Meet Playwright John Minigan!

I first began working with playwright John Minigan on a shared project — #CodeRedPlaywrights — Responding to gun violence. We’ve shared various playbills, and he’s one of those readers I trust with my ugliest, roughest, wartiest drafts of new work. John feels like a close friend, even though… We’ve never had the opportunity to meet in real life. Hopefully soon! So, John…

What inspires your creativity?

John Minigan: *Gestures at the world*

My biggest interest, at least in the last 10 years or so, has been the intersection of the personal and the political. So often our politics are at the level of that annoying college roommate who loves to play devil’s advocate. What I’m more interested is in the impact of the political on individual lives.

And I find I get really engaged when I have two ideas that don’t seem to connect. The energy of those separate ideas bouncing off each other gets me writing to figure out why they are so desperate to work together.

Robert D. Murphy as Claude, Liz Adams as Gertrude, and Paul Melendy as Little H in Noir Hamlet, Centastage, Boston, 2018

Tell me about what you’re working on now.  

So many projects. Because of the pandemic, there are several full-lengths that I’d love to get into workshop or production, but not much of that’s happening, so they feel a bit backed up and therefore still in-process. My newest full-length is a piece about the dangers of belief. It’s the story of Jordan, a gifted federal agent who goes undercover in an apocalyptic religious community and the fallout of her attempt to do the right thing, even though it defies what her superiors want.

I’m also really happy about a new commission for a short audio piece for a big Boston theater. Very cool project that hasn’t been announced yet, but I’m excited by the parameters of the piece, which will involve a lot of really specific Boston research. A great excuse to pound the pavement in Boston to think through ideas.

With Miranda Jonte as Anna and Tim Weinert as Curt in rehearsal for Breaking the Shakespeare Code at Playwrights Downtown, NYC, Hey Jonte!, 2019

Are there any surprises — or setbacks — That have fueled your craft?

I was a full-time high school teacher running a busy after-school drama program up until just under three years ago. It meant that I only had time to write during July and August, so I had to really consistent about writing for those two months in order to get anything done. Now that I’m teaching part-time, I’ve mostly maintained that habit of writing really consistently.

What do you do for a living, and does that play into your artistic life?

I retired from my gig as a full-time high school teacher of mostly theater and Shakespeare in 2018, and lots of years immersed in so much drama – in the texts and in the building! – have had a huge effect. Shakespeare, in particular, has been for years the wallpaper of my brain, and my two most-produced full-lengths as well as my most “awarded” though still unproduced full-length are all “Shakespeare adjacent.” And the other huge influence of that gig on my artistic life comes from work on the twenty or so devised plays I created my students—a mix of 40-minute one-acts and full-lengths. The process of developing story and character through improv and discussion has led me to treat all of my work as really fluid. I’m good about tossing stuff out because that process taught me that there’s always more material to waiting to come forth.

I’m currently teaching part-time: Playwriting and Shakespeare (and have taught Adult Acting) at the Hanover Theatre Conservatory and Theater Education to grad students at Emerson College.

Marge Dunn as Ellie and Hayley Sherwood as Vi, still from film of A Monogamy of Swans, 2017

What’s the earliest memory you have of the arts? Music, dance, theatre, visual art — Whatever!

Way back when I was in single digits, my uncle was a custodian at St. John’s Prep, an elite private school with an incredible theater program, and he often brought us to shows. The first two I remember were a stage version of The Hobbit and, most memorably, Thornton Wilder’s The Skin of Our Teeth. Both were wild, hugely theatrical and entertaining – pretty spectacular, and influential because I was so young when I saw them. I’m nowhere near that kind of work yet. But I have Goals.

Looking to 2021, what do you feel most excited about creatively?

I have the sense that, maybe not in 2021, but soon after, we will be back in theaters, and what I’m really missing is collaboration with other artists. 2019 was my first year past full-time teaching, and there was so much collaboration: a week-long workshop at Portland Stage, another week at PlayLab at the Great Plains Theater Conference, and two busy and blissful weeks working on and in of my shows at the Edinburgh Fringe.

Cameron Cronin as Death (aka Dick Follansbee) w/ Noah Simes as Bobby, still from film of A Dateless Bargain with Engrossing Death, 2017

How do you balance creative life and all of the rest of it?

I write every morning and then mostly “leave it alone” for the rest of the day. I’m lucky to be one of a vanishingly small number of Americans who was in a profession with a pension, and it is amazing to have the gift of time I didn’t have in my 35 years in the classroom.

What’s it like making art in your community? Tell us about Boston!

Boston is SO interesting. My own journey as a Boston writer (or Boston-ish, since I live 20 miles out of the city) has shown me that despite playwrights having a lot of avenues for support, it’s also a kind of balkanized theatrical community, where efforts/recognitions/successes in one area, program, or venue won’t necessarily translate. I’ve had a major, well-funded state playwriting fellowship for the past two years, a year-long writing fellowship at a professional theater in town, two full-lengths produced in Boston nominated by the Boston Theater Critics’ Association for the award for the best new script, etc., yet I still feel very much on the margins as an artist in town. It feels like, in Boston, you can be both “recognized” and “invisible” at the same time.

