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Aug 27, 2017

I Interview Playwrights Part 974: Brenton Lengel






Brenton Lengel

Hometown:  Naples, Italy

Current Town:  Manhattan, NYC

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  My two biggest projects at the moment are Afterall, a fantasy adventure through the afterlife that begins with the main character's death, and NPCs, a workplace comedy about the lives of Non-Player Characters in roleplaying games. I'm also in the early stages of a page-1 rewrite for an upcoming play called "No Gods, No Kings," which is set during the Spanish Civil War.

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 very young, my dad used to take me camping, which at the time meant setting up an old pup-tent in the backyard of our home in Allentown, PA. He'd tell me stories, usually about "The Cowboys and the Indians" or "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" (which I didn't realize was a movie until I was like, thirty), and one night he told me about the Appalachian Trail, explaining that it was an unbroken two-thousand-mile footpath through the mountains that ran from Maine to Georgia. Right there in that tent, little four-year-old Brent declared that he'd hike it all one day, and some twenty years later, he did exactly that and then wrote the first play ever about the experience, which is called North to Maine and is probably my most famous work to date.

In a number of ways, that gets to the core of who I am. I have an adventurous streak in me, and I'm definitely a capital "R" Romantic with a number of high ideals and strange notions, and that doesn't always mesh well with mundane reality. Luckily I'm patient and stubborn enough to force these "airy nothings" into reality, and once I've done that, I write about it. I've been accused of being a "method writer" more than once, and I think that's as good a descriptor as any.

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

A:  Theatre has a culture that is, at times, particularly snobbish and stifling. It's kind of a paradox because most of us grew up as nerds and outcasts and we think that theatre is a safe place for people to be different and to think differently, but I find that's often not the case. It's like theatre allows for a very select, very formulaic kind of weirdness, which leads to the big stages and companies reproducing the same tired old plays that they've been producing for fifty years, just with the words and the characters scrambled. Sure, they're penned by different authors, but when you consider the sheer breadth of creativity that can be done on a stage, it is staggering how many times we all wind up watching three to six characters savage each other around a couch for ninety minutes to an hour.

So I'd like to say I'd get rid of couches, but it's not really the couches' fault, and sometimes, despite the fact that it's being done for the umpteen-bajillionth time, sometimes - it's still a good play. So really, what I'd like to get rid of is that attitude, the attitude that plays are only about a certain type of thing and for a certain type of people. I think the more diversity we have, not just of identity but also of thought, the more relevant and interesting theatre will be as an art form.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Arthur Miller is probably my biggest influence; I love the way he writes, and the fact that he stood up to the House of Un-American Activities Committee is hugely inspiring and gets to the heart of what I think an artist should be--not just an entertainer but also someone who lives in the world and actively works to make it a better place. I like Eugene O'Neill for the same reason: he was a member of the IWW, the Wobblies - the same group Heather Heyer was marching with in Charlottesville before she was run down by that Nazi. Though I've never had occasion to see his work staged, Spanish playwright Fredrico Lorca is also a hero of mine; he was killed by the fascists at the start of his country's civil war for being gay and also an outspoken socialist. The fact that he did what he did and said what he said in a society as oppressive as 1930's Spain and in the face of all that darkness continued to create art is hugely inspiring - so yeah, for those three and for Lorca in particular, I'd use the term "hero" to describe them.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  The kind that takes me somewhere else, and teaches me something new, and gets me to care for something or someone that I might have previously dismissed. I was in DC recently and I saw The Originalist at Arena Stage, which was a play about Antonin Scalia, who I'd previously seen as little more than a monster, to be completely honest. To see him posthumously humanized really touched me. Art is often an exercise in empathy and communication, and if a play can get me to feel compassion for someone whose death I may very well have celebrated...well, that's good art, and exciting theatre.

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

A:  The best thing you can do is put words on paper and then show them to people. Writing is a skill, and every time you do it, you get better. Don't worry if they aren't the right words, and don't worry that people won't like them. Even if your work is initially terrible--and it won't be, but if it is--well then, people are going to like it anyway, because a lot of us are terrible at a lot of things and that's human. That's a part of ourselves that is arguably the most worthy of love specifically because it's the part that we most often neglect. Have faith that who you are and what you have to say is valuable and interesting because, I guarantee you, it is. It's a very scary thing to put yourself out there and express yourself honestly, but the alternative is way worse than someone else not liking what they see. So if you have a story inside yourself, don't keep it hidden; share it. If you do that, you will be successful--maybe not in the way that you imagine, but I find that often times when all is said and done, imagination can fall short of reality.

