Featured Post

1100 Playwright Interviews

1100 Playwright Interviews A Sean Abley Rob Ackerman E.E. Adams Johnna Adams Liz Duffy Adams Tony Adams David Adjmi Keith Josef Adkins Nicc...

Sep 7, 2017

I Interview Playwrights Part 985: Naveen Bahar Choudhury




Naveen Bahar Choudhury

Hometown: Born in Washington, D.C. and raised ten miles away in the Maryland suburbs

Current Town: New York, NY

Q:  What are you working on now?

A: I’m working on the first draft of a new play that is partly a subversive retelling of the Abraham and Isaac story, and partly about a family celebrating the Muslim holiday which commemorates this story, Eid al-Adha (which is Arabic for “Feast of the Sacrifice”). I’m also working on rewrites for several plays, including a play commissioned by the Ensemble Studio Theatre/Alfred P. Sloan Project that I’ve been working on for a looong time, and a few other plays that are in varying states of disrepair. I made up a rule that I wouldn’t start any new plays this year until I finished rewriting all of my old ones. I didn’t follow the rule. I just kept having ideas.

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 really little, I was crazy shy – whatever picture you have in your mind right now of a shy little kid, I was way shier than that. I basically refused to speak unless it was a life-or-death (or pee-in-the-pants) situation. I remember at least one person asked my mom if I was mute (I wasn’t). As soon as I could read the Dr. Seuss books, I started writing simple rhyming poems and stories to give to my parents as a way to communicate my feelings, or things that were too scary to say out loud (everything was too scary to say out loud). My parents were very encouraging of my writing – mostly because they valued the arts and creativity – but also because it was probably the only way they could get some insight into what was going on with their weird little kid! As an adult, I’m no longer shy, but I do still see storytelling as a way to talk about things that we can’t talk about in everyday life.

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

A: More (like a LOT more) productions of plays by living playwrights, playwrights of color, and women playwrights – preferably all three! And really more plays from all communities whose voices are routinely ignored and/or oppressed: LGBTQ writers, differently-abled writers, and many more. I love Shakespeare, Chekhov, and Tennessee Williams as much as anyone; but if you want to get an age diverse and race diverse and otherwise diverse audience, you must produce plays that are directly relevant to this moment, and directly relevant to the audience you are trying to attract. And everyone should want to attract a diverse audience – that is the only way theatre will survive.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A: Dael Orlandersmith, Stephen Adly Guirgis, David Henry Hwang, Kristoffer Diaz, Suzan-Lori Parks, Diana Son, Lynn Nottage, Caryl Churchill, Tony Kushner, Craig Wright, Gina Gionfriddo, August Wilson, Paula Vogel, Rajiv Joseph, Heather Raffo, Quiara Alegría Hudes, Tennessee Williams, Chekhov, María Irene Fornés, Theresa Rebeck, Qui Nguyen, Itamar Moses, Oscar Wilde, Anna Deavere Smith, Lisa Kron, Lloyd Suh, Ionesco... Gaaaah, so many more people!!!! This question is bananas. I could keep naming people all day.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  The kind that makes me remember that a play can be about anything... plays that can’t be easily adapted into some other form, because they are specifically theatrical in some way or another... Plays that make me think, “oh, I’ve never seen it done this way before.”

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

A:  Try to write the play that only you can write. Don’t worry about things like networking or submitting your work to a million places until after you’ve written something and rewritten it and heard a group of talented actors read it for you, so that you can rewrite it again after that... until it starts to sound like you. In other words, don’t put the cart before the horse. Put finding your voice ahead of the horse. In fact, don’t even get horses involved; Equus has already been written. Am I doing this analogy right?

Q:  When not writing on a computer, what's your go-to paper and writing utensil? What other devices do you use?

A:  I like legal pads for when I’m writing quick and dirty; Moleskines for slower writing – like if I’m writing in a meadow. Ballpoint pens, always. I often write on the train (because I’m almost always on a train... In fact, I’m writing this very sentence on a train!), and most of my train writing is with the Notes app on my iPhone. I use the voice memo app a lot as well, when I get ideas while I’m walking, which is a lot. (It’s kind of a long walk to the train).

Q: Who is the adorable dog in your photo?

A: That would be Chester, the Drama Book Shop dog.

Q:  What’s coming up? And where can we learn more about you?

A:  I will have readings of the things I’m writing and rewriting this fall! With the Ma-Yi Theatre Writers Lab and elsewhere. Stay tuned. Learn more about me here: http://ma-yitheatre.org/labbies/naveen-bahar-choudhury/


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

Sep 6, 2017

Jack and Jill Plays - Part 21 - Harold


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.




