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Mar 18, 2020

I Interview Playwrights Part 1079: Kyle Smith





Kyle Smith


Hometown:  I’m originally from a small town in the San Francisco Bay Area called Orinda.

Current Town:  Brooklyn. I’ve been living in NY for the last 11 years. Right now, my whole family is quarantined on one side of the country, and I’m under self-quarantine on the other.

Q:  Tell me about your show that was cancelled because of the coronavirus:

A:  The play is called Unstuck in Time. It was my second full length to ever be fully produced, by five days. I’ve had tons of short plays produced since I started writing, but these two were the first full lengths. The first was called The Part of Me, which was produced at MadLab in Columbus, OH, which they are still figuring out how they want to proceed for the rest of the run; they’re thinking about putting it up on YouTube.

Unstuck in Time follows Billy as he travels his timeline, trying to find a way to save the life of his wife. There’s kind of three threads that you are following in the show: his relationship with his wife in the deep past and how they fell in love (1950s), him processing his grief with his children after his wife has died (1960s-70s), and his present-self trying to find a way to change his past, and save his wife (1992).

The inspiration for it came from the loss of my grandparents, the loss of my uncle in law’s father, a little bit of Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, a bit of the final season of Legion, a bit of Arthur Miller, and a bit of Doctor Who. All these things came together in what is my tenth full length play I’ve ever written, and my second full length produced.

The production was being done by No Frill’s Theatre Collective, a friend’s theatre company in NYC that I’ve worked with the past two seasons of their short play festival. I honestly consider myself very lucky, as I had an opening for both full lengths before we had to shut the doors. So many playwrights didn’t even get that opening and just had to face their shows being cancelled or postponed.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I just wrote a short play for the Covid-19 bake-off about a guy who breaks into a church looking for supplies, and a janitor who pretends to be a priest. One of the elements in that bake off was “a moment of mass panic” so I thought I’d give my characters a (Catholic) mass to panic during.

I am also working on a screenplay about a 17-year-old girl at a Bible Drill competition. The drive of the screenplay is she’s competing to win this Bible competition and her “error” (if we go by Aristotle) is that she feels like she has to keep performing, doing things, at all times or else she’s a failure, an “error” that I feel strongly myself. I’m just fifteen pages in, but I’m feeling good about it.

For my next full-length play, I’m still working out the details. It is a horror play which plays with sleep paralysis and depression, set on a king-size bed. I had just seen Lucas Hnath’s The Thin Place, and it got me in that horror mood. Still working out the arcs on this one, but if I can scare myself, I’ll consider it a success.

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

A:  Growing up, my family would take me to the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. There were a series of traditions that we observed, including an initiation where we would make the new comer drink out of the water fountain in the town square that shot out the worst water anyone’s ever tasted (they might have fixed that by now).

I remember my first play I saw there, there was this sound of a rattlesnake repeated throughout. That sound stuck in my head, and got the gears of my mind working, and eventually I think a guy got fully nude, and I was like “holy shit, you can do this in theatre?” At the time I thought Theatre was “Annie” and “The Sound of Music”, but here was this play, that blew up everything I thought you could do on stage. And I think it was the first time I seriously considered being a writer, because if a play could affect me like that, then maybe I could do the same for someone else.

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

A:  The audience. Too often I go to a play and I’m in an audience full of elderly white people. I saw “Collective Rage: a Play in 5 Betties” a couple years back, and I was laughing uproariously (as one should, that play is one of the funniest I’ve ever seen), and all these older white people were turning around to glare at me. Apparently, Lin Manuel Miranda has had similar experiences, and I’m sure many theatre goers with unique laughs have as well. So much of Theatre is written to be enjoyed by the masses, but because Theatre’s don’t really have a safety net (as I think we’ll see even more during this Covid-19 crisis), they have to jack up the prices and the people who can afford to go are the ones who see going to the theatre as a status symbol. As a writer, I want young people seeing my plays, I want to reach populations who don’t go to plays often. I want Theatre to go back to being for the masses.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Edward Albee, Simon Stephens, Sarah Kane, Eugene Ionesco, and Martin McDonagh are the big ones. I find myself admiring Arthur Miller more the older I get. He’s got excellent scaffolding holding up his plays and Unstuck in Time has some things I borrowed from him.

