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Posts By catherineforever666

OU Theater Alum Nathan Ramos wins East West Players prestigious award and is interviewed by us!

  • July 27, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · News

Ohio Theater Alum Nathan Ramos recently just won the East West Players Prestigious See Change Award.  East West Players (EWP), the nation’s longest running professional theatre of color and the largest creator of Asian Pacific artistic work chose Nathan and his play “Base Degrees” as the first place winner.

The press release for the award describes his play: “Base Degrees” explores the pursuit of success and its costs as Benji, a first generation Asian American struggles in New York City to find his voice as his writing career stalls. As the professional paths of his best friend Sheila and his half sister Laura begin to blossom, he begins to unravel. “Base Degrees” explores what lengths we are willing to go to realize our dreams, and whether morality is tied to upward mobility.

Here is another press release quote about the purpose of the award: “The theme of seeking plays that delve into the shifting demographics of the US seems to have caught onto something, based on the sheer volume and breadth of submissions,” says Snehal Desai, EWP Literary Manager and Artistic Associate. “It was an exceptional field of plays and the three winners stand out as sterling examples of reflecting our theme of 2042: See Change. The eight plays highlighted today are engaging, smart, and compelling works that incisively explore the changing American landscape with humor and humility. They really dove into the theme of cultural intersectionality and they are works that all of us involved with this competition look forward to seeing on the stage.”  Read more by clicking on this link,

Keep reading to check out our exclusive interview with Nathan about this awesome honor he was given!

  1. What was your inspiration for your play “Base Degrees”?

Two years ago, I began to get disillusioned by the industry, and I didn’t have a thick enough skin when I would hear comments like, ‘you’re too Asian, you’re not Asian enough,’ or even things meant to be positive but felt more like inadvertent racial idealization, ‘it’s so good you’re a tall Asian!’ Some words even completely altered my self perception and self worth, ‘You’ll never work in TV/film because of your cleft lip and palate.’ As I was trying to work through my feelings, I recalled words from a fellow writer that told me ‘we can’t wait for anyone to write the roles we want to play.’  It made me begin to think about how I viewed myself in the theater world, the fact that there has never been an Asian sex scene on primetime television, there has never been a romanticized/sexualized asian male lead, that I have never seen myself as a protagonist, because I don’t exist in the mainstream story as a main character.

The actual inspiration for some of the content of Base Degrees came from an article about how Lena Dunham and the cast of Girls was just a result of nepotism in the industry. I wanted to explore the dialogue about the wealth gap, racial representation (which girls has received much flack about), and upward mobility within the industry, and not simply vilify those that happened to be born into privilege.  The See Change 2042 Playwriting Competition is based on the estimation that in 2042, people of color will be the majority in America.  I wanted my play to reflect that world, and to also portray women, minorities, and the lgbt community in a multi-faceted light.

  1. How did you feel when you found out you won this awesome award?I was helping a friend write a Medieval French Newspaper for one of her classes at NYU.  We were writing while getting drunk at Horchata, a Mexican Restaurant during Happy Hour near Washington Square Park.  I started sobbing when I got the call, and whenever I cry, because of my cleft palate, I always start dry heaving because my nose doesn’t drain very well.  So I was crying and dry heaving when I heard the news. I am sure Snehal, the literary manager at East West Players was so confused.  It’s my first play I’ve ever submitted to anything, and my first full length play I’ve written so it was definitely a big shock.

3.What do you think theater companies can do to support playwrights/theater artists of color?

I think it has a lot to do with visibility, and not just ‘Asian in the ensemble holding a spear’ or ‘Asian as a servant/monster’ character.  I know a lot of actors that just don’t go in for roles that feel like a marginalization, which then in turn lets the casting directors say that there just isn’t any minority talent.  Asians can and want to be the romantic leads, Asians can and should be vital to the story and not just adjacent and silent.  It’s fucking 2015, come on.

The problem is theaters are inevitably businesses, and because the Asian community is so fractured and the arts aren’t emphasized as a a viable occupation as a part of the community a lot of the time, the demand is somewhat scattered.

Asian representation is really beginning to move toward positive change, but a step toward positive perception could be if producers did Dinner with Friends on Broadway starring Sandra Oh, John Cho, Daniel Dae Kim, and Lucy Liu.  Asian kids would see hot talented intelligent people that look like them doing what they love without being villified, silenced, or exoticized. Asians need a unifying brand, and I know I would definitely hang that poster up in my room for the rest of my life. Let Asians just sit at a table and drink a glass of wine on stage. Making the Asian experience a universal experience through specific truthful storytelling would also help non-minority casting directors and other creatives see that Asians can be humanized instead of exoticized.

  1. What was your favorite thing about going to OU? Big Mamas, Goodfellas, Casa Nueva, Della Zona, Donkey, DP Dough, 3.75 Chinese (which i’m sure is much more expensive now). I didn’t realize how grounding it was to be in the middle of nature until I came to new york and was surrounded by concrete. I grew into the person I am today at OU.  I learned a lot of really difficult lessons, one of which Shelley Delaney told me.  I had been upset about feeling like I wasn’t ever the first choice for anything, and she told me that I don’t need to be the most talented, I just need to be the most reliable, and that’s why they could depend on me in a pinch.  That advice has gotten me more jobs than anything else in my acting career.  Everyone is talented, but you can only depend on a choice few when it comes to collaboration and making art.