Q:  You mentioned one of your biggest projects is with The Crüxshadows. What's it like collaborating with a rockstar?

A:  It's simultaneously one of the most amazing and annoying experiences I've ever had. Rogue is one of the smartest and hardest working artists I've ever met, and easily the most successful. I was a fan for years before I approached him with the project, and it's a miracle that he even responded to my email. The flipside of it is, he approaches writing a play or a novel or a screenplay in much the same way he approaches writing a song, so every word, every syllable, is of the utmost importance. When you consider just how many words and syllables there are in a script or a manuscript compared to lyrics in a song...well, the process is slow-going to say the least. Then again, I'm also the kid who decided he was going to hike the entire AT before he was even in the first grade, and then grew up to do it, so I'm uniquely suited to this sort of collaboration. It's super cool to meet your idols and find out they really are awesome people who think you're cool and talented too, and what's coming out of our work together is better than either of us could do on our own, so I'm really excited about it.

Q:  Any upcoming projects we should look out for?

A:  My 2012 play Snow White Zombie Apocalypse is being turned into a comic book as we speak. It'll be published by Scout Comics and illustrated by Dark Horse Alumnus Hyeondo Park. I'm about to launch a crowdfunding campaign for NPCs, which is being produced and directed by my good friend Levi Wilson of Maybe Sunshine and in association with my theatre company State of Play Productions Inc. Also, I have something VERY big on the horizon regarding Afterall, which will be announced at this year's Dragoncon, so keep an eye on that.

Finally, The Crüxshadows just released their newest song Singularities (Calling Heaven) I highly recommend people check that out, and if you like it, their new album AstroMythology is being released at Dragoncon and will be available to purchase soon!

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Jack And Jill Plays - Part 11 - What Were You Gonna Say?



About Jack and Jill Plays:


This is a new thing I'm doing.  Posting a short play every day as long as I can.  This does not mean that I wrote this play today but I might have.  (My life is not always my own what with work and a 4 year old running around so maybe I wrote it today or maybe it was stockpiled in preparation for the days I can't get in writing.)  My goal is to do at least 100 of these or maybe more but probably 45 or 50 is the length of a full length play so even that would be good.  100 would be better.  300?  amazing.  500?  Does anyone want 500 of these plays?  Anyway, the goal is consecutive days.

The normal things about plays apply-- don't produce or reproduce this play without my permission.  I wrote it so I own it.  Etc.




What Were You Gonna Say?
by Adam Szymkowicz

(JACK and JILL.  Maybe they're washing dishes.)

JILL
Do you ever feel like just when you start to get something it changes?

JACK
Like what?

JILL
Or something is just starting to get good and then it's over.


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Aug 26, 2017

I Interview Playwrights Part 973: Deb Margolin



Deb Margolin

Hometown: Mamaroneck, New York

Current Town: Montvale, New Jersey, don't tell anyone

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  I'm working with a jazz band; this cool composer Jawanza Kobie got a residency in Phila for his project of bringing kids into the world of jazz the way Peter and the Wolf by Prokofiev does with classical music. So I wrote the story, the piece is called The Bird Stories, and I perform it with this jazz band. I'm also whittling away at a piece for a chamber musical that I was invited to write by a man I'd met only once before the invitation.

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

A:  My parents weren't big on taking us to cultural events. In fact, they didn't. Except for once: we were taken, with some friends of my parents and their kids, to see Oklahoma! on Broadway. I was 8 years old. We sat in the very last row of a 1,200 seat theater; the characters onstage, carrying on with their business, looked the way cars look when a plane clears the last cloud cover as it's coming in for landing. These people were singing OK! lahoma where the Bears go Leaping from the Trees! or whatever it is, and don't even TRY to tell me the lyrics, and I realized with stunning clarity in my little 8 year old mind how ridiculous these songs were, and yet how magnificent the opportunity to sing them was! The stage! Such a place! Such a space! And I thought to myself: someday I'll go stand on one of those and I'll say lovely things! Not surrey with the fringe on top! What a sacred space I realized I was beholding! I made a vow to myself then and there. I don't like that musical; please forgive me.