Out of newer writers, I enormously admire Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, Halley Feiffer, Noah Haidle, and Jen Silverman. There’s something to be said of having a strong voice, and I feel like I could identify each of these playwrights just by the way they write.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theatre that keeps me engaged. Theatre with strong scaffolding that says something or asks a question I had not considered before. Theatre that can make me laugh and cry within minutes of each other.

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

A:  Read plays that excite you, read theatre theory to know how they work, and submit to everything. I jump started my career by trying to amass 100 rejections in a year. In total I got 130 rejections, but over 30 positive responses (semi finalists, finalists, productions, awards, etc.).

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  If you want, you can check out some of my plays at https://newplayexchange.org/users/1696/kyle-smith

Or go to my website at https://Kyleanthonysmith.com

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Mar 17, 2020

I Interview Playwrights Part 1078: Amy Berryman




Amy Berryman

Hometown: Mostly Seattle, WA - but also spent some years of early childhood in Abilene, TX

Current Town: New York City

Q:  Tell me about The New Galileos.

A:  The New Galileos is a play about three female climate scientists being held hostage by the government. The play follows Nora Travers, a young marine biologist who published a children's book on climate change, as she finds herself locked in a cell with two renowned climate scientists, glaciologist Elaine Tuck and activist/author Beth Whitney. There is fourth actor along with these characters, who plays important people in each of their lives via flashbacks, as well as a government interrogator later in the play. It explores censorship, the intersection of science and capitalism, and, of course, climate change.

It was originally a short play written for AMiOS Theatre's SHOTZ - a monthly pressure cooker theatrical event that takes place every month at the Kraine Theatre downtown. A writer and director are paired with actors, given a theme and a set of "conditions" that the play must adhere to. I had already been obsessed with climate change and the question "What are we going to do when it's too late?" (which I also explore in my play WALDEN). This SHOTZ was a dystopian themed SHOTZ and the three actors I was given for my piece were all women. The idea that came to me was three scientists trapped together, and they disappear one by one over the course of this seven minute play. Trump pulled out of the Paris Agreement while we were in rehearsals for the short play. The disinformation and denial all felt very potent at the time and continues to. The short play was then chosen by AMiOS to be developed into a full length through their First Draughts program, where four playwrights develop their SHOTZ pieces into full lengths over the course of six months. It was a finalist for the O'Neill in 2019 and was slated to have productions at several schools in 2020, including Caltech, before the pandemic hit. It was also chosen for the Landing Theatre's New American Voices Playwriting Festival, which has been postponed due to the pandemic, so I appreciate the opportunity to talk about it here! You can also read it on NPX.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  My play WALDEN will have its world premiere next year at People's Light, and I am currently honing my screenwriting skills working on a pilot.

Lots of ideas for plays in my brain, and I hope to get to work on them soon, but, honestly: I am currently writing this a few days after my bartending job halted, day two of quarantine essentially. I am not working on anything right now. I think we should all be easy on ourselves in this moment. Breathe, listen, maybe journal. But let's not put pressure on ourselves to write "King Lear" - I am letting us all off the hook, okay?

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 a novel called "The Lost Dog" between ages seven and eight - it is handwritten, eighty pages, and was clearly a coping mechanism because my family moved across the country during that time. That's still me - prolific and writing through my pain.

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

A:  That we could make a living doing it and that it could be more affordable and accessible. I believe theater should be funded by the government. I believe everyone involved should be paid more. One thing that I hope comes out of this time is that people value live performance and gathering together more.

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

A:  Share your work with your friends! I would normally say invite everyone over and buy them pizza and read your play - now I guess figure out a way to do that digitally. Get yourself in a class! Classes provide deadlines, which help me so much. And, read plays! New Play Exchange is a great resource to see what's being written by your peers right now.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  You can find me on twitter and instagram @amyrberryman - I'm also on New Play Exchange and my website is www.amy-berryman.com and WALDEN will be at People's Light next year! I'm also interviewed on a wonderful podcast called Beckett's Babies which you should check out!

 

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Mar 10, 2020

SHOWS

PRODUCTIONS

Clown Bar 2
Production #1 of CB2
Majestic Rep
Las Vegas, NV
Opens May 20, 2020




Clown Bar
Production #41 of Clown Bar
Tiyatrohane
Izmir, Turkey.
Opens March 11, 2020.



Production #42 of Clown Bar
Pennyless Players, 
Kristallwerk, Graz, Austria.
Opens March 12, 2020



Production #43 of Clown Bar
Big Dog With No Tail
LA Fringe
Los Angeles, CA
Opens June 6, 2020.

