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Tag: news

Check out Qui Nguyen’s interview with American Theater Magazine!

  • May 14, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · alumni · News

Alum Qui Nguyen’s recently sat down with a American Theater about his new play “Vietgone”! American Theater prefaces the interview with this: This week’s guest is playwright/geek theatre pioneer Qui Nguyen. Associate editor Diep Tran caught up with him at the Pacific Playwrights Festival at South Coast Rep (you can read her write-up here). The two of them bond over being Vietnamese-American and discuss Qui’s newest play Vietgone, a quasi-historical sex comedy about his parents, and the newest Vampire Cowboys show, Six Rounds of Vengence (running through May 16). Qui also explains the origins of the label “geek theatre,” and breaks down how to properly write a strong female character.

Listen to the full interview here

More about Qui

Originally from Arkansas, Qui Nguyen is a playwright, TV writer, and all around pop-culture nerd. When he’s not geeking out to indie comics and early 90s hip-hop, he spends his time being the Co-Artistic Director of the OBIE Award-winning Vampire Cowboys. His work, known for its innovative use of pop-culture, stage violence, puppetry, and multimedia, has been praised as “Culturally Savvy Comedy” by The New York Times and “Tour De Force Theatre” by Time Out New York.

His plays include the musical War is F**king Awesome (currently being developed through the Sundance Theatre Lab); She Kills Monsters (The Flea); Soul Samurai (Ma-Yi Theater/Vampire Cowboys); Krunk Fu Battle Battle (East West Players); Aliens vs Cheerleaders (Keen Teens); Trial by Water (Ma-Yi Theater); Bike Wreck (EST); and the VC productions of The Inexplicable Redemption of Agent G; Alice in Slasherland; Fight Girl Battle World; Men of Steel; and Living Dead in Denmark. His scripts are published by Samuel French, Broadway Play Publishing, and Playscripts, Inc.

Recent honors include a 2014 Sundance Institute/Time Warner fellowship, a 2014 McCarter/Sallie B. Goodman fellowship, a recipient of the a 2013 AATE Distinguished Play Award for She Kills Monsters and 2012 & 2009 GLAAD Media Award nominations for She Kills Monsters and Soul Samurai.

Qui is proud member of New Dramatists, The Playwrights’ Center, Ensemble Studio Theatre, and The Ma-Yi Writers Lab.

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See Bianca Sams New Play “SIMPLY BESS” at Nashville Rep tonight on Live Stream!

  • May 12, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · alumni · News

A recent OU alumni, Bianca Sams, was apart of the Ingram New Works Playwrights Group this year and the product of her work, SIMPLY BESS, will be livestreamed on howlround tonight.  This prestigious playwrights group accepts 4 fellows per year to be part of a writing group at Nashville Repertory Theater and culminates in a works in progress play series.  Congrats Bianca on your new play!  Also we like thephoto of you with the lab coat 😉

Here is more info on the play and how to watch it:

Tuesday, May 12 at 5pm PDT (Los Angeles) / 7pm CDT (Chicago) / 8pm EDT (New York)
Simply Bess by Bianca Sams
Simply Bess follows a young African American actress trying to make a name for herself. We see her backstage trials and tribulations on the 1950s European tour of Porgy and Bess, sponsored by the American State Department as a way to combat communist propaganda about racial problems in the United States.

TO watch the play tonight here is the link

More about Bianca

Bianca’s plays are lyrical investigations of found stories out of today’s headlines or the pages of history that focus on the conundrum of whether the stress and pain we inflict upon ourselves and others is actually purifying or destroying the fabric of humanity. She is particularly interested in how trauma affects us on an individual level but, also ripples outward to loved ones and the larger community. She is equally fascinated by how each person must choose to either allow their adversity to consume them or rise above the trauma. Bianca often examines the different adaptive and maladaptive ways in which people choose to cope. She has been inspired by both modern and historical events.  She approaches each piece with an investigative journalistic eye mixing research with her own brand of lyricism and poetic language, while also attempting to go beyond the politics and facts of the original tale, to connect an audience with the personal story behind what inspired her. 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

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Tyler Whidden’16 wins the prestigious Trisolini Award!

