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Jun 24, 2019

I Interview Playwrights Part 1051: Cayenne Douglass




Cayenne Douglass

Hometown:  New York City! A rare breed of Native New Yorker!

Current Town:  Back for the summer but living in Boston September-May. I’m currently at Boston University getting my MFA in Playwriting.

Q:  Tell me about your play in the EST Marathon, Oh My, Goodness.

A:  A woman calls a suicide hotline and gets the wrong number… it’s about interconnectivity and how one small act of kindness – or ‘goodness’ can change someone’s course.

Q:  What else are you working on now?

A:  So many things! There’s a play about biracial identity which also deals with deportation (my father was deported back to Trinidad in 2008 under the Bush administration) - this is my most autobiographical play, there’s also a play about Girl Scouts with a chorus and rap music. I just finished the first draft of a play called Reborns that I developed with Kirsten Greenidge that I’m really excited about. Reborns centers around women who collect silicone baby dolls that look exactly like real babies – if you Google ‘reborns’ you’ll see! People’s first reaction is usually “that’s creepy” but that’s not my interpretation, I try to see the humanity in it. People are odd, they have all sorts of attachments and coping mechanisms. The play is asking how we attribute meaning to inanimate objects and in doing so does that change their inherent value. It also deals with issues of loss and how we tend to gravitate towards less complicated relationships.

I’m also working with director, Daniella Caggiano on the book for a musical called Brewsters about beer brewing women in 15th century England and how their image got tied to our modern-day understanding of the witch archetype. I developed early drafts of this piece through The First Stage Residency at The Drama League and The Emerging Artist Residency at Tofte Lake in 2018. I also just got a travel grant through BU to go to England next summer to do further research!

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 used to want to be “a naked doctor when I grow up”! I think I’m still that in a way. Exposing my own vulnerability through writing in order to foster wellness in a world that can sometimes feel lonely and alienating.

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

A:  I see a trend in theatre to write issue plays, plays that are extremely meta, or have a great deal of self-commentary. Don’t get me wrong, there are aspects of this kind of theatre that I think are important and that I find exciting but often it turns into the playwright talking “AT” the audience rather than letting an audience grapple with the issue on their own. I don’t think theatre should dictate or pontificate. If characters are well drawn and complex, they will have issues inherent to living in this world. We can still examine the same topics but through character and we can actually go deeper because there’s more access for empathy. I want the medium to be warmer and to have more humanity through a social lens.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  I’m a lover of language so Tennessee Williams and Shakespeare rank high. More contemporarily speaking, I love Susan Lori Parks, Martyna Majok, Paula Vogel, David Auburn, Celine Song, Annie Baker, Melinda Lopez, Leah Nanako Winkler, Peter Gil Sheridan… I could go on. I’m inspired by so many different sources because everyone brings something so unique to the table. Anyone that can make me hear language in a new way and make me feel the play from the inside out. I most recently saw Plano and was really taken with the way Will Arbery used language in connection to the passage of time.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Good dialogue with odd characters that don’t behave the way you expect them to. I also get really excited when reintegration of themes and symbols seamlessly weave themselves through a play and pop up in a way that’s surprising; and always theatre that has an element of spectacle!

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

A:  This question made me laugh! I’m just starting out myself! My first production was less than three years ago and that was a self-produced 10 min play! That said I’ll share how I’ve been able to make fast strides. Start small, celebrate the baby steps, and put up work even when it’s not perfect – I believe that the play only gets better in the rehearsal room. That’s what I did. I wrote 10-minute plays, self-produced at small festivals and used that momentum to move forward. If you can get into play development labs that have a production component that’s always a win. Just start doing it, read a lot, support your friends work and they’ll support you. Get bodies in the room to hear it read out loud as much as possible. I also think it’s good to be realistic about what you’re applying to. Look at people just ahead of you in their careers and see what they are doing then look up those opportunities and apply to those if they are applicable to your work rather than throw yourself into a pool of applicants where you aren’t going to be seriously considered. Be realistic but aim high. Chart your career for the long haul rather than wanting or expecting things to happen fast. Live life outside of theatre and listen to people and stories unlike yourself.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  I just found out that my play Maiden Voyage has been chosen for a production for Fresh Ink Theatre’s 2019-2020 season in Boston. This is my first full length production! Maiden Voyage charts the first all-female crew aboard a US Submarine and explores gender politics and how the mimicry of maleness affects the women’s ability to carry out this patrol. It’s playing May 1st -May 16th at Boston Center for the Arts. I’ll probably also do a reading in New York January 2020 of a new play TBD. If you want to stay in the loop please visit my website at www.cayennedouglass.com or follow my IG at: bruteful_theatre


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Jun 19, 2019

I Interview Playwrights Part 1050: Amanda Quaid




Amanda Quaid

Hometown: New York City

Current Town: New York City

Q:  Tell me about your play in the EST Marathon. 

