthodox Podcast and I will be featured soon on the Ecumenical “Mockingcast” this November, talking about plays and singing songs. Speaking of podcasts, check out the recording of my play The Curse of Atreus on http://www.12peerstheater.org/modern-myths-podcast. And may I also recommend my tribute to Leonard Cohen at http://www.tabletmag.com/scroll/213694/to-be-leonard-cohen.


Plays by Jim


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Oct 14, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 883: Jess Barbagallo



Jess Barbagallo

Hometown: Cato, New York

Current Town: Brooklyn, New York

Q:  Tell me about your upcoming show.

A:  My Old Man (and Other Stories) is a collection of short stories-as-play. The form emerged really organically. I was trying to figure out this notion of beginning-middle-end so that I might be able to look at my work more discretely, as I find it near impossible to end things - artworks, jobs, relationships. Looking at other people's plays was too daunting a model to understand what should be a really simple structure! I get caught up in the bells and whistles of plot intricacy, somebody else's good idea, somebody else's bad idea. But in the short story, which over the last year has so moved and comforted me in my most lonely moments, I could see this attainable form, rooted in language and character. So I started writing individual scenes that I believed could be complete works on their own and these scenes generated characters that became like a roster and then a family. The family in my play is a group of isolated individuals unified loosely by real estate, but really by contrarian spirit, as each one of them is sort of incapable of sustained connection with another human being.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  Well, this play is still running so there is a work that comes with that. A few nights ago I began rewriting this play, My Old Man ..., under the title Nobody's Euphemism (by Dick Foreman). Since we opened last weekend, I've had all this excess energy and have already begun asking the hard "next" questions, like what is my work doing in the world, what am I pushing against, etc. I found myself reading some academic writing on Richard Foreman for a class I was teaching, getting swept up in his specific experiments and the complete originality with which he laid open his mind for others to witness. I mean, I find some of his interpretation of Freud to be simplistic or sort of over-invested in the fetishization of the female form, but on the whole his work has always shown such bravery. I crave that discourse, which in many ways I feel is dead in our field, or at the very least, languishing.

My life is turning more toward acting in December, but I begin work with this new writer's group hosted by Clubbed Thumb in just a couple weeks. It will be nice to have deadlines and a little fire under my ass.

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

A:  Oh, man. I'm sort of terrified of the anecdotal because I think I am actually a very average storyteller, by conventional standards of what makes a good story. (I think I address this in My Old Man, actually.) When I was a kid, I had some intense inclinations toward religiosity, being raised Catholic. After school, my mom would have no idea where I'd run off to because I was in the backyard communing with milkweed or pussy willows. I know I'm naming the plant wrong, but I would sort of set intentions on plants and I believed that those intentions were gifts for God or at the very least sacred communications. I also went through a period of time where I slept on the floor beside my bed as a kind of penance. As a child I was interested in purity and perfection as virtues. I didn't have the attention span to really live up to these aspirations, but they were on my mind. Devotion is on my mind to this day. I love very hard - people and art.

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

A:  Capitalism? The commodification of theater and then the commodifications that ensue are just a big, fat problem. You know, the competition in New York is supposed to make us all better and in certain ways it does. I mean, I might be less rigorous if I had other sensual things compelling me away from the art task. But for me, the product-oriented nature of artmaking is just so yucky. Actors are valued as names and aesthetics become brands. This is very dangerous because it calls for the packaging of beauty and wildness, calcifying these elements into practices that become known quantities. Very little room for risk or growth in this paradigm.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  In high school, the basics: Albee, Williams, Shakespeare. In college: Richard Maxwell, Karen Finley, Mike Leigh, Big Dance Theater, Fleetwood Mac (they are Pure Theater). In my adult life, it is harder for me to use the word hero, but I'll try to make myself a little vulnerable. Taylor Mac's latest work is certainly heroic. Faye Driscoll is deeply talented, Roseanne Spradlin. Ann Liv Young is always exciting, even when dull. The way that Brooke O'Harra and Tina Satter carry themselves as artists in this world, they are role models to me, uncompromising people of vision. Mike Kelley was a theatrical genius. Last summer I worked with Jeff Weiss, creator of the downtown serial And That's How The Rent Gets Paid, a complete inspiration. Elizabeth LeCompte makes stunning stage compositions of great elegance, if I do not always agree with or condone her dramaturgy. It's tricky, the mix of ethics, morality, freedom and vision that come together to form an artist. Rainer Werner Fassbinder was always searching for that elusive freedom - the part of the stew that comes hardest to me - and in my mind, he is the most towering artist of the 20th century.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  A theater of listening. It's surprisingly rare. I think listening is scary because you might not always like what you hear or you might be greeted by silence or your own not knowing. An example of great listening was a music show I saw at The Stone recently featuring Jen Shyu. My friend Katie, a great theater director, laughed at me when I described to her how the musicians listened to each other; her husband is a jazz guitarist so she is a little more jaded around this concept. But there were like six people at this show! And yet the musicians were still so committed to each other, to the audience and to the music. Great focus, great integrity, very powerful.