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

Tyler Whidden’16 has won the prestigious Trisolini Award which is given to grad students at Ohio University!  There were 5 recipients of a graduate fellowship award and each was awarded $15,000, plus a full tuition scholarship for fall and spring semesters.  Last year Neal Adelman won the award with his proposal for his thesis play about taxidermied animals and masculinity, “Only Good Things Happen at the Fair.”  Congrats Tyler on this big honor and we are so excited to see how this new play idea will take shape!

More about the project:
Project Title: Occupation: Dad

Statement:
In my thesis play, I intend to explore what it means to be a father today in a world where more women are working and more men are staying home with their children. Occupation: Dad follows a day in the life of new father, Jason, as he and his newborn son navigate through the rocky terrain of stay-at-home parenting. Like James Joyce’s Ulysses (but with slightly less drinking), Jason and his son are on a journey encountering people and situations that question and challenge Jason’s ability to be a parent. During his search, Jason faces his relationship with his own father and soon realizes the answers to being a good father can be found in being a better son. The Named Fellowship will allow me the freedom to continue to explore topics and situations that come with being a stay-at-home father and how those situations can shape the new family dynamic.

Click here to read the full OU Press Release

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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Jeffry Chastang’s play DAUPHIN ISLAND going up at Alabama Shakespeare workshop series in May!

  • April 27, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

Jeffry Chastang’s play DAUPHIN ISLAND which just had a production as part of the 21st Annual Seabury Quinn Playfest is on fire!!  It recently was named as a semi-finalist for the prestigious Eugene O’Neill Summer Playwrights Conference and also will have a workshop as part of the Southern Writers Project through Alabama Shakespeare this May 8th through 10th!  If you are in Alabama this May, go check it out!  It is exciting to see the life that a play developed at OU can have!  Congrats Jeff!

The Alabama Shakes website describes the workshop series:

Presented by the Alabama Shakespeare Festival, the program culminates each year with a lively three-day weekend with an irresistible menu of stimulating, never-before-seen theatre, delicious food, Southern hospitality and opportunities for the audience and professionals to mix and mingle. The Festival of New Plays Weekend is May 8-10, 2015.  Founded in 1991, the award-winning workshop explores the rich and diverse experiences of many southern cultures, giving playwrights an opportunity to showcase their talent. Through SWP, the Alabama Shakespeare Festival seeks to create theater that speaks specifically to the people of the region.

To get tickets click here

More about Jeff

Jeffry Chastang is a writer/actor who hails from Inkster, Michigan, 15 miles west of Detroit/Motown. He earned a BA in Journalism at Wayne State University. As an actor his professional credits include FENCES, JOE TURNER’S COME AND GONE, THE OLD SETTLER, A SOLDIER’S PLAY, and JITNEY. Jeffry’s professional writing credits include FULL CIRCLE, …CONTINUED WARM, 1ST SATURDAY IN SEPTEMBER, and BLOOD DIVIDED. He was a recipient of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts’ Roger L. Stevens Award for FULL CIRCLE which was produced by Detroit’s Plowshares Theater Company. Plowshares’ also produced Jeffry’s second play …CONTINUED WARM which was named Best New Play by the Oakland Press. Jeffry was commissioned by the Alabama Shakespeare Festival to write a play marking the sesquicentennial of the Civil War. The play, BLOOD DIVIDED was produced by ASF in 2011 and received a 2011 Edgerton Foundation New Plays Award.

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Alumni Laura Jacqmin’s play going up in London this July!

  • April 20, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · alumni · News · Productions

Alumni Laura Jacqmin’s play “A THIRD” will premiere at Finborough Theatre in London this July!  If your are in the UK, check it out! Congrats Laura!

SYNOPSIS of the Play:

“We just want a third. And that third is going to be there for us. Not an equal: just there for us. For whatever we want him to do.”

The world premiere of A Third by award-winning Chicago playwright Laura Jacqmin runs at the Finborough Theatre for twelve performances, on Sunday and Monday evenings and Tuesday matinees.

Young marrieds Paul and Allison have everything going for them. They have money, they’re in love, and their sex life is great. But could it be better? Instead of being monogamous, why not try “monogam-ish”? What would happen if they invited “a third” into their bedroom and into their lives?