A:  The Extinctionist is a one-act about an environmentalist trying to decide whether to have children. It’s a comedy, of sorts, about the problem of free will. The cast is Sharina Martin, Sean McIntyre, and Stephanie Berry. Pamela Berlin is directing. It’s the very first production of a play I’ve written, so to do it with that team at EST is a huge honor.

Q:  What else are you working on now? 

A:  My play Native Tongue, about an immigrant and an accent reduction teacher, is in the lineup for the HB Playwrights reading series in June. I recently completed a prequel/adaptation of Medea that I’m excited about, which tells the story of Jason and Medea’s marriage from the moment they first meet.

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 in high school, there was a Mister Softee truck that would park outside at the end of the day. The driver was an immigrant. I didn’t know him well, but I saw him every day as I was leaving class. One afternoon, I noticed some younger boys arguing with him. I think it was a discrepancy about money. The driver was up in the truck window, perched a foot or two above them, looking down, and they were yelling at each other.

All of a sudden, the boys started hitting the truck, body slamming it, so it rocked back and forth. The driver lost his balance and told them to stop. They laughed at him. Then they started mocking his accent. I stood frozen, shocked, and by the time I was able to process it, they were ambling away, imitating his voice.

It was the first time I realized that an accent could make somebody vulnerable, that speech carried a hierarchy. I suddenly became aware of all the different accents I heard around me in the city, and how each voice held a story. I began to study phonetics, and when I was 19, I started teaching speech. Immigrants found me on Craigslist, or through word of mouth, and came to my living room to work on their accents. It was an incredible education in the relationship between speech and identity, how a person’s very being is intertwined with the way they sound.

I still make a good part of my living as a dialect coach, and now when I write, speech is the first thing I learn about a character. If I can hear their idiolect, I can write for them.

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

A:  I wish actors could earn a living only doing plays.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes? 

A:  Duse, Ibsen, Beckett, Brecht, Caryl Churchill, Mike Bartlett, Alice Birch

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 

A:  I’m excited by plays that can only be plays, that are stylistically theatrical and have a distinct actor/audience relationship. I also love dialectical writing, where there’s a clear opposition between ideas and I’m able to truly see both sides. I think that sort of storytelling is very healthy.

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

A:  I’m just starting out myself, so I wouldn’t presume to give advice. But I can say that I wrote privately for a long time, assuming I would never show my plays to anyone. It wasn’t until I was pregnant with my daughter that I started writing in earnest and finally thought, “Why not?” I expected motherhood to derail my creative life, but I found it fueled it in ways I never expected. It gave me clarity around how I wanted to spend my time, and it gave me confidence to use my voice. Parenthood is certainly not the path for everyone, but I would say I’m glad I didn’t buy into the idea that you can’t be a mother and an artist, because you absolutely can.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A: 
The Extinctionist runs in Series B of the EST Marathon through June 24

Native Tongue will be read at HB Playwrights on Friday, June 28

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Jun 14, 2019

I Interview Playwrights Part 1049: Carole Real





Carole Real

Hometown: San Anselmo, California

Current Town: I’ve lived in LA for twenty years but am moving back to New York City in the fall.

Q:  Tell me about your play in the EST Marathon. 

A:  The play follows a temp worker in a large corporation who is charged with the task of reading foreign factory audits. Spoiler: the factories are not great places to work. The play is both funny and disturbing.

Q:  What else are you working on now? 

A:  My latest project attempts to channel my feminist rage. Tall order!

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 fifteen, I got a job as a lab assistant for my high school Chemistry class—meaning I washed beakers for a few hours a week. The high school sent me paperwork I had to sign to get paid and one document was a declaration that I was not a member of the Communist Party. I showed it to my folks and they told me it was a holdover from the McCarthy era. I didn’t want to sign it, so I looked up the phone number for the ACLU and phoned them to ask them if I had to. The ACLU lady explained that the political climate wasn’t right to challenge this practice in the courts and advised I sign the document. I want to go back and give sixteen-year-old me a high five and a hug for knowing that requiring employees to sign such a document was wrong and calling the ACLU on my own!

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

A:  I would have all companies produce an equal number of plays by women and men and produce playwrights who reflect the demographics of the city where the theaters are located.


Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Tennessee Williams, Sarah Ruhl, The Lilly Awards and everyone who helps run a theater anywhere.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 

A:  Anything that makes me feel.

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

A:  Get smart actors to read your plays aloud.

Q:  Plugs, please: 

A:  Nothing for me, but check out this new initiative to broaden the scope of theatrical criticism: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/janejung/3views-on-theater

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Jun 13, 2019

I Interview Playwrights Part 1048: Megan Monaghan Rivas




Megan Monaghan Rivas

Hometown: I was born in Charlottesville VA but my family moved before my first birthday, so I didn't get the accent (alas).

Current Town: After a very nomadic life, I live in Pittsburgh PA now.

Q:  Tell me about Three Musketeers: 1941.

A:  It's a very free riff on Dumas' classic, with a plot built largely from historical research about the French Resistance. Set in Occupied Paris, the play focuses on a five-person Resistance cell composed entirely of women and girls. The arrival of two strangers catalyzes change - some tragic and some heroic. It was commissioned by Project Y Theatre for their Women in Theatre Festival, which runs the length of this month (June 2019) at the ART/NY Gural Theatre on West 53rd St.

Q:  What else are you working on now? 

A:  I teach in the School of Drama at Carnegie Mellon University, so right now I'm gearing up for my summer teaching there. In about three weeks, a hundred teenagers will arrive to spend six weeks trying on conservatory life - studying theatre full time, living in the dorms, etc. I always enjoy them. I'm also developing a book idea exploring the conundrum that dramatic literature shows us the worst in human nature as well as the best - but tends to rely on the worst for conflict, our lifeblood. I was inspired by an actor I've worked with a couple of times, who offhandedly mentioned that at age 21 she had already played two roles professionally that required her to portray an attempted or actual rape. How many more would she portray in her career? What earns that emotional as well as physical labor? And how would she sustain her wellness through that repetition of trauma? Further, what is it doing to/for an audience? These are the questions I'm wrestling with.

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 the second of five siblings, all very close in age - the eldest is only eight years ahead of the youngest. (My mother is a superhero.) Moving through life as part of a tightly knit pack who automatically turn to one another when the going gets tough, positioned me to understand the Musketeers.

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

A:  The economics. I'd make it the standard practice to pay all theatre workers living wages, guarantee retirement and health insurance for all in the industry, and settle for nothing less.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Very early in my career I connected with the great American dramaturg Morgan Jenness, who was then running the Helen Merrill Agency. I still say I want to be Morgan Jenness when I grow up.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  I love theater that lifts off from realism and flies. Marcus Gardley's plays are a great example of this - they are grounded in profound truth, but live fearlessly in mythic and poetic dimensions.

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

A:  The same advice I have for all early-career theatre artists: make lots of work with lots of different people. The more work you make, the more you'll have to share with interested folks, and the more chances you'll have to pique folks' interest. The more artists you collaborate with, the more advocates you'll have (as well as having more folks to advocate for yourself). Don't get hung up on making one thing perfectly - engage yourself with making many things as well as you can.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  The Women in Theatre Festival is showcasing the work of more than 15 women theatre-makers for the rest of this month. Tickets can be reserved here. Also, it's Pride Month - if you're in NYC on June 17, go see the legendary Jomama Jones host the QUEER & NOW forum in the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park.


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Jun 12, 2019

I Interview Playwrights Part 1047: Larissa Marten




Larissa Marten

Hometown: Born in San Francisco. Grew up in Jersey. College in Michigan.

Current Town: New York, NY

Q:  Tell me about I Killed the Cow.

A:  The development process for I KILLED THE COW began 4 years ago with a set of my own journal entries. In these entries, and what can be said for the original thesis for I KILLED THE COW, I wanted to do two things: work through my own sexual assault and prove my hypothesis of how people are shaped by their past partners. Those journal entries took various forms; drawings, bits of dialogue, articles I found. I taped the various pages to the walls of my apartment in Berlin, Germany, where I was living at the time, and formed the scene structure for the first version of I KILLED THE COW.

25 performances and a dozen drafts later, myself and the director of the show have crafted I KILLED THE COW to serve a far different purpose than the one we originally set out with. Because we quickly learned that we didn't want to continue performing the show in traditional theater settings. If we were going to talk about sexual assault we needed to stop preaching to the choirs of New York audiences who were mostly agreeing with us.