The Wooden Heart

Production #3 of the Wooden Heart
Capital Community College
Hartford, CT
Opens May 8, 2020.

Production #4 of the Wooden Heart
Clemson University
Clemson, SC
Opens September 28, 2020.


Deer Isle-Stonington High School
Deer Isle, Maine.
Opens March 4, 2020.

Hazen Drama Club
Hazen Union High School
Hardwick, VT
Opens April 2020.

Los Angeles, CA
Opens April 17, 2020.

Death and Pretzels
Chicago, IL
Opens May 30, 2020.



Production #24 of Marian
Cambridge Street Upper School
Cambridge, MA
Opens March 19, 2020

Production #25 of Marian
Mount Holyoke College
South Hadley, MA
Opens March 27, 2020.

Production #26 of Marian
Michigan State Univeristy
East Lansing, MI
Opens April 10, 2020.

Production #27 of Marian
West Side Show Room
Rockford, IL
Opens April 30, 2020.

Production #28 of Marian
Illinois Wesleyan University
Bloomington, IN
October 2020.


Production #47 of HLF
Splendora High School
Splendora, TX
Opens May 14, 2020

Production #48 of HLF
Newton South High School
Newton, MA
Opens May 21, 2020.

Production #49 of HLF
Cary Players
Raleigh, NC
Opens February 5, 2021


Production #19 of Kodachrome
Labette County High School
Altamont, KS
Opens April 16, 2020.

The Adventures of Super Margaret

Production #11 of Super Margaret
AJ Briesemeister Middle School
Seguin, TX
Opens April 1, 2020.

Pretty Theft

Production #15 of Pretty Theft
University of Michigan
Opens March 20, 2020.
Ann Arbor, MI


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Mar 8, 2020

I Interview Playwrights Part 1077: D.M. Conte


D.M. Conte

Hometown: Hauppauge, NY is where I spent my formative years, but I wouldn't call it my hometown. I left immediately after high school and never looked back. I would call any town I am currently living in my hometown.

Current Town: Culver City, CA


Q:  Tell me about Worst Case Scenario.

A:  Worst-Case Scenario was born out of an idea of two people who were opposites coming together. I knew She was a survivalist, worried about Armageddon, and He was a germophobe, neurotic and obsessed with the world living under his fingernails. And I sat on the idea for a bit. I worked on other things, but I couldn't shake these two characters. And about a year and a half after the island of Kauai had its false incoming missile alert in January of 2018, it somehow clicked. I knew they had to be in a bar on the island at the time of this false alert. The story is about two people choosing love in their own brokenness. Many romantic stories are written with these ideas of love as a perfect package or fit, that one person will magically change every thing in your life that you don't like. This is not that story. These characters choose love in spite of all the baggage each other has, and there is something really hopeful about that.

Q:  What else are you working on now? 

A:  I have another play, Shame, which I will be mounting this summer. It's a story of two brothers, a modern-day Cain and Abel. I like working on characters that have a hard time getting out of their own way, even when it seems the Universe is conspiring to help them. I also have a half-hour comedy pilot, 150 Jobs, about a young woman trying to find a career in the gig economy, and a feature, Continental Divide, which is a look at the American family in the shadow of the 2016 election. I like to write all genres and mediums. Shame started out as a film, but when I wrapped my head around it, I knew it had to be a play.


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

A:  When I was around six or seven, I would go door to door and visit with my neighbors. Not their kids, I would sit at the kitchen table with the adults and they would have coffee and I would be given a glass of milk. And I would ask them all kinds of questions, about their lives, their parents, ... I wanted to know their stories. I'm not sure what they made of me and my visits, but it made me aware of who they were as people at a very young age. So, I would say that I am a very curious person. I want to know the "why" for everything.

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

A:  It needs to be funded at the local and state level. It's too hard to create something new when you need to find funds to get it to a decent theater.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Playwrights would be John Patrick Shanley, Lesley Headland. Actors/ Actresses would be Tim Robbins and Salome Jens.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  All kinds, I suppose. I remember seeing Antonio Banderas in "9" on Broadway. He was electric, what an incredible talent! And I have see theater in Los Angeles that has knocked my socks off. Tim Robbin's The Actors Gang has done some of the most courageous and incredible work I've ever witnessed. They did a play Tim wrote called "Break the Whip" about Jamestown and the Algonquin Indians that was done using subtitles. It was incredible. So, all theater can be exciting... If the piece works, you know it... you can feel it.