Allison and Paul convince themselves that they are being just about as liberal and adventurous as modern society seems to want. But as they transition from threesomes to couple-swapping, they discover the fragility of their own liberal attitudes. Just how flexible can one person’s sexuality truly be? And how far can “monogam-ish” go before it’s simply cheating? Can a couple go back to simply being a couple?

A funny, provocative and unflinching look at modern attitudes to sex, relationships and polyamorous love.

COME SEE IT!

The show will be running: Sundays, Mondays and Tuesdays, 21, 22, 23, 28, 29, 30 June, 5, 6, 7, 12, 13, 14 July 2015

Sunday and Monday evenings at 7.30pm.
Tuesday matinees at 2.00pm.

Performance Length: Approximately 95 minutes with no interval.

Tickets £18, £16 concessions

Our address is
Finborough Theatre
118 Finborough Road
London
SW10 9ED

To get more info on the production click here

MORE ABOUT LAURA:

Playwright Laura Jacqmin is a Chicago-based playwright and television writer. She was the 2008 winner of the Wasserstein Award, and previous International Playwright-in-Residence at the Royal Court Theatre. Other awards include two NEA Art Works Grants, the ATHE-Kennedy Center David Mark Cohen Playwriting Award, two MacDowell Fellowships and an Illinois Arts Council Individual Artist Grant. She was a finalist for the Heideman Award, the Laurents/Hatcher Prize, the BBC International Playwriting Competition and the Princess Grace Award. She took part in the Old Vic New Voices TS Eliot US/UK Exchange in 2012. Her play Dental Society Midwinter Meeting was named one of New City Stage’s Top Five Plays of 2010, as well as Time Out Chicago’s Honorable Mentions for the Best Theatre of 2010. Other productions include Ski Dubai at the Steppenwolf Theatre, Chicago, and Dead Pile at XIII Pocket, Chicago. She is also a staff writer on forthcoming Netflix series Grace and Frankie starring Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin. http://www.laurajacqmin.com/

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Ryan Patrick Dolan interviewed by us about his play in the Seabury Quin Playfest!

  • April 16, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Chicago · Current Students · Festival · News · Reading

Hey y’all!  Who is getting excited for the Seabury Quinn Playfest this April!!  Our last interview in our series is one of everyone’s favorite OU Second-Year Playwrights, Ryan Patrick Dolan!  Ryan has become well known in the playwriting program for his honest and realll humor, his improv background and of course his love of Chicago!  Read my full interview with him below and learn more about him and his awesome new play at Seabury Quinn, BAIT SHOP.

What was your inspiration for “Bait Shop”?  Did you start off with an image, a person you know etc…

I used to spend my summers in Northern Michigan at a cabin with my family. There was a hardware story in a small, little town called Cedar. We used to buy worms from there to go fishing when I was young boy. I spent every summer there from the age of 3 to 18. My parents got divorced and I didn’t go back for twenty years. Then two summers ago, my dad rented a house, and my big sister and her family, and my little sis, my step-mom, and even my mom all went back to spend a week there. Some stuff had changed, but I was blown away by how much was the same. Some of the same locals still worked the same jobs. Some of our favorite restaurants looked exactly the same. We went on a charter boat once a year fishing on Lake Michigan. The guy who take us, Bob, was this real character. He’s kind of the inspiration for John, although Bobs life is nothing like his. Bob is married and had kids. I remember though as a kid when Bob would talk about partying with the other charter captains and their assistants and sometimes sleep on their boats since they had to go out at 6am the next day. They would drink at a bar called the Bluebird my big sister used to waitress at in college. My sis said she made a ton of money there. The Bluebird hasn’t changed at all. It looks exactly the same. The fishing town is the same. Bob is the same except he’s grayer, but so am I.

Also, the play kicks off with a friend of John’s dying. It’s a real shock to John cause he’s 40. I’ve lost two friends from the improv community in the last couple of years. Both in their 40s. Improv comedians tend to drink and party more than a normal adult. That suspended sense of adolescence smashing into the reality of getting older, and starting to lose friends and realizing life wasn’t going to last forever was something I wanted to explore. I thought the setting in Michigan would be a good place to do it.  Nobody ever thinks they’re old. Everyone thinks they are the same person they were at 22 or 25. Younger people expect older adults to know more things or have things figure out or to have a sense of wisdom. There is wisdom in getting older, but nobody has anything figured out.

