OHIO

Ohio University MFA Playwriting Program

  • Home
  • News
  • Faculty
  • MFA Bios
  • Fest
    • 2022 Festival (28th)
    • 2021 Festival (27th)
    • 2020 Festival (COVID-19)
    • 2019 Festival (25th)
    • 2018 Festival
    • 2017 Festival
    • 2016 Festival
    • 2015 Festival
    • 2014 Festival
    • 2013 Festival
    • 2012 Festival
    • 2011 Festival
    • 2010 Festival
    • 2009 Festival
    • 2008 Festival
    • 2007 Festival
    • 2006 Festival
    • 2005 Festival
    • 2004 Festival
    • 2003 Festival
    • 2002 Festival
    • 2001 Festival
    • 2000 Festival
    • 1999 Festival
    • 1998 Festival
    • 1997 Festival
    • 1996 Festival
  • Madness
  • Curriculum
  • Alumni
  • Links

Category: News

“Barbie” Madness coming this Friday!

  • September 21, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

The next madness of the fall semester will be produced by second playwright, Catherine Weingarten!  Her prompt is Barbie Madness!  She has asked the playwrights to write madnesses inspired by different Barbie dolls!!!  Woot woot Barbie rocks!

Show is September 25th,  11pm, in the Hahne Black Box theater. Admission is free. We recommend you get there 45 to 60 minutes ahead of time to assure yourself a seat.

For more information about Madness the fall semester, check out our Madness page.

More about Catherine

Catherine Weingarten hails from Ardmore, PA also known as the area that inspired the preppy sexy TV show “Pretty Little Liars.” Catherine’s comedic plays delve into the societal pressure placed on young women to be both impossibly good looking as well as ridiculously intellectual, humble, kind as can be but sexy.  Her plays usually include some hot fantasy sequences which helps attract the common man into the theater!   She recently graduated from Bennington College in Vermont where she studied playwriting(with Sherry Kramer) as well as gender, mediation and environmental studies.  Her short plays have been done at such theaters as Ugly Rhino Productions, Fresh Ground Pepper, Wishbone Theater Collective and Nylon Fusion Collective.  She is currently the playwright in residence for “Realize Your Beauty Inc” which promotes positive body image for kids by way of theater arts.   Catherine is thrilled to pursue her MFA at OU and thankful for the awesome opportunity for baller mentorship.  catherine-weingarten.squarespace.com

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

“Silence” Madness coming this Friday!

  • September 14, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

The next madness of the fall semester will be produced by second playwright, Rachel Bykowski!  Her prompt is Silence Madness!  She has asked the playwrights to write madnesses with a significant moment of silence that informs the course of the play.  Let’s get readyyy to get silent!!!

Show is September 18th,  11pm, in the Hahne Black Box theater. Admission is free. We recommend you get there 45 to 60 minutes ahead of time to assure yourself a seat.

For more information about Madness the fall semester, check out our Madness page.

More about Rachel

Rachel Bykowski was born and raised in Chicago.  She writes plays that examine the masks people wear to conceal their true identities to blend into society and explores the repercussions when the masks are ripped off.  Her work often includes proactive female characters that raise awareness to issues surrounding women. Rachel received her BFA in Playwriting from The Theatre School of DePaul University.  Her playwriting credits include her full length plays: Original Recipe produced by DePaul University; staged reading of Got to Kill Bitch presented by Cock and Bull Theatre in Chicago; and staged reading of Glory vs. The Wolves presented by 20% Theatre Company Chicago and hosted by Women and Children First Bookstore as part of an event to raise awareness about rape culture.  Her one act plays include: The Best Three Minutes of My Life produced by Bradley University; Break-Up Court and Pay Phone produced by 20% Theatre Company Chicago; The Invisible Ones produced by Fury Theatre in Chicago; and She Sings For You produced and published by Commedia Beauregard in Chicago.  Rachel is also a proud company member of 20% Theatre Company Chicago.  She is very excited to continue her writing career and pursuing her MFA in Playwriting under the tutelage of Ohio University.  For more information about Rachel, please visit her website at www.rachelbykowski.com

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

“World War 3” Madness coming this Friday!