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

A:  Get in a writing group. Writing is a solitary journey and you need other people to bounce your ideas off of to see if what you wrote is what they are perceiving. Also, go take an acting class. I started out as an actress and it has helped me immensely in the process of writing because the training has been ingrained in me to go moment to moment, and that is important when you are working on complex characters.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Worst-Case Scenario will run at The Hudson Theater March 20- April 11th, starring C. Thomas Howell. Buy your tickets at www.worstcasescenariotheplay.com

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Mar 3, 2020

I Interview Playwrights Part 1076: Mark Wilding




Mark Wilding

Hometown:  I grew up in Storrs, CT. It’s a university town about half an hour from Hartford. My dad was a professor at the University of Connecticut. My mom worked several jobs – including bank teller and school teacher. She was also a social activist.

Current town:  Studio City, CA

Q:  Tell me about Our Man in Santiago.

A:  In high school, I knew I wanted to be a writer. So I always clipped interesting magazine and newspaper articles. I guess it was instead of keeping a journal. At first, I thought I’d wind up being a journalist – which I was for a couple of years after college – but then I decided I’d give Hollywood a try. I’ve been out here for 36 years, the last 28 of which I’ve managed to make a living as a TV writer. Those yellowed articles have come in handy once in a while during that time – never more so than when I decided to write a play about Salvador Allende.

Gabriel Garcia Marquez wrote a piece for Harper’s in 1974 which discussed the overthrow of the democratically elected leader. In the article Marquez referenced a plot hatched by the CIA to get rid of Allende in 1970. The CIA assembled a couple hundred operatives who were experts in government overthrow. They were supposed to fly to Santiago to help the Chilean military oust Allende. Their cover was as a Navy Glee Club. Unfortunately, they had to scrap the mission when they realized that half the operatives couldn’t actually sing.

I thought this was a perfect blend of human ineptitude and the U.S. always thinking they know what’s best for other countries. Our Man In Santiago takes place three years after that fiasco. When it comes to writing, I inevitably end up finding the humor in most situations. So even though the ouster and eventual death of Allende was terribly tragic, I also thought the situation lent itself to satire, as well as dark comedy.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  I’m currently an executive producer and writer on the NBC/Netflix show Good Girls. I’m also noodling a couple of other ideas for plays.


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

A:  I don’t know that there’s a particular story that can explain who I am. I will say that I lost my dad when I was 14. And I think that greatly affected me. My mom did a wonderful job raising four young kids on her own. But as helpful as people were, there were some folks who also tried to take advantage of her – mostly in financial ways. It made me a little cynical towards human behavior. I think that’s translated to my writing and my general outlook on life. Although I’m always trying to be less cynical. Unfortunately, current events have made that very hard!

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

A:  I would want plays that are more about characters and less about ideas. When ideas take over, I’m bored to death.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Alan Ayckbourn, Martin McDonagh and Arthur Miller. I love the characters that Ayckbourn and Miller have created and I love the chances that McDonagh takes on stage. My admiration for these gentlemen goes a little bit towards what I was saying above. Ideas do percolate through their plays but they’re not front and center.

Q:  What kind of theatre excites you?

A:  Probably the same thing that excites other theatre-goers -- anything with interesting characters that tells a good story. I saw a production of Network in New York last year. Given that the play was based on a movie that’s over 40 years old, I had low expectations. But it was ingeniously staged and the characters were really compelling. I loved it.

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

A:  Have something to say and concentrate on creating fun and interesting characters. And remember, your mission is to entertain people, not to teach them.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Our Man in Santiago runs at Theatre West from March 13 thru April 5. Come check it out! Tickets at http://theatrewest.org/our-man-in-santiago/


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Mar 2, 2020

I Interview Playwrights Part 1075: Stephen Sachs





Stephen Sachs

Hometown: San Francisco

Current Town: Los Angeles

Q: Tell me about Human Interest Story.

A:  Like city traffic congestion, the homeless population in Los Angeles has grown to epic proportions and will only get worse. As a theatre-maker, I feel compelled to ask myself: What can I do as an artist to express what I see in my world?