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

A:  Well, a lot of people think I am just starting out! Even though I've been making original work and sharing it for a decade. I don't have good professional advice to give. Everyone's path is super different and I know from conversations with my peers that I don't want the stuff other playwrights want. But I would say, don't compromise your vision by working with people you don't trust or people who don't inspire passion in you. It's not just about talent, it's about identifying who you want to share intimacy with. I think this goes for every aspect of making theater, from the content of your work to the audience you wish to cultivate. Be specific about your intentions and increase your chances of being satisfied. That's my little art mantra today.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Come see My Old Man (and Other Stories) at Dixon Place on October 14, 15, 21 and 22 at 7:30 PM!

http://dixonplace.org/performances/my-old-man-and-other-stories/

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Oct 13, 2016

Upcoming Productions of My Plays





PRODUCTIONS

Marian or The True Tale of Robin Hood

Production #1 of Marian
Flux Theater Ensemble
The New Ohio, NYC
(This play was commissioned by Flux as part of Flux Forward)
Opens January 2017


Production #1 of Rare Birds
Red Fern Theater
14th Street Theater, NYC
March 23-April 9, 2017

Nerve

Production #19 of Nerve
Mpip Theatre. 
Athens, Greece.
November 7 to December 13, 2016.

Clown Bar

Production #19 of Clown Bar
Ridgewater College
Willmar, MN
Opens November 17, 2016.

Production #20 of Clown Bar
Oklahoma City University
Oklahoma City, OK
Opens March 2, 2017.

Production #21 of Clown Bar
Corn Productions
Chicago, IL
Opens May 12, 2017.

Hearts Like Fists

Production #30 of Hearts Like Fists
Excelsia College
Sydney, Australia
Opens October 27, 2016


Production #31 of Hearts Like Fists
Keizer Homegrown Theater
Keizer, OR
Opens May 4, 2017

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

Production #6 of 7 Ways To Say I Love You
North Montgomery High School
Crawfordsville, IN
Opens October 27, 2016.

Production #7 of 7 Ways To Say I Love You
East Mecklenburg High School
Charlotte, NC
Opens December 1, 2016

Production #8 of 7 Ways To Say I Love You
Ohio State University
Columbus, OH
Opens Feb 8, 2017


The Adventures of Super Margaret

Production #3 of Super Margaret
Franklin ISD
Franklin, TX
Opens October 11, 2016.

Production #4 of Super Margaret
Lourdes Central Catholic Schools
Nebraska City, NE
Opens November 13, 2016

Production #5 of Super Margaret
United Activities Unlimited
Staten Island, NY
Opens March 1, 2017


PUBLISHED PLAYS

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Oct 12, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 882: Andy Bragen




Andy Bragen

Hometown: New York City

Current Town: New York City

Q:  Tell me about Don't You F**king Say a Word.

A:  Loosely based on an actual incident, the title is a quote from me, a time when my inner eight year old emerged. DYFSAW is a four-character comedy about two middle-aged men who come to blows at the end of a long tennis match. The play is told from the perspective of the two men’s girlfriends, who try to make sense of the incident, and to figure out who these men are, and why they love them. The play, set on and off the crumbling public tennis courts on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, uses tennis as a lens to explore deeper questions about love, friendship and competition. We’re about to enter rehearsals and begin performances at 59e59 Theaters on November 4th, running through December 4th.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m excited about a new play, “Monster”, loosely inspired by “Beowulf”, set in a small town that’s been consumed by a big box store, have a workshop of that piece upcoming at New Dramatists in January. Primarily, I’m focused on building my new theatre company, Andy Bragen Theatre Projects. I hope, through my work, and through advocacy, to make a strong case for the value and importance of writer-led companies.