5. What’s your favorite kind of dessert?

Favorite homemade dessert: Mom’s pineapple upside down cake.  Favorite NYC dessert: A tie between Harb’s Green Tea Mousse chiffon cake with red bean and Amanda Freitag’s cocoa carrot cake with cheesecake ice cream, carrot caramel sauce, and candied walnuts.

6.Tell us more about the background for your play

Base degrees’ title comes from a monologue by Brutus in Julius Caesar. He says about Caesar in the early hours on the ides of March, ‘but when he once attains the utmost round, he then unto the ladder turns his back, looks in the clouds, scorning the base degrees by which he did ascend’, meaning once Caesar gains power, he will forget where he came from, what got him there, and why he ascended in the first place.  In an age where our scope always seems to be ever narrowing, how do we direct our sights upward without disregarding the world around us?

When Base Degrees begins, it is the third year of living In the Heights for Benji, his half sister Laura, and their best friend Sheila.  When Laura’s chance encounter with writing star Orson begins to lead to opportunity, and Sheila’s lucrative online business leads her to moving out and moving up, Benji feels stalled.  After a one-night stand, and a life changing tragedy, the characters must react to the changes, new pressures, and shifting relationships that arise when fame and upward mobility come to fruition.

Base Degrees explores the different ways we pursue our ideas of success, and what success actually means. Benji has done everything in a conventional sense, but seems to be thwarted at every turn within the traditional channels. Laura falls into good fortune by ambiguously scrupulous ways, but is genuinely talented and wouldn’t get there by any other means, however, does this lead to a moral quandary? Orson was born with a silver spoon in his mouth so he struggles with knowing if he’s actually talented, if he would be where he is without his mother, and must deal with wondering if the people around him are his friends, or just want to use him. Sheila has achieved wealth doing perceived immoral acts, but she uses the money for only good deeds, so does it matter how she has accrued this wealth?  Joel doesn’t wake up in the morning wanting to see his face on the side of a bus, he just wants to eat good food, do his job well, love those around him, and leave the world a little better than he found it. Within these pursuits of success, is there a correct or morally superior way of living?

 

  1. Do you have any advice for aspiring playwrights?

Playwrights are the most honest part of the artistic process.  The best plays are the most truthful, they say the things that we are afraid to say in real life, they give the audience courage, or catharsis, or they let you connect with someone that you would never come in contact with in your every day life.

Really learn and know the rules of writing.  Comedic rules work for a reason, structure is there for a reason, and once you understand how those things work is when you can then deconstruct them.  I kind of live by the Pixar Rules for Writing. I have found that playwriting is equally mathematical and creative. Don’t forget your characters’ objectives.  If they are just fucking around for a page and nothing is deepening then go back to what they’re actually supposed to be doing. Don’t write what you think people want to read, or what you think people want to hear.  Be specific, and get used to other people reading your work.  Find actors who have the sensibilities that you are inclined to as a writer and let them interpret your work.  Also work with actors that you don’t really like or don’t think are compatible to your work because they may open your words up in strange and wonderful ways. Read bad plays and see bad theater, because it is easier to see what you should improve upon than what to aspire to.  Drink one coffee if you know what you want to write and need to bang it out.  Drink a beer if you’re creatively stuck and need to ruminate.

More about Nathan

Nathan Ramos currently resides in New York City where he balances writing plays, acting, and teaching. Nathan is originally from Cleveland, OH and born to a Filipino Texan and a Korean immigrant. He holds a BFA in Acting from Ohio University. Ramos will receive a $5,000 prize.

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Ohio Alum John Hendel will appear on Jeopardy tomorrow!

  • July 14, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Events · News

So I recently chatted with a friendly Ohio alum who is about to make his jeopardy debut!!  John Hendel is a talented actor/playwright whose work always has a fun sense of humor and probing trashy questions about the world.  Let’s learn a little bit about him and then WATCH HIM ON JEOPARDY!  Woot woot!!

  1. What made you interested in OU’s playwriting program?

I didn’t realize I was a playwright until I went to OU. I originally went for Theater Performance, getting into the BFA studio. Meanwhile, I took prerequisite playwriting classes, enjoyed them, found that I had a talent for it, and joined the BFA playwriting program as well. Erik was very open to training me on my time, understanding my focus was elsewhere. But as I went through the Performance program, I grew less and less enchanted with acting as a career. What I was in reality was a writer, not an actor. I don’t know if I would have come to that conclusion so quickly and so thoroughly had I not been at a school so inclusive with its playwriting program and with such strong ties between the actors (both BFA and MFA) and the playwrights (both BFA and MFA).