  • September 7, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

The next madness of the fall semester will be produced by third year playwright, Aaron James Johnson!  His prompt is World War 3 Madness!  He has asked the playwrights to think about everyday wars that happen in people’s lives apart from the political.

Show is September 11th,  11pm, in the Hahne Black Box theater. Admission is free. We recommend you get there 45 to 60 minutes ahead of time to assure yourself a seat.

For more information about Madness the fall semester, check out our Madness page.

More about Aaron

Aaron Johnson hails from the land of cheese in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.  He received his Bachelor of the Arts degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he majored in English with an Emphasis in Creative Writing and in Theatre and Drama.  While not officially specializing in playwriting in his undergrad, Aaron took the only playwriting course offered twice and completed his creative writing thesis as a play instead of fiction or poetry writing which the school usually requires.  During his time at UW-Madison, Aaron completed three full length plays, multiple One-Acts, and numerous short plays which were all workshopped and some eventually produced at the university in staged readings.  In his Theatre and Drama major he specialized in props and was props master for a number of university shows including Ti-Jean and his Brothers and Eurydice.  Working his summers during college as a technical writer, Aaron decided to take a year off from school and work full time but the call of academia was too much for him to resist though as he is currently pursuing his MFA in Playwriting from Ohio University.  Aaron’s writing tends to take the complex and unnoticed topics of today’s culture and bring them to light by using them to create dramatic conflict and then ultimate understanding.  Using these undiscovered topics and coupling them with a realistic style will grow people’s curiosity and actively induce them to gain knowledge about today’s world.  Aaron fells immensely privileged and grateful to be working towards his MFA in Playwriting at OU with such great and inspiring mentors, colleagues, and friends.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

“Crash and Burn” Madness coming this Friday!

  • September 1, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · Madness · News

The second madness of the fall semester will be produced by third year playwright, Ryan Patrick Dolan!  His prompt is Crash and Burn Madness!  He has asked the playwrights to focus on plays where characters take big risks to go for something really want.

Show is September, 4th 11pm, in the Hahne Black Box theater. Admission is free. We recommend you get there 45 to 60 minutes ahead of time to assure yourself a seat.  Hope the night doesn’t crash and burn(in a bad way) hee hee 😉

For more information about Madness the fall semester, check out our Madness page.

More about Ryan

Ryan Patrick Dolan is a third-year MFA Candidate in the Ohio University Playwriting Program under Charles Smith and Erik Ramsey. He has a B.A. in playwriting from Columbia College Chicago where he studied under playwright, Lisa Schlesinger. He writes dark, comedic plays that explore love and loss, passion and destruction. Stylistically influenced by his years of improvisation, acting, and the Chicago Storefront aesthetic, he challenges the American stereotypes of gender, race, and sexuality.

Dolan’s play, “Daddy’s Little Girls,” was named a National Semifinalist for the Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival’s 10-minute play competition, the THE GARY GARRISON AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING TEN-MINUTE PLAY. In conjunction with KCACTF, “Daddy’s Little Girls” also garnered him one of the eight, nationwide nominations for the National Partners of American Theatre Playwriting Award which recognizes “best-written, best-crafted script with the strongest writer’s “voice.””  His full-length play,“Moraine,” had a reading at the 2014 Seabury Quinn Jr. Playwrights Festival at Ohio University, and at the Trellis Reading Series at the Greenhouse Theater Center. Moraine is being produced at CIC Theater this March and April in Chicago, and is being directed by Mary Rose O’Connor.