Now, the show has been crafted to fit in a suitcase in order to tour across the country using humor and metaphor to talk about sexual assault. The show tours to businesses, non-profits, and educational institutions, furthering understanding in the realm of sexual assault by combating misinformation and stigma. Through the performance and post-show talkbacks, I KILLED THE COW opens up digestible conversations about sexual expression and violence.

Since I perform the show as well, it's definitely tested my adaptability as an actor. I've performed the show in conference rooms, outside, in living rooms, and just about anywhere where a group of people can sit comfortably for an hour. But with the majority of the show breaking the fourth wall, it brings me the utmost joy to interact with people from all walks of life and unite as we move toward a more constructive understanding of the causes of sexual violence.

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

A:  I was horrible at sports growing up but I was forced to do all of them. I could end this right here and I feel like that would explain enough. I could never wrap my mind around why we were being competitive about a ball made out of rubber. I'm a competitive person, but I'm more analytical than I am competitive which was my first flaw in the sports world.

One day I was on the field for a little league soccer match. I always played defense because you had to stay behind the midway line when your team's offense had the ball on the other side. Not as much downtime as goalie, but not as much pressure. You know I analyzed all of this to get that perfect position.

My teammates were playing superbly that day and were on offense for minutes at a time. I laid down to take a break. I remember looking up and noticed the curvature of the Earth for the first time. It was in that moment that I realized how small we are and how much of the universe there is to explore. Yet here we are chasing rubber. Since then, I've always wanted to explore it all. And I'm pretty sure that's why I'm in the arts.

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

A:  Accessibility. I want to create work that generates community and promotes accessibility. In the age of black mirrors, these ideals sit almost opposite on the spectrum. However, finding the common ground between seemingly paradoxical notions is the crossroads for innovation.

In projects for the screen, progress in accessibility has been continual. Today the latest films, TV, and new media content are available through streaming services. However, this progress in accessibility has conversely led to a decline in community. Societally, we hide behind devices companionless while watching the latest projects, instead of joining communally for screenings.

In projects for the stage, community is strong. Across America, regional pockets surrounding theaters frequently gather to watch the latest shows. However, accessibility is at an all-time low in the theatre. Audiences are maturing faster than they’re being replenished by younger generations, largely because ticket prices have sky rocketed. With the national debt high and the average income below age 35 low, it’s no wonder why Millennials and Generation Z would rather spend their money on Netflix and Hulu. Or just use someone else’s password.

Community and accessibility are common cravings. They are vital for our survival. However, in order to have both, compromise will be necessary. And the theater needs to be more accessible.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  People who find theatricality in the everyday. Taylor Mac. Erykah Badu. Caryl Churchill.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  The kind of theatre that figures out how to be accessible without sacrificing craftsmanship.

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

A:  Don't listen to advice. Trust your gut.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  If you're interested in bringing I KILLED THE COW to an organization near you, please get in touch at www.ikilledthecow.com or @ikilledthecow across social media. Follow me on social media @larissamarten.

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Jun 11, 2019

Upcoming Productions of My Plays

PRODUCTIONS


Production #1 of The Wooden Heart
Lafayette, LA
Opens September 6, 2019.

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

Production #9 of Kodachrome
Actors Bridge Ensemble
Nashville, TN
Opens July 12, 2019.


Production #21 of Marian
Spirit Gum Theatre Company
Winston Salem, NC
Opens October 11, 2019.

Production #22 of Marian
The Breck School
Golden Valley, MN
Opens March 5, 2020


Production #36 of Clown Bar
Prohibition Hall
Kansas City, MO
Opens July 5, 2019.

Production #37 of Clown Bar
Elon University
Elon, NC
Opens October 3, 2019.

Production #38 of Clown Bar
University of Wisconsin,
Stevens Point, WI.
Opens November 8, 2019.

Production #42 of HLF
Edinburgh, Scotland
Opens August 3, 2019.

Production #43 of HLF
Anchorage, AK
Opens Sept 19, 2019.

Production #44 of HLF
Christopher Newport University
Newport News, VA.
Opens April 3, 2020.


Production #22 of Nerve
The Elephant British Pub
Adelaide, Australia
Opens June 5, 2019

Production #23 of Nerve
Bootstraps Comedy Theater
Dallas, TX
Opens July 12, 2019


Production #7 of Rare Birds
Unit 14 Theatre Company
Highland Park, IL.
Opens July 18, 2019.

a night of short plays

Production #33 of 7 Ways
Auburn Community Players
Fiskdale, MA
Opens July 12, 2019.

Production #34 of 7 Ways
Fountain Central Jr-Sr High
Veedersburg, IN
Opens November 22, 2019

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