  1. What kind of stories are you drawn to?

I like stories about stupid people, sort of like the old joke, “If sense were really common, everyone would have some.” I’m most fascinated by characters who make it through their days and lives behaving illogically and irrationally. My BFA final project about two married murderers came from watching too much Fox News, for instance. I also enjoy the Kitestab style of storytelling. A Kitestab is the combination of a written monologue and archival video footage, the two of which are completely unrelated, the combination of which is is it’s own separate entity. It is a very cool experiment I suggest for all writers.

3.What was the transition from OU to real life like?

Transitioning out of OU was/is finding where my place is in the world as a playwright. The general notion of College was that I take that degree and I make a career out of it, but that’s not how playwriting has worked for me. Instead, it’s about living and being a playwright. It was about accepting that my career and my wages don’t have to go hand in hand. Playwriting became more of a reality, like death or taxes, something inescapable.

  1. What’s your fave candy and what do you think that says about you(as a writer or person or both)

Gummi Worms, sour ones if I’m feeling indulgent. Such a unique idea, such an odd evolution. Edible bears are bit strange to begin with, but how did worms come from that? It would seem almost lazy, like a mistake in the factory, but clearly some thought goes into it, splitting the gummi worms into two alternating flavors. Worms? Worms. (side note: while I was at OU, the best sour gummi worms were to be found at the Court St. BP station).

  1. Can you tell me a little bit about your upcoming Jeopardy appearance and how you got involved?

I’ve been a Jeopardy fan all of my life, and have been applying to be a contestant ever since my first year at OU. It’s an online test and they will never tell you how you did. The only thing you know is if they contact you. They contacted me last year for an in-person audition. Few months later, I get called in as a Southern California alternate (since we don’t have to travel, we get brought on as alternate candidates). I didn’t make it that time, but I was guaranteed a spot. I returned to the studio in April and it was a dream come true. Alex Trebek actually saying my name, getting to buzz in, getting things right, getting things wrong. It really is a blur. The hardest part has been keeping the secret of how I did, but it’s been fun misdirecting people into guessing how I did.

  1. Do you have any tips for OU theater students on things to take advantage of in the program?

Take advantage of the free facilities at OU and create your own work. When you’re surrounded by eager artists and simply need to sign up for a space, create and produce. Self-production is such a huge part of the theater world, there’s no good reason to not take advantage of facilities when they’re right in front of you.

Tune in Wednesday night to see John!!  Click Here for more Jeopardy info. Also while you are waiting to watch him on Jeopardy, read a little of his work!!  This is an excerpt from his short play “Why Leopards Whittle”

A tree, stage right. Seated on a rock, stage left, is GUS, a leper. He is whittling. Another leper in the colony, JAMES enters. They are both wrapped in tatters, more Ben-Hur than Molokai.

JAMES

What are you doing?!

GUS

Whittling. Don’t think we’ve met. I’m Gus.

JAMES

Where did you get that wood?!

GUS

That tree over there.

JAMES

You tore from The Savior!

GUS

That tree?

JAMES

Stop it! That’s our sustenance! Do you see anything else

living?? Do you think we get water from these rocks??

GUS

No, but I can’t believe we get water from a tree.

JAMES

We do! Stop whittling, you fool!

GUS

Do you know how long it took me to fashion a blade out of this

rock?

JAMES

I don’t care! Stop blaspheming.

GUS cuts off his finger.

GUS

Aw, dammit to fuck!

JAMES

You see? You are being punished.

GUS

Fucking hell, do you have a spare rag, friend?

JAMES

Serves you right.

GUS

This is a lot more painful than it looks. Can you please help?

JAMES

Maybe it’s a sacrifice.

GUS

Are you even listening?

JAMES puts his foot on GUS’s finger.

JAMES

You have cursed yourself. The Savior is angry.

GUS

“The Savior” is a tree that doesn’t grow leaves even though it’sJuly. Can you please get my finger?? Is anyone here a surgeon?

End of Excerpt!

More about John

John Hendel is a playwright out of Los Angeles. His plays have been seen in the Hollywood Fringe Festival, the Cincinnati Fringe Festival, and the NY Artists, Unlimited International CringeFest. He is a multi-time participant at the Last Frontier Theater Conference in Valdez, AK, as both a playwright and an actor. He writes online at offthehendel.com, where he also practices the art of the Kitestab.

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Catherine Weingarten’s version of Lysistrata happening in Cincinnati this July!

  • July 10, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News · Productions

Current student Catherine Weingarten has been working on a 60 minute trashy adaptation of Lysistrata this summer for Stone on a Walk theater.  Stone on a Walk Theater, a relatively new Ohio based group, promises to give their audiences short, sweet and cheap theater.

The production was commissioned by friend and collaborator Katie Lupica, who Catherine had previously worked with at Powerhouse/New York Stage and Film Apprentice Program.  Sara Tripp Swartout, an alum of the Ohio University BFA Playwriting program, is the assistant director as well as dramaturg for the production.  Read an article in Cincinnati Enquirer about the show!  For the production Catherine is fusing her use of girly humor and contemporary language to give Lysistrata a fresh makeover!  Check out the production if you’re in the area!

Details

When: July 17-25

Where: Simple Space, 16 E. 13 St., Over the Rhine,

Cincinnati, Ohio.