Dolan produced four one-act plays written by three other Ohio University playwrights and himself called “10-4: The Truck Stop Plays” at CIC Theater in Chicago in the Summer of 2014. Dolan’s one-act “Burger King,” was directed by Ashley Neal.  Ryan’s play “The Peace of Westphalia” was awarded the first-ever workshop production in the playwriting program at Columbia College. His ten-minute plays have been produced by American Theater Company, and Brown Couch Theater. Ryan was the dramaturg at RedTwist theater for Kimberly Senior’s production of “The Pillowman,” and Keira Fromm’s production of “The Lobby Hero.” Both were nominated for Jeff Awards for “Best Play” and “Best Director.” Ryan is also a 12-year veteran of the Chicago improv scene. He has primarily improvised at iO and Annoyance Theaters, but also has performed and taught workshops at numerous festivals and universities around the country with his groups Revolver and Pudding-Thank-You. He also teaches workshops to Ohio University’s improv group, “Black Sheep.” His acting credits include productions at Steppenwolf Theater’s “Next Up” series, TimeLine Theater, Collaboraction, Strawdog, and Wildclaw Theater.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

“Weather Permitting” Madness coming this Friday!

  • August 24, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

The first madness of the fall semester will be produced by third year playwright, Tyler JC Whidden!  His prompt is Weather Permitting Madness!  Tyler has asked the playwrights to write plays that are set outside and look at how the inevitable affect characters pursuits of goals.

Show is August 28th, 11pm, in a special location,  the Courtyard outside of the Hahne Black Box theater. Admission is free. We recommend you get there 45 to 60 minutes ahead of time to assure yourself a seat.  Hope it doesn’t rain 😉

For more information about Madness the fall semester, check out our Madness page.

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.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

Laura Jacqmin nominated for Jeff Award in Chicago!

  • August 23, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · alumni · Chicago · News

Playwriting alum Laura Jacqmin’s play ” Look, we are breathing ” which was done at Rivendell Theater Ensemble the spring of 2015, has just been nominated for a Jeff award!! The Joseph Jefferson Awards (The Jeff Awards) are given annually by a volunteer non-profit committee to acknowledge excellence in theatre in the Chicago area. Founded in 1968, the awards are given in tribute to actor Joseph Jefferson.

From press release: “The list comprises 187 nominations in 36 categories, representing 34 theaters that opened productions between between August 1, 2014 and July 31, 2015. The 47th annual Equity Jeff Awards will be presented Monday, October 5 at Drury Lane Oakbrook Terrace.”

Here’s a brief synopsis of Laura’s play: “Those who die young are mourned for their lost potential. But what if Mike, a high school hockey player killed while driving drunk, never really showed much potential? In this searing world premiere, Chicago playwright Laura Jacqmin turns her unblinking eye on the grieving process, as three women in Mike’s life realize that in order to move on, they first have to confront some hard truths about themselves.

Congrats Laura and we hope you win!!  You on fire, gurl!

More about Laura

Laura Jacqmin is a Chicago-based playwright and television writer, originally from Cleveland. She’s the winner of the Wasserstein Prize, two NEA Art Works Grants, the Kennedy Center David Mark Cohen Award, two MacDowell Fellowships, an Illinois Arts Council Individual Artist Grant, and has been a finalist for the Heideman Award, the Laurents/Hatcher Prize, the BBC International Playwriting Competition, and the Princess Grace Award. Her play Dental Society Midwinter Meeting was named one of New City Stage’s Top Five Plays of 2010, as well as TimeOut Chicago’s Honorable Mentions: Best Theater of 2010. Her television work includes the forthcoming series “Grace and Frankie” (Netflix) and “Lucky 7” (ABC). She received her BA from Yale University, and earned an MFA in Playwriting from Ohio University.

Plays include Ghost Bike (Buzz22 Chicago), Do-Gooder (16th Street Theater), January Joiner (Long Wharf Theatre), Ski Dubai (Steppenwolf Theatre), Look, We Are Breathing (Sundance Theater Lab), Two Lakes, Two Rivers (O’Neill National Playwrights Conference, Royal Court Theatre’s International Residency), and Dental Society Midwinter Meeting (Chicago Dramatists/At Play, remounted 16th Street Theater and Theater on the Lake). Her short play Hero Dad premiered in the 2012 Humana Festival of New Plays at Actors Theatre of Louisville.