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

A:  It’s less story than a sense of place. I’ve spent my entire life on the Lower East Side, living just across the street from the apartment I grew up in. I have a young daughter, and go to the same playgrounds that I went to as a small child. The Lower East Side/East Village has changed immensely since my early childhood in the 1970’s, and yet there is also, for those of us who have remained, a great deal of continuity. The evolution of the neighborhood, its shifting communities, my own personal history there – these have been significant themes in my work over the years.

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

A:  I remain deeply inspired by the work of companies like 13P, and those that have followed in their path. I feel like we theatre artists (playwrights, directors, actors, etc.) can and should take the lead, and find ways to present our work individually or collectively. Part of the challenge of this is about money - foundations are inclined to provided funding for established organizations over emerging nonprofits. Often grant-seeking organizations are required to have a number of years of programming under their belt before they will even be considered. Part of it also about our mindset as artists. Can we, and I’m talking primarily about playwrights, take more responsibility for the presentation of our own work? Can we take the initiative, as opposed to waiting for someone to select us? Personally, I have found this path to be deeply empowering and satisfying. It’s hard, but it’s worth it.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Eugene Ionesco, for his antic playfulness, moral compass, and imagination. Sarah Ruhl for her mind, language, and deep theatricality. Many others, but those two stand out because they are both interested in transformation (be it from man to rhinoceros, or woman to almond), which I find interesting and important. Wallace Shawn.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Plays that shift my sense of time. Daniel Fish’ work comes immediately to mind. And there was that amazing Mnouchkine piece a few years back, “Les Ephémères”, which I’m still thinking about. Just about everything I’ve seen by Wallace Shawn. “Grasses of a Thousand Colors” – wow!

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

A:  Write, write, write. Read, read, read. Find your collaborators, and produce your own work. Focus on creation and production, as opposed to career. Be generous and kind toward your colleagues. Everyone is working hard, and loves the field, wants the best. It’s hard to make theatre, so we need to support each other.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  A plug for all of the actors fighting for a living wage off-Broadway; #fairwageonstage. As writers we owe them support, and solidarity.

Plays by Andy




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Oct 11, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 881: Jonathan Josephson



Jonathan Josephson

Hometown: Los Angeles, CA

Current Town: Pasadena, CA

Q:  What are you working on now? 

A:  On the adaptation side, I have a reading of my Sherlockian mash-up Holmes, Sherlock and The Consulting Detective coming up in November at the LA Arboretum, this will be the 4th public reading of the play (production pending with Unbound Productions, for whom I serve as Founding Executive Director). The piece features three Sherlock Holmes detectives investigating three seemingly unrelated crimes, until they all crash into one another....hilarity ensues. In December, I'll have a reading of my three Dickens inspired holiday one-acts called Charles Dickens' Christmas Tree at the Pasadena Central Library. I'm also tinkering with new works based on the works of Louisa May Alcott, The Brothers Grimm and a few others. In terms of original plays, I'm putting the finishing polish on Grandpa and the Gay Rabbi which was one of the winners of the 2016 Sam French Off-Off Broadway Play Festival before it's published next year and also tinkering with a two-act play, Four Sons, which I had shelved for a while but am recently interested to dive back into. That one is a Passover comedy about four sons who find out that one of them is adopted by they don't know which one. I'm also part of the writers pool for Playground-LA so I'll be writing a 10-minute play each month for the next five months for enhanced-staged-reading consideration at the Zephyr Theatre in Hollywood.

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 a Cub Scout, in uniform, I literally helped a little old lady cross a street. I just thought that was the bees knees. Still do.

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

A:  I'd love to see more major regional theatres produce short plays. There is incredible writing done in the short form and outside a handful of champions, 10-30 minutes plays are almost exclusively produced by small professional theatres, community theatres and in academic settings. Why not have a slot, even a second stage slot, for excellent short work that exposes more audiences to the form, tells more varied kinds of stories from more varied kinds of writers, and engages more diverse/early career/local directors, designers and other theatre artists? It works for Actors Theatre of Louisville, Milwaukee Rep, definitely City Theatre, why not more? Why not all?