Click here for or more info about the show and to purchase tickets

More about Catherine

Catherine Weingarten is a friendly jewish chick from an obscure area of Pennsylvania! She is currently pursuing her MFA in Playwriting at Ohio University, studying under Charles Smith and Erik Ramsey. For her undergrad, she attended Bennington College where she studied mediation, environmental studies and theater; and studied playwriting under Sherry Kramer. She has taken workshops in playwriting with Samuel D.Hunter, Kara Lee Corthon and Branden Jacob-Jenkins.

Ms. Weingarten’s works have been produced at such venues as UglyRhino Productions, Last Frontier Theater Conference, Abingdon Theater, Less Than Rent, Poetic Theater Productions, Dixon Place, Nylon Fusion Collective and Fresh Ground Pepper. She was most recently a member of Abingdon Playwright’s Group as well as New Perspective Theater’s “This Women’s Work” 2014 short play lab.  She has assisted the literary departments of New Georges, Writopia and Lantern Theater.

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Check out Tyler Whidden’s Article “On Writing and Vincent Van Gogh”

  • July 8, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

Current third year playwright Tyler Whidden just wrote a fun and informative article about Van Gogh’s life as an artist and what writers today can learn from it!  The article was written for Goddard’s alumni blog.  One of the points Tyler brings up is how Van Gogh tried to bring a voice to the voiceless with his art and how writers should examine the value in that as well:

Sometimes, writers tend to try to imagine and portray worlds and people with whom they have no real relationship. There are times when we shy away from writing what we know and try to paint foreign (to ourselves as individuals) backdrops with characters who would never invite us to their parties.  Which is fine – to a point.

Don’t reject the tremendous amount of influence you were given by the people you grew up with: neighbors, relatives, community members, etc. Who you are as a person and as an artist / writer, is directly related to the influence by those around you – even those you may not have had direct contact with.

Like Van Gogh choosing to bring peasants to the forefront of his work, you too can paint the “average, hard-working, Everyman” (or, whatever descriptives you would choose) within your own life. Chances are, you wouldn’t be who you are without them.

This article rocks!!  You can read the full article here

More about Tyler

Tyler Whidden was born and raised in Cleveland, OH where he grew up the least-talented son of a hockey-first family. After earning his BFA in Playwriting at Ohio University, he began a tragic career as a stand-up comic based out of Seattle, WA. As a comedian, Tyler was labeled by critics and fans alike as, “hilarious,” “tragic,” and “probably stoned.” After years of toiling on the road, he moved to Chicago where he returned to theater, studying and working with Victory Gardens and the Neo-Futurists theaters among many others. He received his MFA in Creative Writing from Goddard College and worked as Director of Education with the great Ensemble Theatre of Cleveland. His play Dancing With N.E.D. has seen productions in New Jersey, Ohio, and Washington. His family-friendly farce, The Unofficial Almost True Campfire Tales of Put-in-Bay was commissioned by the Put-in-Bay Arts Council as part of their Bicentennial Celebration of the Battle of Lake Erie in the Summer of 2013 and his one-act play, Detour, was part of the “Truck Stop Plays” production in Chicago. He is currently an Instructor at Ohio University and at Southern New Hampshire University and lives in Athens, Ohio, with his beautiful wife, Angie — who is way out of his league — and their beautiful boy, Booker — who is Tyler’s  intellectual equal.

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Bianca Sams play “Rust On Bone” will receive a reading in Chicago with Babes with Blades this weekend!

  • July 7, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · alumni · Chicago · Events · News

Alumni Bianca Sams thesis play Rust on Bone will be read as part of Babes With Blades Fighting Words Series. The reading will take place this Sunday, July 12th at Noon in Chicago! !!!  There will be another developmental reading with the company this September!

Babes with Blades is an awesome woman friendly company that strives to work with female playwrights and tell story stories with strong female protagonists!  Here is their mission: Babes With Blades Theatre Company uses stage combat to place women and their stories center stage. Through performance, script development, training, and outreach, our ensemble creates theatre that explores the wide range of the human experience, and cultivates broader perspectives in the arts community and in society as a whole.  Congrats Bianca on this awesome development opportunity!!  If you’re in Chicago, you best check it out!!

Details

Babes with Blades Theater

Sunday, July 12th, 12pm

Heartland Studio 7016 N. Glenwood

More info on the Fighting Words Series with Babes with Blades

Playwrights selected for the Fighting Words program will receive a set of three readings to facilitate the development of their script. Each play will be assigned a director who will take part in the development process from the start. All readings and moderated talk backs are videotaped and given to the playwright to aid with rewrites.
The first reading is internal and is attended by company members and the director; the playwright is invited but not sponsored. The second reading is an advertised public reading; the playwright is invited but not sponsored. The final reading is an advertised public reading with one choreographed fight and a reception following the moderated talk back; the playwright’s travel expenses will be sponsored up to $400 to attend. The playwright is given approximately two months between drafts for revisions with a schedule provided at the time of selection.

BACKGROUND: Many scripts have completed the Fighting Words program since its inception, and several have gone on to full productions with the Babes.