Q:  If you could change one thing about theater, what would it be?
A:  That more people, and in particular, women, were given the right to FAIL, and then offered the same stage a year later. We need the right to fail. Not just famous playwrights: ALL playwrights. I would wish for the restoration of inexpensive small clubs and spaces that g/littered New York as I was coming of age as a playwright, actor, performance artist. You could try out anything. It was a glorious freedom!

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?
A:  Dario Fo and Franca Rame. Samuel Beckett, the mother of performance art, and Caryl Churchill, the father of it. Spiderwoman Theater. My colleagues in Split Britches Theater Company. Jim Turner, who is so funny his company is painful.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 

A:  I believe that good comedy is all-encompassing. All plays are about love; all plays are about death. Comedy hits all those spots. I love a deep investigation of character. I think we go to the theater to stare at people. I like to look deeply into the architecture of someone's character. When a play/playwright gives me that, they have done an honor to me.

Q:  What advice do you have for playwrights just starting out?
A: Figure out, search for within yourself, those things that you can't die without having talked about. Work from your deepest desire for speech; when speaking from that source, you are always original and resonant. If theater is about the revelation of humanity, we all have enough, as we are human. Pay attention to your obsessions; they are clues to parts of you you may not have realized are artistically viable and revelatory of your humanity. Do automatic writing. Write without stopping. This shakes the tree, and the oddest, highest fruits will fall down. Be careful who you talk to about your work. People can't wait to tell you not just what's wrong with your play, but what's wrong with your hair, your telephone manner, your shirt, your boyfriend, your girlfriend, your non-binary friend, your jokes, your style of grieving. Write from a place of desire. No critic should be in the room when you write. Never put the critic before the playwright.

Q:  When not writing on a computer, what's your go-to paper and writing utensil? When on computer, what's your font?

A:  I have various journals I write in, and a small notebook I carry with me at all times, in case I think of something, overhear something, or something makes me laugh. Camus said that at any street corner, the feeling of absurdity can strike any man in the face! On computer, I'm usually in Times Roman out of laziness; having been in the type business to support my theater habit for years in my 20's and 30's, I know and love many typefaces, Perpetua, Garamond, Futura, Gill Sans.

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Jack And Jill Plays - Part 10 - Cupcakes


About Jack and Jill Plays:


This is a new thing I'm doing.  Posting a short play every day as long as I can.  This does not mean that I wrote this play today but I might have.  (My life is not always my own what with work and a 4 year old running around so maybe I wrote it today or maybe it was stockpiled in preparation for the days I can't get in writing.)  My goal is to do at least 100 of these or maybe more but probably 45 or 50 is the length of a full length play so even that would be good.  100 would be better.  300?  amazing.  500?  Does anyone want 500 of these plays?  Anyway, the goal is consecutive days.

The normal things about plays apply-- don't produce or reproduce this play without my permission.  I wrote it so I own it.  Etc.




Cupcakes
by Adam Szymkowicz

(JACK and JILL are eating cupcakes.  They are almost done.)

JACK
How's yours?

JILL
Good.  Yours?

JACK
Good.  What were we upset about?

JILL
I forget.

JACK
Don't think of it.  We'll get upset again.

JILL
I wish my job was just eating cupcakes all day.

JACK
How is that a job?

JILL
I know.  I'm saying I wish it was a job.

JACK
Yeah.  Why can't jobs be things that aren't jobs.

JILL
Yeah.

JACK
I think I need a day job again.

JILL
I know.

JACK
I'll push paper somewhere.  Like a job that isn't busy all day.  Like that kind of job.  Where do you get that?

JILL
I don't know.

JACK
Or maybe I could wait tables like you.

JILL
You can't do that.

JACK
Yeah.  I know.  I would be bad at that.

JILL
Yeah.

JACK
Maybe I'll become a lawyer.

JILL
You can't be a lawyer.

JACK
I know.  We should get a couple more cupcakes.

(They sigh.  Lick their fingers.)

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Aug 25, 2017

I Interview Playwrights Part 972: Akin Salawu



Akin Salawu

Hometown: Somerset, NJ

Current Town: Bedstuy

Q:  What are you working on now? 