HAROLD
by Adam Szymkowicz

(JACK and JILL enter, exhausted and filthy.  JACK collapses.)

JACK
I don't have anything left in me.

JILL
There's always something more.

JACK
Totally, right, except now.  I'm done.  Finished.  Bury me here.

JILL
What shall I write on your tombstone?

JACK
Write: "I just couldn't do it any more."

JILL
Or I could just put, "Wuss."

JACK
Okay.  Or that.

JILL
You're really done?

JACK
Yeah.

JILL
That's it?

JACK
That's it.  I have failed at everything that could matter.  The long day is done.  The candle is out.  The sun has set.  The mayflies are all dead.  Corn chips don't taste good any more.  Music sounds dumb.

JILL
Maybe let's get to the house and you can lie down.

JACK
I can't make it.  Go on without me.  Remember my name.  Whisper it to the wind.

JILL
I should have married Harold.

(JACK stands.)

JACK
I will continue and persevere.  I will go inside.  I will make you food.  If you never ever say that name again.

JILL
What, Harold?

JACK
NEVER AGAIN!!

JILL
Okay.

(Exit JACK and JILL)

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

I Interview Playwrights Part 984: Robert Schenkkan





Robert Schenkkan

Hometown: Born in Chapel Hill, NC but raised in Austin, Texas.

Current Town: Live in NYC.

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Writing a movie for Redford to direct about the Manhattan Project, a movie for Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Amazon about the Klan in South Carolina, and another movie for Imagine. I have a new play, HANUSSEN, several commissions I owe, and of course, I continue to follow/manage the rollout of BUILDING THE WALL. Over the next six weeks I will visit productions in Austin, Miami, Vienna, and Tucson.

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 grew up in Austin, Texas and every summer my parents used to drive us (me and my three brothers) to West Palm Beach, FL where we would stay with our grandparents. Hard to keep four boys quiet for long and our favorite entertainment would be when our father would make up a story. These epic serials could go on hours from one improbable adventure to another. Storytelling in its purest form. When I describe what I do now, I simply say, “I’m a story teller.”

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

A:  Tickets would be cheap so everybody could attend regularly.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  Miller. Becket. Shepard and O’Neill.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theater that both moves and surprises me.

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

A:  It’s a marathon, not a sprint.

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 use yellow legal pads and Uniball Vision Elite black pens. I work on computer with Times New Roman font.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

Sep 5, 2017

I Interview Playwrights Part 983: Jonathan Spector





Jonathan Spector

Hometown: Annandale, VA

Current Town: Oakland, CA

Q:  What are you working on now?

A:  Too many things at once, which I find immiserating. I’m much happier just working on one thing at a time, but the fates conspire against me. I’m workshopping my play EUREKA DAY, about an outbreak of Measles at a progressive private school in Berkeley. It’s sort of a play about how we find consensus with people when can’t agree on the facts. I’m trying to complete a draft of a new piece that I started in Berkeley Rep’s Ground Floor about decision science and happiness called THIS MUCH I KNOW. And I have a super-rough new piece, SIESTA KEY which’ll have a reading in Crowded Fire’s Matchbox Series in November and needs a big rewrite first.

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 moved around a lot as a kid and went to five different elementary schools. I was constantly in the position of having to figure out who these new people were and how the rules worked. That combination of curiosity and alienation is usually my entry point into exploring some aspect of the world I don’t understand.

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

A:  I know everyone says money, but still: money. Both to lower the cost of seeing it and the to pay artists what they need.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes?

A:  All the people whose work blew me away and opened my mind to what theatre could be when I lived in New York in my early 20s: Melissa James Gibson, Anne Washburn, Chuck Mee, Jason Grote, Sheila Callaghan, MacWellman, Les Waters, Daniel Aukin in his run at Soho Rep (Sarah Benson’s run has also been breathtaking). Back when I thought I wanted to be a director, I assisted Steve Cosson on a couple of the early Civilians shows, and that idea of treating a piece of theater of as an investigation made a big impact.

Then there’s a whole bunch of the writers I first encountered when I was the Literary Manager of the Bay Area Playwrights Festival: Annie Baker, Sam Hunter, Marcus Gardley, Jackie Sibblies Drury, Julia Jarcho. And the greats across the pond: Beckett, Caryl Churchill, Martin Crimp, David Greig, Complicite, Peter Brook.

Q:  What kind of theater excites you?

A:  Theater that assumes a deep intelligence on the part of its audience. Theater that is strange and surprising and uncomfortable.

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

A:  Read a lot and see a lot. Put up your own work however you can.