R.L. Nesvet’s The Girl in the Iron Mask was selected for BWBTC’s 2006-07 season and was produced at the Raven Theatre, March – April 2007. Jennifer L. Mickelson’s The Last Daughter of Oedipus was produced at the Lincoln Square Theatre in August – September 2010, as the opening show in BWBTC’s 2010-11 season. Barbara Lhota’s The Double launched BWBTC’s 2011-12 season with a production in fall 2011. Reina Hardy’s Susan Swayne and the Bewildered Bride opened BWBTC’s 15th Anniversary season, 2012-13, in fall 2012. Eric Simon’s Bo Thomas and the Case of the Sky Pirates and Aaron Adair’s L’Imbecile premiered during BWBTC’s 2013-14 season.

More about Bianca

If the theater is a cultural and social crossroad in our society — a place where disparate ideas and values meet, collide and diverge again, — then Bianca’s plays are violent intersections that force audiences to face their own complex love affair with misery. She writes plays to create understanding between people of all cultural backgrounds by asking them to wrestle with the traumatic things in life that can simultaneously pull us apart and hold us together as humans. ” Because, let’s face it, no matter your cultural or sociopolitical background, shit happens and that fact makes pain a great equalizer.” Bianca’s work examines what happens when characters meet at these perilous crossroads in their lives.

As a female playwright of color, she is drawn to stories that question the roles of women, ethnicity, and family in modern society, that deal with the search for self in the collective identity and which explore underlying connective threads of mankind.  Bianca weaves hot button social issues into her work because growing up in the politically active San Francisco Bay Area instilled a drive to create art that “holds as it ‘twere a mirror up to nature”.  She hopes that through watching a dynamic dramatization of these issues unfold before their eyes, she will engage the audience in a visceral manner that convicts them to do something about it. You can see the fingerprints of  her approach in her full length plays, At The Rivers End, Battle Cry, Rust On Bone, Black. Irish., Just Porgy, Rise Phoenix Rise and Summer Nights & Fireflies.

Awards and honors include KCACTF Lorraine Hansberry (2nd place), Rosa Parks Award (2nd place), Kennedy Center/Eugene O’Neill New Play Conference fellow, Jane Chambers Student Playwright Award/Athe (2nd Place), Scott McPherson Playwright Award, The Playwright Center Core Apprentice (2014), Playwright Foundation BAPF (finalist), Eugene O’Neill NPC (semi-finalist), TRI Research Fellowship at Ohio State University, Nashville Rep/Ingram New Works Lab Playwright-in-residence , Warner Brothers TV Writers Workshop, and T. S. Eliot Acting Fellowship. Click HERE for a copy of Bianca’s Artistic Statement. 

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Cristina Luzarraga Interview by us as part of our incoming MFA Playwright Series!

  • July 5, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

Hey y’all!  So we are super excited to have exclusive interviews with the incoming class of MFA Playwrights who all happen to be chicks!  Our final interview in our series is with Cristina Luzarraga, a chick who currently does standup comedy in Chicago and has a taste for the dark humor! Read the interview below to learn more about her!

  1. Who are some of your artistic influences/artists that do it for you?

Discovering Edward Albee in high school meant discovering that theater can be at once funny and deeply disturbing. I love that emotional tension, and I love how theater—maybe more so than any another narrative art form—allows it to be experienced on a visceral level. Some other darkly comic writers I like to turn to for inspiration are: Joe Orton, John Guare and Martin McDonagh. Also, Caryl Churchill is everything.

    2.  What got you excited/interested in OU’s program?

I was drawn to OU because of the opportunities it affords for production and collaboration with theater artists across disciplines. Plus, I’m hoping the relative remoteness of Athens, OH will be a boon to my writing output.

   3.If you could be an animal, what would you be and why?

A sloth. Sloths seem really content.

   4.Whats your fave kind of dessert??

Key lime pie

5. At this point in your writing, what types of stories/images are you drawn to?

I’m often attracted to stories that are high-concept. If this bizarre/twisted/impossible thing happened, then what? How would the characters respond? What would the world look like? Some people consider this kind of speculative narrative gimmicky, but I appreciate how it gets the creative juices flowing and facilitates the layering on of subtext and satire.

  1. How has your standup comedy work informed your playwriting?

Comedy has made me more aware of the immediacy of live theater.  Theater, like comedy, functions in the moment. It’s not uncommon to have a captivating moment followed by a dud. In stand-up, a dud is evidenced by a lack of laughter. In theater, it’s more subtle (Is the audience leaning back? Do they seem disengaged? Are they in their heads trying to figure out where the story is going?). I think it helps to imagine a play as a series of moments because it makes the writing less precious and easier to edit and refine.

Now that you are into Cristina, read her writing sample and like her more!  Here is a writing sample from Cristina’s  short play Hippo Woman:

A dinner table. Seated are SETH, TORY, and IRIS.

SETH

So, some members of “Thin Is In”––“Thin Is In” is the gym where I work. Iris here is my favorite client.

IRIS

Oh stop!

 

SETH

I’m serious, she’s a virtuoso at squats.

 

IRIS

I’m blushing!

 

SETH

You’re too modest. A great set of buns right here! Especially for a woman your age.