 

You  started off in the Chicago Improv scene!  What is a quality/skill you learned from improvisation that has helped your playwriting?

There are so many ways that improvisation has made me a better writer. Writing is really about editing, and doing and watching a ton of improv has made me a good editor when it comes to pacing, and knowing when stuff is too wordy, or the audience is not engaged. When I’m hearing my words in front of an audience, it’s become second nature to me to know when the audience is with the piece and when stuff isn’t clicking. That is a huge advantage when I’m rewriting my work.

It’s made me better with dialogue. I’ve improvised thousands of scenes that started with nothing. It taught me how to build a scene by two characters having to react to the last thing said. Or if someone makes a tangent or changes the course of the conversation in a scene, there’s usually a reason why that change has made, a tactic for the character and the actor playing that character. Also, people bounce around topics sometimes when talking. So you can go on a tangent, and then bounce it back to what someone was originally talking about. Being superfamiliar on how people talk and listen to each other in a way that the audience finds engaging is vitally important to me.

Obviously, I’ve made people laugh a ton, and failed at making people laugh a ton, and watched others do the same. You get to have an innate sense of what is funny on the page, and how it might translate to the stage. If something doesn’t work on stage, however, sometimes it might just be the wait it’s set up in the writing or how it’s delivered. So, having all that background in humor helps me figure out how to fix things much more efficiently, or to know when something isn’t working and know it’s better to cut it and move on.

Some writers are really married to their words and push against changes or suggestions by directors or actors or dramaturgs. I’ve improvised for over ten years. Every show that is successful was because I had to constantly collaborate with everyone else on stage with you. Afterward, we’d always try to figure why things worked and didn’t work. I learned pretty quickly that someone else is always going to have a really good instinct or idea that’s just as good as mine. You have to constantly figure out when to push your thing in improv or know when to give over or learn how to do both. I use that when I collaborate on my script. There are no bad ideas in the rehearsal room. If I know what I’m doing and trust my talent and voice, I always know that the words are going to be mine and I can always come up with something else that’s funny if a scene or a joke needs to go.

Finally, (this much longer than you thought, isn’t it?) the type of improvisation I do in Chicago is called “long form.” Usually, a show will start with three or more different “threads” or scenes that are completely distinct from each other, where the characters do not know each other or share the same world. Then as the show goes along, you start mixing these worlds, and their ideas, characters and themes together. Some of my plays, like “Moraine,” my first year play, jumped back and forth in time in what seemed to be unconnected ways. As the play pushed towards the climax, the audience could figure out how they all connected to tell one cohesive story. This is a real pain in the ass way to create a play, and I don’t always want to create something that way, but it’s cool when I’m able to pull it off.

 

Word on the street is you are a major Katy Perry fan!  If your play was a Katy Perry Song, which would it be and why?

She hasn’t written it yet. She’s waiting to collaborate with me on it.

What is a fun fact most people don’t know about you?

I have a real stupid tattoo that I got when I was 19. It doesn’t bother me, but it’s dumb. Don’t get a tattoo. At some point, you realize they’re not worth it. It doesn’t make you any more original than when you don’t have one.

You’ve read about and now are supa into RYANNNN!  Now Come check out the reading of his play “BAIT SHOP” at the 21st Annual Seabury Quinn PlayFest at 8pm SATURDAY, APRIL 25th at 4pm in Baker Theater!

Here is the blurb for it:

John, 40, has been working at his bait shop in Northern Michigan all his life. He’s got his fishin’, drinkin’, buddies and is livin’ the good life. He’s also been known to enjoy the company of the college-aged waitresses, who come up during the summer to make money. As he befriends a new waitress, Lauren, he receives startling news about a friend. At the same time, Janet, the first of his life, reappears out of nowhere. As John and Lauren’s friendship grows, John has to come face-to-face with his life choices, and the question: is it too late to change his path?

More about Ryan

Ryan Patrick Dolan is a second 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.

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Morgan Patton Interviewed by us about her play in the Seabury Quinn Playfest!