A:  Surreal & absurdist play about a society that murders people for breaking morality laws on the day a revolution begins. It is an all female cast and each woman is of a different ethnicity. There are so many insanely underutilized actresses that I want to create a world that asks these actresses to tackle the kinds of roles that are generally written for dudes.

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

A:  Years ago, I got an email from my preschool teacher who fondly recalls my obsession with getting the other kids to put on the Wiz after I saw it on Broadway. It seems I failed miserably and threw plenty of discouraged temper tantrums. I ran a student theater troupe at Stanford but we never did the Wiz. And I threw no tantrums. If anyone says I did, I'm fairly confident there's no proof.

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

A:  I would make it way cheaper to mount shows and cheaper to attend Theater so the experience of seeing a show could be accessible to the masses. In this Utopian society, I could cry out "lets make something new!" And all the kids who never get called off the bench dive in and after a few months of rehearsal, we open to massive crowds because theater is as accessible as McDonalds...in this Utopian society.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes? 

A:  Honestly they're mostly teachers who were and are deeply invested in sharing their infectious love for the theater: My High School drama teacher, Barbara Herzberg, Stanford's Patricia Ryan & Judith Dolan, USC's Nina Foch, and Darrell Larson & Oscar Machado from my time at Columbia.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 

A:  Theater that cracks my mind open and makes my jaw drop with perspectives and ideas that changed the way I saw something - anything. I could count on 2 hands the times that has happened. The most recent was Small Mouth Sounds at Ars Nova.

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

A:  Nobody knows anything, so beware of advice. Mine whatever is inside you and don't worry about commercial viability or pleasing anyone but yourself - that's ultimately what people will be drawn to.

Q:  When not writing on a computer, what's your go-to paper and writing utensil? 

A:  I used to go for simple leather journals & black ball point pens, but lately I'm digging the Pokemon journals. 

Q:  When on computer, what's your font? 

A:   Garamond or Caviar Dreams.


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Jack And Jill Plays - Part 9 - Sprite


About Jack and Jill Plays:


This is a new thing I'm doing.  Posting a short play every day as long as I can.  This does not mean that I wrote this play today but I might have.  (My life is not always my own what with work and a 4 year old running around so maybe I wrote it today or maybe it was stockpiled in preparation for the days I can't get in writing.)  My goal is to do at least 100 of these or maybe more but probably 45 or 50 is the length of a full length play so even that would be good.  100 would be better.  300?  amazing.  500?  Does anyone want 500 of these plays?  Anyway, the goal is consecutive days.

The normal things about plays apply-- don't produce or reproduce this play without my permission.  I wrote it so I own it.  Etc.





Sprite
by Adam Szymkowicz

JILL
Hi Jack.

JACK
Hi Jill.

JILL
Seems like we're always running into each other.

JACK
Yup.

JILL
Even after the divorce.

JACK
I think I see you more now.

JILL
Could be.

JACK
I'm like, wait, is that Jill?  Why did I leave my apartment?

JILL
It's not so bad...

JACK
I didn't mean--

JILL
To see me.

JACK
Oh, I know.  There's just, you know.

JILL
Baggage.

JACK
History.

JILL
Okay.

JACK
So, uh . . . how's everything?

JILL
You know, for the first few months it's been quiet, uneventful.  The days were gray and passed without me noticing.  And then a couple days ago, something opened for me.  A buzzing stopped I hadn't noticed until it was over.  I went outside and the sun was out.  I took a book and I could really see the words on the page and I could look up and be present, feel my feet on the ground.  I'm not saying every day will be better now but I think I got past something that was itching under my skin.  You know what I'm saying?

JACK
You miss me.

JILL
I'm saying life after you can be good.

JACK
Yeah.  Yeah.  For me too.  Yeah.

JILL
Well, good to see you.

JACK
I miss you.  I can't sleep.  Nothing tastes good.  Everything hurts.

JILL
Uh.

JACK
Can we get our divorce annulled?

JILL
I don't think that's a thing.

JACK
Remarried, then.

JILL
I don't think that's a good idea.

JACK
Yeah.  Okay.  Yeah.

JILL
We could have dinner though.  Or like a soft drink.

JACK
Okay.  Yeah.  Okay.  I'll buy some Sprite.

JILL
I don't drink that any more.

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