(beat)

So, some members of “Thin Is In” are having their first meeting to discuss weight loss, right?The director of the group––that’s me––the director says, “Now, I’d like each of you to give us the facts of your daily routine.” So several fat people speak up, admitting their excesses, and then one of the more obese chicks says, “I eat moderately, I drink moderately, and I exercise frequently.” And I’m like, “Uh, are you sure you don’t have anything else to add?”“Well, yeah” she says, “I lie extensively.”

(laughing)

Get it!?

 

IRIS

I just want to thank you again, Seth, for coming tonight. We’re both so happy you could make it. We don’t get many gentleman callers around here.

 

SETH

My pleasure.

TORY passes him the main dish.

 

SETH

No thanks, I’m on a cleanse right now. I’ll take some of that though.

TORY passes him the asparagus, which he piles up on his plate. He drinks copious amounts of water.

 

IRIS
So Seth, are you seeing anyone?

 

SETH

(speaking with his mouth full)

Not since I pulled my pubic muscle.

 

IRIS

Seth, you and Tory have a lot in common.

 

SETH

Oh yeah?

IRIS

You have a dog and Tory likes animals

(beat)

Tory has been volunteering at a shelter, isn’t that right, honey?

 

TORY

It’s part of my therapy. It’s required.

More about Cristina

Cristina Luzarraga is a playwright, comedian and New Jersey native. After graduating from Princeton University, she moved to Chicago to pursue improv, stand-up and theater. She has studied at The Second City, iO and the Chicago Dramatists. Her play Due Unto Others was produced by Princeton’s Lewis Center for the Arts.

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Natasha Smith Interview by us as part of our incoming MFA Playwright Series!

  • July 3, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

Hey y’all! So we are super excited to have exclusive interviews with the incoming class of MFA Playwrights who all happen to be chicks! Second in our series is Natasha Smith (no relation to Charles Smith!), a friendly writer currently based in Arizona who went to the high class liberal art school also known as Amherst. Read the interview below to learn more about her!

1. Who are some of your artistic influences/artists that do it for you?
First of all, I’ve had some amazing teachers. Connie Congdon, Addae Moon, and Michael Winn are all fantastic writers who have been incredibly supportive of my work. Working in Atlanta’s theater scene introduced me to a number of inspiring writers, like Gabrielle Fulton, Pearl Cleage, Suehyla El-Attar, Neeley Gossett, Jiréh Breon Holder, Mike Lew, and Katori Hall. Other writers who have been influential are Lynn Nottage, Marcus Gardley, Julie Hébert, David Lindsay-Abaire, Jon Robin Baitz, and Sam Shepard. I’ve also had the chance to assist some directors who work deeply and incisively, like Tom Jones, Stephen Wrentmore, and James Still. There’s so much incredible work out there and I love being exposed to new genres and artists. Sometimes I come away with a sense of “damn, I’ll never be able to write like that,” but I always try to turn that attention in a positive direction. How do they do what they do? How do they use collaboration to their advantage? There’s always something I can learn from the experience.

2. What got you excited/interested in OU’s program?

A year out of school I interned at the Alliance Theatre, which is one of my favorite places in the world. Celise Kalke, their Director of New Projects, has been a wonderful mentor. She’d been encouraging me to apply to Ohio as long as I’ve been talking to her about grad school, but I didn’t apply until my second round of applications this year. Once I really started looking into it, I was intrigued, and I really got excited about the program after talking to Charles and an alumni Celise put me in touch with. The focus on structure, the system of constant production, and the ubiquitous support of writers within the department all stood out to me.

3. If you could be an animal, what would you be and why?

One of those terrifying creatures that dwells near the bottom of the ocean. Maybe a giant spider crab? But probably a shark. They’re among the less-scary animals in that part of the ocean, but still very badass.

4. Whats your fave kind of dessert?? 😮

Fudge makes the world a better place. Especially dark chocolate fudge that’s not too sweet.

5. At this point in your writing, what types of stories/images are you drawn to?

The stories that resonate with me right now are about power and loss: how loss makes us feel powerless, how people use power to regain what they’ve lost, the intangibility of each and their lasting impact. We enter the world with a limited amount of power that usually increases as we get older and become more independent, and we start life with a lot to lose. I’m fascinated by how they play into each other and how our perceptions can change or mask our experiences.

6.Can you talk about your play “Catapult”, that you sent me as your writing sample and what got you interested in writing that?

Catapult was birthed in the summer of 2013, when I was taking a class at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, MA. On the orientation day, I still hadn’t decided what play I wanted to work on, and I got caught up talking to another participant who was a parent of a student who had gone to a college like mine. We were talking about how Amherst had been in the news recently – Angie Epifano’s story had gone viral, the New York Times was writing about sexual assault at Amherst and schools like it, and I was really passionate about the conversation we were having. I realized that the play I needed to write was right in front of me, and I finished the first draft of the first act that week. On a deeper level, I wanted to write a play about friendship and the clash of “diversity” – what happens when students from different racial, ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds are thrown together on a tiny college campus? What do they bring to the situation, and what do they learn from each other? How do they listen or not listen to each other?
The title came very early in the process. The biggest challenge was making Anders, the character who rapes another character, understandable and human and not just some caricature of evilness. I also struggled to help Leslie, the main character, find her own voice. It’s still a work in progress!