  • April 15, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · Festival · News

Hey y’all!  Who is getting excited for the Seabury Quinn Playfest this April!!  Next up in the  interview series is one of everyone’s favorite OU Third Year Playwrights, Morgan Patton!  Morgan has become well known in the playwriting program for her complex characters, her plays with enormous heart and of course her way smart vibe!  Read my full interview with her below and learn more about her and her awesome new play at Seabury Quinn, Fools’ Gold.

As a writer you are drawn a lot to stories about families, what do you find intriguing about family plays?

Well even though I don’t have a particularly dysfunctional family myself, I’m really drawn to the potential for dysfunction within a family. Living in close quarters brings out the worst in all of us, so your relationship to the people you live with or grew up with says a lot about you. I also really like to play with the notion that family can be defined as the people you choose to love, not the people you’re obligated to love from birth. My current play actually isn’t about family unless you consider best friends to be family, which these characters do.

Your thesis play, “Fools’ Gold” is an adaptation of “Merchant of Venice.”  What drew you to that story?

Even though it’s one of the most performed of Shakespeare’s plays throughout history, it’s also one of the most problematic, and not just because it’s anti-Semitic. Maybe I was drawn to the dysfunction in this play like I am to the dysfunction in a family. But when I pulled it apart I saw a strong, ambitious woman, some great interpersonal relationships, and the potential to shine a light on something wrong in society. By removing the context of religion, I was able to explore some issues with the socioeconomic divide.

 .If your play was an article of clothing, what would it be and why?  Be as specific as you want 😉

My play would be a skort, the kind from the ‘90s where it looks like a skirt in the front and shorts in the back, because Fools’ Gold is a lot about people or situations not being how they initially seem. And depending how you view it, it might look nice from one angle, but from the other perspective it’s a little uncomfortable.

What is a fun fact most people don’t know about you?

I would like to write a musical some day. Most people don’t know this about me because I decided it yesterday.

You’ve read about and now loveeeee Morgan!  Now Come check out the reading of her thesis play “Fools Gold” at the 21st Annual Seabury Quinn PlayFest at 8pm THURSDAY, APRIL 23rd in Baker Theater!

Here is the blurb for it:
Portia is a lawyer with a clear-cut set of morals, but when she realizes that the man she’s falling for is in trouble with the law for doing something he felt was right, it suddenly seems like a moral grey area. She finds herself wondering, perhaps for the first time, whether the ends really do justify the means, or if she’s just compromising her identity because of the feelings she has for him. And if so, is that such a bad thing?

More about Morgan

Morgan Patton was born and raised in Newport, Kentucky, just across the river from Cincinnati. In 2011, she graduated Magna Cum Laude from Northern Kentucky University as an Honors Scholar with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Playwriting and a Bachelor of Arts in English. Her plays work with themes of love, loss, and family in order to explore the elusive concept of identity and what it means to belong. Recently her ten-minute play YARD SALE, about a mug and a teapot, was a regional finalist for the Kennedy Center American College Theatre festival, and was one of six ten-minute plays staged and developed there. For more information, visit her website at www.playsbymorgan.com.

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Alumni Chanel Glover thesis play featured in Terranova Collective Reading Series in NYC!

  • April 13, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · alumni · New York · News

Chanel Glover’s play How to Eat to an Oreo is having a reading April 23rd as part of the final presentations from the “Groundworks” Playwrights group through Terranova Collective in NYC.  This play was Chanel’s thesis play at OU and we are excited she is developing the script further with such an awesome and cutting edge theater group.  Go Chanel!!

If you are in New York, make sure to check it out!  The reading is free!

Blurb from website:

Every year, terraNOVA Collective presents the Groundworks New Play Series, staged readings of work developed through our Groundbreakers Playwrights Group.

The purpose of the New Play Series is to give playwrights an opportunity to have their work seen and heard by a larger audience. Each playwright works with a director and actors over a short rehearsal period to give further life to their work. 

Read more about the Reading Series

Go see it!  Here is more info:

HOW TO EAT AN OREO Written by CHANEL E. GLOVER Directed by JENNA WORSHAM Featuring KRISTIN CANTWELL, RACHEL CHRISTOPHER and ALEXANDER LAMBIE

In How to Eat an Oreo, two teen summer camps sit a stone’s throw away from one another. Fatima has fled the gay-to-straight conversion center, and is hiding out in Gideon’s room at weight loss camp. While Fatima awaits the sunset to make her official escape to Wal-Mart, she and Gideon navigate around one another, sometimes crashing into each other, as they both confront the ‘cruelties’ of how they believe the universe made them.