Her work has been produced and developed by Atlantic Theater Company, Old Vic New Voices, Roundabout Underground, Vineyard Theatre, LCT3, Ars Nova, Cape Cod Theatre Project, Second Stage Theatre, Contemporary American Theater Festival, The 24 Hour Plays Off-Broadway, and the inaugural NNPN University Playwrights Workshop at Stanford University, among others.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

Ira Gammerman’s short play featured in Sam French OOB Fest in NYC this week!

  • August 1, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · alumni · Festival · New York · News

Playwriting alum Ira Gammerman’s hilarious and dark short play “Billy Bitchass” will be apart of the 40th Annual Sam French OOB short play fest in NYC.  This is a highly prestigious short play fest and out of thousands of scripts, only 30 were selected.  The plays will be performed in NYC in front of an industry panel and the top plays will be published with Sam French.  Ira’s play will be done this Wednesday, August 5th at 8pm at 13th street theater; it also features an Ohio MFA actress alum, Marissa Wolf!

Check it out of you’re in NY!  Ira’s writing is way too funny to exist!

Click here for tickets

More about Ira

Ira Gamerman is an Award-Winning AustraliAmerican PodcastPlaywright. He creates sound and songs using affected electric mandolin and guitar with Anonymous In The Clouds, Battler, and Pronouns. His Dramatic work has been produced by The Kennedy Center, Collaboraction, Short & Sweet Sydney, Source Festival, and The Chicago New Media Summit. In 2006, City Paper voted Ira “Best Playwright Of Baltimore” and in 2009, he was nominated for a New York Innovative Theater Award for best short play. As a Podcaster, Ira writes for Radiotopia’s THE TRUTH (featured on This American Life) where his Collaborative Audio-Play “Biological Clock” won a 2013 Mark Time Award from the Fire Sign Theater for Best Science Fiction Audio Production of the Year. He also co-created and co-hosts DANGEROUSLY UNQUALIFIED: A PODCAST ABOUT LOVE with EST/Youngblood Alumni Playwright Ryan Dowler through BSD MEDIA. Internationally, Ira is Co-Creative Artistic Director of AUSTRALIAMERICAN THEATER CONGLOMORATE: EVERYTHING IS EVERYWHERE (2 Americans 2 Aussies 2 Gals 2 Dudes 2 Goys 2 Jews 2 Legit 2 Quit) with Jessica Bellamy, David Finnigan, and Siobhan O’loughlin. Ira holds a BA in Theater from Towson University, an MFA in Playwriting from Ohio University, and studied Devised theater at the (now defunct) Dartington College Of Art in the UK.  As an educator, Ira has taught undergraduate theater at Ohio University and Kingsborough Community College in Brooklyn in addition to playwright-mentoring Young Playwrights Festivals at Atlanta’s Horizon Theater and Baltimore’s Center Stage. As a journalist, Ira has been published by Consequence Of Sound, Eleven Magazine in St. Louis (even though he has never actually visited St. Louis), and HowlRound. He was also an extra in Season 3 of The Wire and has the screenshot to prove it if you don’t believe him.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

Playwriting Alum Reginald Edmund chosen as part of new Patriot Program!

  • July 31, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · alumni

Ohio alum Reginald Edmund was just selected as an affiliated artist of Merrimack Repertory Theater in Lowell, MA!  With the arrival of a new artistic director, Sean Daniels, comes this new exciting affiliated artists “Patriot Program” which has been created to serve over 50 theater artists of all kinds to create new work for the American theater.

Here’s an excerpt from the press release:

Daniels aims to put Merrimack Repertory Theatre and Lowell on the national radar by originating work here that goes onto to have future life in the American Theatre. Part of that means attracting artists to MRT so that it is one of the first places they think of when they have a new project.  According to Daniels, “We’re building a national theatre for our town and a local home for these national artists.”