Now that you know that Natasha is a cool chick WITH depth, read a writing sample from her play Catapult and like her more!:
MARISA
Just–let’s enjoy the time we’ve got. Why don’t you come out tonight?
LESLIE
Probably not gonna happen.
MARISA
One night. This frat party is gonna be crazy.
LESLIE
That’s an endorsement?
MARISA
Crazy good.
LESLIE
Yeah. Beer pong and plastered idiots dancing like hyperactive toddlers: my greatest fantasy.
MARISA
Toddlers are nothing like sex-crazed frat boys.
LESLIE
Equally likely to take their pants off in public.
MARISA
Point taken. Okay, I have a deal. I’ll come to your weird museum field trip/ and look at dead bodies with their skin peeled off–
LESLIE
Really? I thought you were too grossed out/ to even–
MARISA
If you’ll get dressed up, have a few drinks, and at least pretend you’re having fun.
LESLIE
Ew, you make it sound so creepy.
MARISA
Which one?
LESLIE
Are you just gonna complain the faces are giving you funny looks?
MARISA
Not once. Swear to God.
LESLIE
But you’re going to make me stay out all night.
MARISA
Only half of it.
LESLIE
What would I even wear?
MARISA
(digging through the pile)
Let me see, I have something that should…
(pulling up a short, lacy dress)
This’ll work.
LESLIE
I only even have sports bras.
MARISA
It’s a tight dress, you don’t need to–
LESLIE
So, basically, I’d freeze off my ass and tits.
MARISA
It’s not like you have much to lose.
LESLIE
Hey!
MARISA
Don’t you ever want boys to look at you like they’re–
LESLIE
Pervs?
MARISA
Like they’re insatiable and you’re–
LESLIE
A juicy steak?

More about Natasha
Natasha is a Tucson-based playwright, currently affiliated with Arizona Theatre Company as the Artistic & Playwriting Intern.
Over the summer of 2014, Natasha taught playwriting to high school students through ATC’s Summer On Stage program. Prior to joining ATC in 2013, she completed a Literary Internship at the Alliance Theatre and a Playwriting Apprenticeship at Horizon Theatre, where her one-act play No Salt was produced. She graduated with honors from Amherst College in 2011, with a BA in Theater/Dance and English.
Natasha’s thesis production, In Her Place, won the Denis Johnston Playwriting Award from Smith College. She spent the summer of 2010 co-teaching a creative writing course to young adults in Nairobi, Kenya. She is a three-time recipient of the Roland Wood Fellowship from Amherst College.

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Philana Omorotionmwan Interview by us as part of our incoming MFA Playwright Series!

  • July 1, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

Hey y’all!  So we are super excited to have exclusive interviews with the incoming class of MFA Playwrights who all happen to be chicks!  We are so excited to have some new blood at OU and see what these writers are up to! First up is Philana Omorotionmwan, who is a Stanford Grad and currently a teacher in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.  Read the interview below to learn more about her!

 

1.Who are some of your artistic influences/artists that do it for you?

Audre Lorde, Suheir Hammad, Cherrie Moraga, Adrienne Kennedy, and Suzan-Lori Parks are writers whose work I could not exist without.

2.What got you excited by OU’s program?

Madness. I feel the opportunity to experiment and fall on my face on a weekly basis is going to be invaluable to my growth as a playwright.

 3.If you could be an animal, what would you be and why?  

A dolphin. I think being able to hold my breath for as long as they can would make swimming a lot easier.

4. What’s your fave kind of dessert??

Cream cheese filled king cake. I’ll be missing those during Mardi Gras season next year.

 

5. At this point in your writing, what types of stories/images are you drawn to?

I’ve noticed that I tend to write about dystopian futures, dysfunctional mother-daughter relationships, and unfulfilled desires. Those things go together, right?

6. So word on the street is that you are also into running/fitness.  When did you get interested in that and why?

After undergrad. I got closer to weighing 200 pounds than I would have liked. I started working out to widen the gap. I ran my first distance race in 2012 and became addicted to the adrenaline rush.

Now that you love Philana, Read an excerpt from her work and like her more!  Below is an Excerpt from Philana’s play Before Evening Comes:

JAMES
I’m not here to talk about the past. I’m only here to let you know that my department will be moving forward on the recommendation to amputate… Taht-uh-me’s right leg and initiate him into the MOC brotherhood.

MARY
Is that why you’re here? The notice already came in the mail.

JAMES
I know, but I thought maybe I could change your mind. It didn’t seem right to do you like that. I never have before.

MARY
You’re not doing anything to me. Not this time. You’re doing it to my son.
(A beat.)
When his file came across your desk, did you even think about trying to help him?
(Silence.)
Of course not. What’s my son but one more boy who needs to be stopped from standing on his own two feet.

JAMES
On the street corner.

MARY
From running in the rain.

JAMES
From police sirens.

MARY
From jumping.