Thursday, April 23rd at 3pm 

 59 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022

 

More about Chanel:

CHANEL GLOVER is a ‘trained’ lawyer who dabbles in playwriting, and desires most to be the first Black (Lesbian) Superwoman to rid the world of menacing stereotypes with just the stroke of her pencil. In May 2014, she completed an MFA in playwriting at Ohio University where her full-length plays How to Eat an Oreo, Black as the Dirt and They’re Not Rappers have received staged readings at Ohio University’s Seabury Quinn, Jr. Playwrights’ Festival in April 2014, April 2013 and June 2012, respectively. She can be found everywhere, as she is a superwoman in training, remember? And raised American nomadic. 

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Neal Adelman Interviewed by us about his play in the Seabury Quinn Playfest!

  • April 10, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · Festival · News

Hey y’all!  Who is getting excited for the Seabury Quinn Playfest this April!!  Next up in the  interview series is one of everyone’s favorite OU Third Year Playwrights, Neal Adelman!  Neal has become well known in the playwriting program for his hilarious and unique language, his crazy madnesses and his way cool demeanor!  Read my full interview with him below and learn more about him and his awesome new play that will be featured in a production at Seabury Quinn, Only Good Things Happen at The Fair.

Your play “Only Good Things Happen at the Fair” started as a proposal for the Trisolini Award, which you then won. Can you talk about your proposal and things your initial ideas for this play?

Well, it’s complicated. The initial push for the play came a year ago from the coupling of some local headlines about a Sheriff who was recently found to have misbehaved and my  own personal experience with members of the law enforcement community when I was growing up in Texas. But, it has evolved a great deal since then and—in so much as characters and story are concerned—it bears many similarities to a short story I started writing about six years ago, but could never quite get a handle on. And the title came from a certain conversation I had about eight years ago when I asked a girl if she wanted to go to the Southwest New Mexico State Fair with me. She said: no, and in a last ditch effort to convince her otherwise, I said: only good things happen at the fair, and I knew it was a terrible lie and that I was going to have to write about it some day.

Which artists (writers,playwrights etc.) do you look up to?

So many. Okay. Here goes. Wait. I’m going to break them into sub-headings not cause I’m hot shit, but cause if anyone reads this and feels compelled to check these writers out, I want them to be able to find them at the book store. Is that cool? Okay. Fiction: Barry Hannah, Ed Jones, Larry McMurtry, Amy Hempel, and Cormac McCarthy. Playwrights: Sam Shepard, Harold Pinter, and my mentor, Mark Medoff. And, my favorite songwriters are: Townes Van Zandt, the Boss, and Lightning Hopkins. Cause songwriters are important too. People listen on average to over a hundred songs a day and if you think that shit doesn’t accumulate and affect your writing, you’re crazy.

If your play took me on a date, what exactly would the date be like?  Would I enjoy it?

Well, first my play would come pick you up in his Camaro. Not a new Camaro, but probably a ’78 or ’79 with a tuned up 350 underneath and a t-top. And as soon as you get in the car, just so you won’t be intimidated by the glass packs or Humble Pie kicking through the stereo, my play will tell you that if you need to pick your nose, it’s cool if you just wipe your buggers on the floor mat. And then, we’re going to the Dairy Queen, cause it’s summer, and cause this is Texas, and cause we’re gonna need a Butterfinger Blizzard to cool off. And where are we going? Well, if the fair’s in town, we’re going to the fair, cause my play loves the fair, but if the fair isn’t in town, then we’ll probably drive the dirt roads and then park somewhere out by the lake and watch the fire-flies dance over the water and maybe drink a couple beers and, yeah, you’d enjoy it, cause even though you don’t like Camaros and you think Dairy Queen is for old men in suspenders, and you went to college but my play never did, you’d still enjoy it, cause underneath the Humble Pie and glass-packs, there’s an innocence and sincerity to my play you want to be around. That said, I doubt you two would go out a second time. If he called. And he will.

What is a fun fact most people don’t know about you?