Having said that, playwrights in town are very supportive of one another. There are lots of active writers’ groups, and events like the Boston Playwrights Theatre’s Boston Theater Marathon, the Open Theatre Project’s Slam, and others that provide venues for new work on the fringe, even while larger theaters are reluctant to look to locals for new work.

Cristhian Mancinas-García as Reynaldo (and Yorick) in Noir Hamlet, Centastage, Boston, 2018

Who’s in your inner circle, and how do they support your work?

Personally, my family is tremendously supportive. My wife is also a writer and artist—a dancer/choreographer and dance scholar/author, so she understands the commitment. Our son is a composer and music teacher about to start a Ph.D. program. And our daughter may not view herself as an artist (though she’s a great photographer), but she’s very supportive of all of us. She even has a tattoo of a line from one of my plays, which I think I can list as my favorite production of all time.

Professionally, I’m in two groups for Boston playwrights: Write On, which is part of the production company Centastage; and Writers at Play, which meets at Boston Playwrights Theatre. In addition to our regular sessions, we’re generally really good about seeing one another’s work. And our regional Dramatists Guild Rep, Patrick Gabridge, is a champion of all Boston playwrights and creates and runs a lot of programs that provide support.

The Fam, L-R: Lynn Frederiksen, Colin Minigan, Moi, Mariah Minigan

What art knocked your socks off recently? Could be a play — Or an album, a movie, an exhibit, a novel, anything! — What made you connect with the art and the artist’s work?

I saw it in 2017, I think, but Paula Vogel’s Indecent is still up there at the top of my list. It not only hit squarely my interest in the way the political impacts the personal, but the theatricality of the storytelling is just insanely inspiring, using all the elements of theater to move a mass of people sitting together in the dark through a powerful, important, hugely resonant story.

And getting my name drawn at random to be part of one of Paula Vogel’s “Boot Camps” in the summer of 2018 was a great launch to my post-drama-teacher life. That certainly knocked the other sock off.

What’s next on the horizon for your creative world?

I’m excited to get back to that “most awarded/never produced” play, which is getting (wait for it…) another reading, this time at Gloucester Stage. I think this will be reading number 16. But I’m that inflatable clown doll that keeps bouncing back up, certain that this time…

And, as mentioned above, I’m excited to get to work on the commissioned piece.

Any advice for someone just starting out in this art form?

Rejoice in your horrible first draft. It is exactly what it needs to be to get the process started, and it’ll open the door to all the good work that will follow.

How do you relax and unwind?

My daily pattern in summers when I was teaching full-time was to write in the morning, continue the 30-year-long-home-renovation project after lunch (relaxing for the mind), go for a run or walk before dinner, then read, play, or watch something at night. Now, I get to do that almost every day. At this point, to be honest, most of my life feels like relaxing/unwinding from being a one-person school theater department for so long,

Where can we find your work? Onstage, and to read?

Most of my plays are on the New Play Exchange, and there are links to some favorite videos of my work on my website, johnminigan.com. There is also a list of what’s coming up at the ‘On Stage’ page of the website.

Favorite dessert? Flower? Time of day? Dessert? What makes you happy?

I love the moment after the last class of the week, whether it was my full-time job or my current part-time gig. I think so many years teaching, in so many crowded rooms, has taught me to value those quiet moments to breathe, regroup and re-center. And if dark chocolate is also involved…

 

 

Meet Playwright/Producer Aaron Leventman!

Rachael Carnes: Hi, Aaron! Last time we saw each other was at the Samuel French Off-Off Broadway Festival in 2019. That feels like two million years ago. So, what inspires your creativity?

Aaron Leventman: Human behavior and personality, strong identification with a certain person or place, and stories of every day heroism.

RC: Tell me about your work with Almost Adults. I so enjoyed the production of my play WABI SABI last year. Where did the idea come from?

AL: In 2015, I wanted to produce an evening of my own short plays that were LGBTQ+ themed.   I created a production company so that I could accept funds and other kinds of support for this project.  I came up with the name Almost Adults since I realized that the plays had a running theme of the conflicts of young people on the brink of adulthood, along with older people having trouble coping the traumas of everyday life.  After this first production I used the company to produce staged readings of famous plays I wanted to act in and produce since I didn’t have the time or further resources to produce another full production.  When the pandemic hit I started acting in other companies virtual performances and after participating in a number of festivals I realized that I could produce my own series.  I therefore decided to turn Almost Adults into an inclusive virtual company that focused on LGBTQ+ themes to give the series an identity where anyone could participate.

It Ain’t Over ‘Til the Pink Lady Sings by Allison Fradkin
Directed by Aaron Leventman, Almost Adults LGBTQ+ Virtual Short Play Festival, 2020
With Alix Hudson, Zoe Margolis, and Zoe Burke

Are there any surprises — or setbacks — That have fueled you to continue to build it?

I was surprised that people from all over the world of various gender identities, sexual orientations, races, levels of experience, and geographic locations would be generous enough to lend their time to participate.  I was also surprised at how many audience members were interested in watching virtual queer theatre on Facebook, YouTube, and Zoom when there is so much content happening online at the present time.  This continued interest in creating an online community for those wanting to think outside the box to find ways to keep theatre alive during this current time of the pandemic has what’s fueled me to continue.