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  In no particular order: Moss Hart, Stephen Sondhiem, Dr. Jorge Huerta, Suzan-Lori Parks, Moises Kaufman, Neil Simon, David Mamet, Tennessee Williams, Mark Maltby, Jane Anderson, Freddie Mercury, Will Eno, Emursive, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Adele Shank, Bill Rauch, Gary Garrison

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love watching a play and thinking to myself oh, I see where this is going... and then all of a sudden, boom, that's not where we're going at all! I love being lulled into a sense of being safe and ordinary and then it explodes into the OH MY G-D I'M ON FIRE! EVERYONE DANCE! DANCE I TELL YOU! You know, into the extraordinary. Or the weird. Both is best. Both are best? I don't know - more is more in my book. I love thoughtful, smart (sometimes even too-smart) dart-like writing as dialogue, and stage directions too. I love the line in Theresa Rebeck's Seminar "The way you talk about writing is stupid." I love A Christmas Carol but none of the adaptations where the Fezzywig party is a giant dance number or Dickens is a character (Lazy! Except for The Muppet Christmas Carol, that's amazing, because - Gonzo). I love having no idea if there are gunshots, strobe lights, more than six characters (or fewer), bad language or great language in a play before I see it. When I read a program before a show I only read the ads and then I go out of my way to patronize those businesses if I can. I love theatre that is tied into its physical community, it's neighborhood. I LOVE site-specific theatre when it's truly specific to the site; I love immersive theatre when it makes me feel and do and think things that I could never do from the seat of a chair. I love seeing, nay, feeling imagination come alive on stage - planets being plucked from the ceiling like apples or a dead daughter speaking to her grieving mother through a mystical red ball. I don't like living room sets, unless something or someone gets really trashed among the ottomans. I do like sets made of trash, especially when then ultimately reveal something counterintutive. I like bold design - sound, lights, costume, special effects, puppets, fights - all of it. I like noise and fireworks and magic tricks. "Bump it with a trumpet." "More frogs and dogs and bears and chickens and... and whatever!!" I like theatre that's fun - serious can be fun; tragic can be fun when it's fiction because having my thoughts provoked is fun, to me. I love a killer 11:00 number. I love a killer cameo or callback. I love an inside joke. I love being reminded that I know very little about most things and lots of other people know lots about many things. I love theatre that compels me to talk about it the whole ride home and think about it the next day. My best theatre experiences make me question if I'm even worthy to judge what I just saw, let alone try to make my own work come to life.

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

A:  Life is long, playwriting lives are long, don't rush to get your work considered and assessed before both it and you are ready. The biggest creative mistakes that I've made were rushing the process of getting a script or an idea out to a decision maker too soon - before I had answered all of my own questions about the piece, let alone was prepared for the scrutiny of an outsider. Lean on a trusted friend or group of friends or mentor to respond to your work honestly. Hear that feedback, then decide to submit. Ignore those people if they're wrong, but hear them first. And do yourself and whoever you're submitting to a favor and don't send out first drafts (unless you have to. I mean sometimes you have to...). Second drafts are always better, even if they're just more thoroughly proof-read. But they're generally more streamlined, more thought-out and trimmed of gristle.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  On October 23, Little Candle Productions is presenting a staged reading of my evening-length piece That Laurence Fishburne Play in Pasadena - the play is two-years in the making and is inspired by my Humana 10-minute 27 Ways I Didn't Say "Hi" to Laurence Fishburne. Deets here. Wicked Lit 2016 runs through November 12 at Mountain View Mausoleum and Cemetery, the immersive theatre event features adaptations of classic horror literature as a moving theatre event (through the hallways of the mausoleuma dn among the headstones in the cemetery). Two of my pieces are included in the evening: Anansi and the Demons drawn from West African folklore and proverbs and Camp Mountain View is the interactive pre-show, intermission performances and curtain call. Tickets and info at www.wickedlit.org. And if Wicked Lit is something that you might want to bring to your town - 13 plays that originated with Unbound Productions (including six of mine) are available for licensing with Steele Spring Stage Rights.