Two years ago, driving down Hollywood Boulevard one warm afternoon, the classic Frank Capra movie Meet John Doe popped into my mind. In the film, Gary Cooper plays a homeless man (then called a “hobo”), who is hired by newspaper writer Barbara Stanwick and transformed into a national celebrity she names John Doe. An idea struck me. What if that story were told today in the fast-moving world of social media with homelessness, fake news and political corruption in our daily news feeds?

Meet John Doe is labeled today as a comedy but Capra’s view in the film is somber and ominous. Released in 1941, many of its lessons remain true today. How a greedy and ego-driven capitalist can crush the good of the common man. How quickly mob rule and public opinion can change. And how whoever controls the media, controls the masses. No wonder 1941 was also the release year of Citizen Kane, Orson Welles’ examination of a power-hungry fictional newspaper magnate.

In Human Interest Story, newspaper columnist Andy Kramer is laid off when a corporate takeover downsizes the City Chronicle. In retaliation, Andy fabricates a letter to his column from an imaginary homeless woman named “Jane Doe” who announces she will kill herself on the 4th of July because of the heartless state of the world. When the letter goes viral, Andy is forced to hire a homeless woman to stand-in as the fictitious Jane Doe. She becomes an overnight internet sensation and a national women’s movement is ignited.

Human Interest Story is about more than homelessness. It’s about all of us asking ourselves, in these unruly times, who am I? What do I truly believe? How am I not who I say I am? And, most important, how truth – in our press, in ourselves and our world – sets us free.

Q: What else are you working on now?

A:  Sleep. In addition to being a playwright and director, I am the Founding Artistic Director of the Fountain Theatre in Los Angeles. Now that my new play has opened, my focus is back on the daily operations of running a theatre. Supporting, nurturing and producing the new plays of others. I’ve completed the screenplay based on my play, Bakersfield Mist. Shopping that around.


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

A:  As a boy, writing was a refuge. A sanctuary. I would close the door of my bedroom at night and sit at my little desk and write stories to dissolve into an imagined world, or more into myself. I am now an adult. But I still love padding across my backyard to my home office each morning and closing the door behind me. I savor the time alone. The voyage inward.


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

A:  Its position in society.

A wondrous event happened a few years ago in Reykjavik, Iceland. I still think about it. The mind-blowing spectacle of the northern lights across the night sky. But that wasn’t the astounding event that evening. In a remarkable demonstration of forced reverence, the Icelandic city government ordered the power of all public lights be switched off for one hour so the citizens of Reykjavik would be forced to look up into the heavens to experience the splendor. Reykjavík is the capital and largest city of Iceland.

Think about that. The city government ordered — as a mandate of civic policy — that all its people must experience the aurora borealis dancing in the night sky above them.
Can you imagine such a thing happening in our country? Me neither.

In our country, art is a luxury, a non-essential extravagance. No longer taught in our schools, not adequately supported by our government. Politicians plot to eliminate the NEA entirely. Attention spans are shrinking. Seeing a meaningful play is more challenging than going to a movie or streaming a video. It requires more of us, demands a deeper concentration and emotional investment. Sometimes we drag ourselves to the theatre like we go to the doctor, not because we want to but because we know it’s good for us. I don’t care. Whatever it takes. Even if your city government has to switch off your lights at home to get you away from your computer and go to the theatre, so be it. As long as you come, sit in a chair, and view wonder.


Q: Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  My high school theatre teacher. He changed my life. Made me believe that a life in the theatre was magical, filled with passion and meaning. Everything I am is his fault.


Q: What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love the magic that comes when something extraordinary appears out of nothingness. I love an audience to come into a theatre and look at a bare stage. The lights go down. The crowd quiets. The lights come up. And somehow in this empty space, an entire world is created. Characters appear, go on a journey. The audience gets swept up in the story. Then it’s all over. The lights come up. And there’s the empty stage once again. And you realize the whole thing has been created out of nothing.


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

A:  Discipline. Playwriting – any kind of writing – is a craft. Like building a table. You can’t Google it. You can’t just think about it, read books about it, do research on it, muse on it, talk about it. You gotta go the work shed, pick up your tools, and do it. Day after day. Get dirty. Sweaty. Frustrated. Bleed. The table won’t build itself. But when finished, if your table is sturdy and inviting, people come and they sit at your table and eat and share stories, and they laugh and they cry, they engage, pass their lives. And you feel the reward of having built something useful and meaningful.


Q: Plugs, please:

A:  The Fountain Theatre celebrates its 30th year in 2020. Go to www.fountaintheatre.com



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