JAMES
Over fences.
(A beat.)

MARY
Over the moon.

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Jacob Juntunen has short play at City Theater of Independence in Missouri this July!

  • June 30, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · News

Jacob Juntunen is having a busy summer!  His play “Hath Taken Away” was recently read at Chicago Dramatists as well as the Last Frontier Theater Conference and now he has a short play called “Nostalgia isn’t what it used to be” being performed at City Theater of Independence in Kansas City Missouri July 9th through the 12!  Congrats Jacob!  Check it out if you’re in the area(The title is cool!!)

More Details

Dates for show: July 9th,10th,11th at 8pm

July 12th at 2pm

Address: City Theatre of Independence Banquet
Sermon Center
201 N. Dodgion
Independence, MO 64050

More about Jacob

Jacob Juntunen is a playwright and theatre scholar whose work focuses on people who struggle against society’s boundaries.

His playwriting stems from a mix of scholarship and social responsibility. Therefore, his playwriting and academic writing are a constant symbiosis. Both focus on understanding the political function of theatre, and this focus is demonstrated in his plays, which, overall, are meant for those “who want to leave the theatre changed and moved,” as one Chicago critic described. He recently wrote See Him? to participate in the Belarusian Dream Theater, a consortium of 18 theaters in 13 countries simultaneously producing plays to raise awareness about human rights violations in Belarus. His latest play, Hath Taken Away, was an O’Neill Playwrights Conference Semi-Finalist, and has had readings at the Last Frontier Theatre Conference (Valdez, AK) and as part of the Saturday Series at Chicago Dramatists. His previous full-length play, In The Shadow Of his Language, was an Alliance/Kendeda National Graduate Playwriting Contest Finalist; an O’Neill Playwrights Conference Semi-Finalist; an AACT New Play Contest Finalist; and a Princess Grace Fellowship Semi-Finalist. It was read at Chicago Dramatists, as part of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs “In the Works” series, at the Alliance Theatre, and workshopped off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons. His play Saddam’s Lions—published in Plays for Two (Vintage)—examines the disquieting memories of an African-American female Iraq War veteran and her struggles to come to terms with war-time trauma. Jacob based this play on interviews with a veteran. This process combined his desire for politically relevant work, his dedication to diverse casting opportunities, and his scholarship about the politics of performance. He hopes to inspire in students a similar yearning for intellectual curiosity, social activism, collaboration, and playwriting.

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NY Madness, “MadLab” in NYC this week featuring a play by Cecilia Copeland!

  • June 29, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · New York · News

NY Madness grew out of Ohio University’s Madness class for MFA playwrights; and this summer they are having their first ever showcase of full length plays developed from madnesses.  Alum Cecilia Copeland has her play “Dinner with Frenemies” this Friday, July 3rd at 8pm.  The festival runs all this week and features some OU MFA as well as BFA actors!  Go check it out!

More info

MadLab is a week-long festival of readings of full-length plays, one-acts, and screenings of short films that grew out of plays written for NY Madness!
June 30 through July 5
IRT Theater
154 Christopher Street
New York, NY

RESERVE NOW! 

All Readings are FREE! 

More about Cecilia

Cecilia Copeland’s plays have been Produced or Presented at the Culture Project, Cherry Lane Theatre, Ensemble Studios Theatre, HERE Arts Center, INTAR Theatre, The Anarchist Theatre Festival of Montreal, Stage Left Productions, Cara Mia Theatre in Dallas, Venus Theatre in MD, the Disreputables in DC, and IATI Theatre among others.  She has developed work with TerraNOVA Collective and the Lark Play Development Center.  Her Full Length, “The Wicked Son”was named one of the Top Three Best New Jewish Plays by the Jewish Plays Project.  Other full length works include Light of Night Production at IATI Theatre, Tiene Duende (It Has Soul) semifinalist for MultiStages New Works Competition, COURTING semifinalist for The O’Neill Playwrights Conference, BIOLIFE semifinalist for The O’Neill Playwrights Conference and The Emerging Playwrights Prize The Marin Theatre as well as a Finalist for Mabou Mines Residency.  Copeland was awarded a Special Effects Grant from Metro Screen Australia for her One Act that she adapted into a Screenplay, Amusement Bomber.  Her short play, The Next Time has been produced all over the world and featured in the Gun Control Plays collection curated by Caridad Svich.  Copeland is the recipient of the Lennis J. Holm Playwriting Scholarship from University of Iowa for her Honors Thesis, One Woman.  She is a graduate of the Writers Workshops at University of Iowa BA with Honors and Ohio University MFA.  Her works have been published by PM Press, The International Center for Women Playwrights, NoPassport Press, Amazon.com, and Indie Theater Now!  She is an Alumna of the Women’s New Works Playlab at New Perspectives, a Member of the Dramatists Guild of America, The Cimientos Playlab at IATI Theatre, and The League of Professional Theatre Women.  Before becoming a playwright Copeland toured as a Jr Company Member of Ballet Iowa in Cinderella and the Nutcracker and later she danced for MTV and VH1.  In 2013 Cecilia Copeland was named an Indie Theatre Now Person of the Year!

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