Plays by Jonathan



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Oct 4, 2016

I Interview Playwrights Part 880: Kate Tucker Fahlsing


Kate Tucker Fahlsing

Hometown: Ann Arbor, Michigan

Current Town:  I’m currently a lady without a town! I’ve been spending a lot of time in Chicago and New York City though.

Q:  Tell me about Across The Park.

A:  Across the Park is a new play that explores mental illness, existential despair, technology and modern romance. It’s a part of seven shows being produced in conjunction with The Araca Project. Here’s the blurb:

Stuck on an island with 8 million people, Caroline and Denny are lonely and over-medicated. Separated by Central Park and almost two decades in age, this dysfunctional pair is brought together online by lust and their inability to cope. ACROSS THE PARK follows Denny and Caroline’s non-traditional relationship for ten years and about ten thousand text messages. This dark comedy takes a candid look at mental illness, the search for human connection, and what happens when the only person who truly understands you is as damaged as you are.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m currently working on a collection of short plays entitled, Sexual Offending. The plays explore offenses of a sexual nature that happen often, but are not necessarily deemed criminal, like, the intentional passing of an STD, virtual prostitution, forcing a woman to take Plan B, and childhood sexual exploration.

I’m also developing a play called, Indian River. It takes place in Indian River, Michigan, which boasts the world’s largest Crucifix. The play follows a group of summer camp counselors on their last night off of the summer. It’s a collective coming of age story that takes a look at the history of a forgotten part of the country; a tumultuous relationship between local law enforcement and tourists, and a fateful night that will change these teens lives forever.

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 mom tells me that as soon as I could talk, I said everything. And as soon as I could write, I wrote everything. I had three imaginary friends "Urmop", "Dinnen", and "Jodah". Urmop was the protagonist of my world. I expressed my beliefs and ideas and dreams through her. Dinnen and Jodah were troublemakers and I articulated my values, moral code, and right and wrong through them. I'm a somewhat angsty human, so I need to talk about this-whole-thing-called-life out loud.

As a child, I definitely tried to push people's buttons to see what I could get away with saying. I once made a joke about old wrinkly balls at a potluck full of biologists (my mother's co-workers). It didn't go over too well. I learned quickly that they weren't my audience. My mantra is to write about the things we can't discuss at the dinner table (old wrinkly balls being one example). I clearly haven't changed a whole lot from childhood. Come see my plays. I will be happy if you leave feeling a little uncomfortable, a little offended, and questioning why you thought that inappropriate line was so funny.

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

A:  I would make it way more accessible to make and see new work. I feel strongly that theater needs a revolution similar to TV where we make it easier to access live performance, promote more unique--less commercial productions, and also have a much greater variety of shows to see. I seek out authentic storytelling experiences that represent all kinds of people and worlds.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I love Ibsen, Chekhov, and Sam Shepard. I’m a huge fan of Annie Baker’s work. I studied performance art in conjunction with the La MaMa theatre back in 2007, so I’ve been greatly influenced by people like Penny Arcade and The Living Theater’s Judith Malina. I also had the privilege of being mentored by Thomas Bradshaw, Zayd Dohrn, and Rebecca Gilman while I was a graduate student in Northwestern University’s MFA in Writing for the Screen + Stage program. I cannot recommend their work enough.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I’m a sucker for a well-crafted story and great writing, which to me means, an authentic voice. I’m drawn to character-driven work. I love when shows push the boundaries of theatrical conventions too. I’m pretty good at figuring out the plot of play before the play is over, so if I can be genuinely surprised and proved wrong about my predictions, I get excited about the work. I had that experience last summer with Alistair McDowall’s play Brilliant Adventures, which I saw at Steep Theatre in Chicago (arguably my favorite theater).

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

A:  It took me about 10 years to ever see my work made, because I never submitted it anywhere. I didn’t feel confident sharing first drafts outside of a classroom setting. In graduate school, I realized that part of being a playwright is pumping yourself and your work out into the world as much as humanly possible. That means see shows, immerse yourself in your local theater scene, write furiously, and submit your work to anyone and everyone that will read it.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  ACROSS THE PARK premieres at The American Theatre of Actors October 27-29 via The Araca Project. For more information and tickets: www.acrosstheparkplay.com


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