I’m a pretty good dancer.

You’ve read about and now have a majorrr crush on Neal!  Now Come check out theproduction of his play “Only Good Things Happen At The Fair” at the 21st Annual Seabury Quinn PlayFest: Here are the times you can catch it:

8:00 pm – April 16th, 17th & 22nd;
2:00 pm – April 25th, Elizabeth Baker Theater, Kantner Hall

Here is the blurb for it:

Sheriff Lonnie Murdock knows that the facts are only ten percent of the truth and the truth is: his son needs to get off his skinny ass and go to the fair. I mean: it’s tradition. But Jason can’t cause he’s a bad man and he knows it, no matter what Heather Ann has to say. Only Good Things Happen at the Fair is a play about the inheritance of masculinity and poorly taxidermied animals.

More about Neal

Neal Adelman was born and raised in Fort Worth, Texas. He writes plays and short stories. His one act play TARRANT COUNTY received an NPP workshop and was a 2014 KCACTF John Cauble Outstanding Short Play National Finalist; his fiction has appeared in Puerto del Sol and Caldera Culture Review. When he’s not writing, he’s either fishing or trying to start a rock and roll band. He currently lives in southeast Ohio and studies dramatic writing at Ohio University.

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Catherine Weingarten Interview by us about her play in the Seabury Quinn Playfest!

  • April 9, 2015
  • by catherineforever666
  • · Current Students · News

Hey y’all!  Who is getting excited for the Seabury Quinn Playfest this April!!  Next up interview series is one of everyone’s favorite OU First year Playwrights, Catherine Weingarten!  Catherine has become well known in the playwriting program for her girly madnesses, her odd female characters and of course her love for theater that includes making out!  Read my full interview with her below and learn more about her and her awesome new play that will be featured in the Seabury Quinn, Karate Hottie.

If your play was a karate move, What would it be and why?

(kicks interviewer in chest) That’s a demonstration!!  So yeah, I think it would be a direct kick to the chest cause my writing style is a bit “in your face” and my play will probably take you to a darker place than you wanted to go and it might hurt after, but then you’ll reflect and be like…woahh that chick kicked me in the chest and maybe it was kinda hot.

What brought you into the idea of karate in your play and how does it form the play?

Well the initial inspiration for the play came from a friend engaged in another kinda obscure sport who got into a weird kinda complicated relationship with an older man.  I personally did karate as a kid with my sister and I was not too bad.  I got a yellow belt!  So thought if I was gunna try to write about a sport, why not write about one I pursued in my childhood.

I guess one of the other things that drew me to karate was the idea that it was combat, but highly choreographed and kind of like a dance and almost seemed like it was so choreographed you couldn’t get hurt.  But at any time you really could really actually hurt a person and send someone to the hospital.  So I liked that “fake out” aspect of it, like oh a karate studio is a safe environment to fight, but at the same time you are fighting.

You are known for your onomatopoeia and use of emoticons in your work, what does that achieve for you?

Hmmmmm….well as a millennial chick, I am obsessed with awkward rythms, emoticons, and saying “like” a lot.  I like capturing how we really talk right now, how young people sound so odd and can’t really talk and how interesting inarticulateness really is.  Also who can resist an emoticon in a play, I think no one!

From a young age I have always had my own wacked relationship to language.  People will say to me, “Catherine, what are you saying.”  And then maybe I’ll cry or something.  But that’s one of the reasons I think playwriting is perfect for me, because I need my own space to explore my own weird view of the world and the ways we communicate with each other or think we are communicating.

Tell me a secret 😉 

When I was a kid I had issues with slutty Halloween costumes.  I went a Quaker school and I think they wanted us to dress us as friendly things like Ketchup bottles and Jesus, but I chose such “winning costumes” as: French maid and pink devil teen.

You’ve read about and now fallen in love with and are obsessed with Catherine!  Now Come check out the reading for her play “Karate Hottie” at the 21st Annual Seabury Quinn PlayFest: Thursday April 23rd at 1pm in Baker Theater!

Here is the blurb for it:

When 16-year-old, Dart fell in love with her sexy, manly 37-year-old karate instructor she didn’t know she would engage in something that promises to be way more complicated and way more wrong and way more HOT than she ever thought it could be 😉

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

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