Find your people. If you see something that excites you, try to find a way to get involved in any capacity with those people or that company. Just about everyone welcomes free labor.

Turn off the internet. When there are a million other voices swirling around in your head, it’s hard to hear your own.

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

A:  My handwriting has become progressively more illegible even to me, so while I occasionally scrawl notes on any available surface with any available instrument, the real writing happens on a computer. Garamond is my font.

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  Other people’s plays in the Bay: Chris Chen’s A Tale of Autumn at Crowded Fire, Madeleine George’s The Watson Intelligence at Shotgun Players, Marcus Gardley’s Black Odyssey at Cal Shakes and (though this is a long way off, I'm extremely excited about it) Dipika Guha’s In Braunau at San Francisco Playhouse.

My stuff: I have two shows opening next year– Eureka Day at Aurora Theater Company (April 13-May 13), and Good. Better. Best. Bested. at Custom Made Theater (June 14 - July 7).


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

Jack and Jill Plays - Part 20 - No Chairs


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.


No Chairs
by Adam Szymkowicz

(JACK and JILL are eating lobsters.  There are no chairs.)

JILL
Try this one.  It's succulent.

JACK
Mine too.

JILL
No, this one's better.

JACK
(trying hers)
Oh that is good.  It's too bad we spent all our money on this.

JILL
You mean all our money?

JACK
Yeah.  All of it.

JILL
That is too bad.  Open the champagne.

(JACK pops the cork.  They cheer.  He pours some for each of them.)

JACK
We are lucky motherfuckers.

JILL
We really are.

JACK
When I get money again, I'm going to buy a chair.

JILL
Yeah.

JACK
I'm tired of standing.

JILL
When will we have money again?

(They think.  They think.  They get depressed.)

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

Sep 4, 2017

Jack and Jill Plays - Part 19 - To Pot


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.




To Pot
by Adam Szymkowicz

(JILL sitting on a lawn chair.  Enter JACK.)

JACK
Why can't I get anything done?

JILL
Didn't you just mow the lawn?

JACK
I should've mowed it like a week ago.

JILL
Dude.  I don't know.  Want to come watch hummingbirds with me?

JACK
You mean give up?  And let it all go to pot?

JILL
Yeah.  That.

JACK
Okay.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)

I Interview Playwrights Part 982: Tori Keenan-Zelt





Tori Keenan-Zelt

Hometown: The Inimitable Pittsburgh

Current Town: Harlem

Q:  What are you working on now?

A: I’m about to start rehearsals for my new play SEPH, going up at the Araca Project in October. It’s about growing up on the crack between life and death and how to become a goddess in a broken world. I’m excited that this version will bring together some of the brilliant NYC and Nashville collaborators I’ve been working with.

I’m also writing a pilot about whether it’s cool to fix an oppressive society by helping a bloodthirsty countess become queen and a play about a recently divorced nanny who moonlights as “The Most Assassinated Woman in San Francisco.”

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 is a musician and minister, and my dad is an evangelical surgeon who paints. They divorced when I was 2, so I spent half my childhood in hospital waiting rooms, at Jesus camps, in woods, and the other half in the back row of strangers’ funerals, on suburban rooftops, and smuggled into bars. I paid attention.

That’s not really a story. Um. OK -- one time, my mom took a picture of me totally embodying the Virgin Mary while cradling a baby rabbit, which, we discovered, happened to be having a heart attack. She got a full Victorian funeral. I still have the lock of hair.

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

A: Less like church and more like a total solar eclipse.

Q:  Who are or were your theatrical heroes? 

A:  Shakespeare at first and forever. But then – shit – OK: Caryl Churchill, Sarah Ruhl, Rajiv Joseph, Paula Vogel, Tina Howe, Wendy Hammond, Nate Eppler, all actors, all musicians, all puppeteers, don’t even get me started on designers

Q:  What kind of theater excites you? 

A:  The kind with blood in it.

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

A:  The play you’re writing now is really about the play you’ll write in three years. Make this one, then make that one. But love them both all the way.

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

A:   I’m all about the composition books and any smooth pen I can smell. But also, have you heard the good news about Frixion?

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

A:  Helvetica – hell yes!

Q:  Plugs, please:

A:  SEPH Showcase @ The Araca Project October 5-9 https://www.sephtheplay.com/

AIR SPACE Staged Reading @ San Francisco Playhouse November 6 https://www.sfplayhouse.org/sfph/play-reading-series/


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Enter Your Email To Have New Blog Posts Sent To You

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support The Blog
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mailing list to be invited to Adam's events
Email:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Patreon

Books by Adam (Amazon)