“As we talked to these artists – we kept hearing ‘I’d love to just have a place to come write’, or ‘I’d love to be writing when other writers are there so we gather for dinner for each night and compare notes’ or ‘I’d love to just start with some designers and dream up a project’. This program aims to provide those generative opportunities.  As we grow, and have more to offer, these will be the artists we reach out to first.”  Read full press release here

Congrats Reginald on this awesome prestigious opportunity!  Watch this cool interview with Reginald to find out more about him and his work.

More about Reginald

Reginald Edmund, is a resident playwright of Chicago Dramatists, he was previously a 2009-2010, 2010-2011 Many Voices Fellow playwright. Originally from Houston, Texas, he served Artistic Director for the Silver House Theatre, as well as the founder and producer for the Silver House Playwrights Festival and the Houston Urban Theatre Series. Reggie was the inaugural recipient of the  Kennedy Center Fellowship at Soul Mountain Retreat as well as the 2009 National Runner-up for the Lorraine Hansberry and Rosa Parks Playwriting Award, and most recently winner of an Edgerton Foundation New Play Award for his play ‘SouthBridge’. He received his BFA in Theatre-Performance from Texas Southern University, and his MFA in playwriting at Ohio University under the guidance of Charles Smith.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

Check out Playwriting Alum Jeremy Motz’s show in the Minnesota Fringe this August!

  • July 28, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · News · Productions

This summer our alumni are up to some fun fun projects!  Jeremy Motz’s new original one man show “DING DONG SING SONG” will be having five performances as part of the MN fringe,  throughout the month of August!  The show is about a failing singing telegram performer, convinced his awful song and dance butchering of “ironic” karaoke hits in ill-fitting costumes is considered “outsider art”.

 This will be his third consecutive year writing and performing original solo shows for the MN Fringe; in 2013, his show BOXCUTTER HARMONICA sold out its final performance, and last year’s REWIND-A-BUDDY received positive reviews.

Check out his show if you’re in Minnesota!  Sounds a bit too fun to exist 😉

Click here for additional show information, performance times, and ticket information.

  More about JeremyJ. Merrill Motz, or Jeremy Motz, or just Motz (rhymes with boats) recently earned a graduate degree in Ohio University’s Professional Playwriting Program, after having spent four years in Minneapolis, where he moved after graduating from Central Michigan University with a BFA in acting. While in the Twin Cities, he acted for Chameleon Theatre Circle, Workhouse, took classes at the Playwright’s Center and The Loft, and appeared as Saul in the original production of Table 12 in the 2010 Minnesota Fringe.

At CMU, his plays Ain’t That A Kick in the Head, Just One, Nobody Flinched Down By The Arcade, and The Roommate were produced by the Alpha Psi Omega one-act festival, with Ain’t That A Kick in the Head and The Roommate selected to be performed at the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival in 2006 and 2007. The Roommate was commissioned by the University of Wisconsin Fon du Lac to be developed into a full-length production for their 2008 main stage season.  His last full-length script, All Gonna Go, received a reading from Swandive Theatre in Minneapolis in 2010. This Spring, his latest (in-progress) script, Reinforce Sincerity, received a reading at the Seabury Quinn, Jr. Playwright’s Festival in Athens, OH.  Motz was published in the online crime fiction magazine Plots With Guns in March 2010, and hopes to dabble some more in crime fiction if he can ever find the time.

Motz has performed with Freshwater in the original production of Table 12, Sky Fleeting (as part of both runs of our Dirty Girls Come Clean festival) and Going Down on the Queen of Minneapolis. Motz wrote, produced and performed in Boxcutter Harmonica,  a one man show, during the 2013 Fringe, and recently wrote The Beacon From Belle Isle,  a modern-day fairy tale about Michigan, which opened our 2013-2014 mainstage season.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

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.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...
Page 19 of 54
  • 1
  • …
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • …
  • 54

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

  • Twitter
  • RSS
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • OHIO
    • Join 61 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • OHIO
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d