What do you do for a living, and does that play into your artistic life?

I teach acting, playwriting, screenwriting, film appreciation, and memoir.  My students teach and inspire me on how to best keep my creative work alive through their own examples.  The research and preparation that I put in to my classes gives me ideas for my own creative projects.

Where the Fireworks Come From by Michael Pisaturo
Directed by Bradd Howard, Almost Adults LGBTQ+ Virtual Short Play Festival, 2020
With Niko’a Salas and Dustin Uher

What’s the earliest memory you have of the arts? Music, dance, theatre, visual art — Whatever!

My parents took me to see Ingmar Bergman’s film of The Magic Flute on New Year’s Eve when I was 8-years-old.  I was terrified at first that the film was in subtitles.  But it led to a life-long love of Ingmar Bergman, Mozart, and art film in general.

Looking to 2021, what do you feel most excited about creatively?

In the hope that we’ll be able to return to live theatre at some point in 2021, I am looking forward to seeing what the community has learned creatively from this most recent time of the pandemic. I think that we will see a morphing of creative life as we once knew it with how we’ve had to adapt during the quarantine.  I’m excited to see how this hybrid way of creating performance will look.

How do you balance creative life and all of the rest of it?

I’m someone whose everyday life is what fuels my creativity.  Other aspects of my life (domestic, family, friends) are just as important to me as the creative work I do and therefore they go hand in hand.  I wouldn’t be able to be creative if I didn’t have a full life outside of the work I do.  This is why I look to stay in touch with what’s happening in the world as the plays I write I prefer to link connect to the big picture in some way.  My interest in producing and acting has helped me realize how I can contribute to the community in artistic ways other than just my writing.

What’s it like making art in your community? Tell us about Santa Fe!

Santa Fe is unique in that there is a large amount of exceptional talent with many professionals in the industry that choose to live in a smaller community rather than a big city like L.A. Its small size as a county makes it is easy to produce your own work.  However, it frequently seems at times like there is more talent than audience for which the challenge to find can be daunting.  But the level of support here is astonishing and I feel lucky to live in a community of like-minded people who are wanting to be creative for the sheer joy of doing it.

Who’s in your inner circle, and how do they support your work?

My inner circle consists of other actors, writers, directors, and producers who I have worked with before on various theatre and film projects.  Some friendships are contained to the specific project we’re working on while others have entered my life more in a personal way.  We frequently show up for each other’s performances and give constructive feedback when asked.  We even have formed writing groups for this purpose.  We share opportunities with each other and with the closest friends without the notion of envy but merely for support.

Maturity by Aaron Leventman
Directed by Tristan Pullen, Almost Adults Productions, Santa Fe/NM, 2015
With Cristina Vigil and Mark Westberg

What art knocked your socks off recently? Could be a play — Or an album, a movie, an exhibit, a novel, anything! — What made you connect with the art and the artist’s work?

The film Hotel Sorrento which I saw when it first came out over 25 years ago I had the opportunity to revisit through a streaming service available at my local library.  I was as emotionally impacted by it as when I first saw it.  The film is a successful adaptation of a play in that it retains its literary merits while find visual ways to demonstrate the story’s overall theme.  It deals with major issues that are relevant to me and my writing such as the personal vs. political, and how deep set family dynamics influences your life in ways that you don’t even realize.

What’s next on the horizon for your creative world?

I’m excited to continue the LGBTQ+ online play reading series I’ve created so I can connect with more artists that I haven’t worked with before and had the opportunity to showcase more great talent.  I was asked to participate in the South by Southwest 2021 mentoring program.  Their annual festival/conference will be happening virtually this year so I am honored to be able to participate in such an exciting platform.  I hope to have more of my plays performed either virtually or in person and would like to continue my acting work as well in whatever medium produces opportunity for my quirky talents.

Any advice for someone just starting out in this art form?

Do the kind of projects you love to do, that give you the most pleasure, not the ones you think you SHOULD be doing.

Blanche in a Wheelchair by Aaron Leventman
Directed by Steve Mazzaccone, Secret Theatre’s One Act Play Festival, LIC, NY, 2019, Finalist for Best Play
With Kyle Merker, and Gary Dooley

How do you relax and unwind?

I find cooking very therapeutic as well as walking when the weather deems itself warm enough to do so.  I enjoy spending time with friends, family, and my partner streaming engaging content online or finding a compelling novel. Naps and meditation are always welcome into my life.  Streaming quality television shows and films of the past and present are an active part of my leisure life as well.

Where can we find your work? Onstage, and to read?

You can go to my website at or imdb page.  My plays are easy to find on Amazon.com and New Play Exchange.  If you want to watch videos from my company Almost Adults on YouTube.

Favorite dessert? Flower? Time of day? What makes you happy?

Favorite Dessert is a hot fudge brownie sundae.  Flower is a tulip.  Time of day is at dusk.  An overall sense of peace of mind, contentment, and serenity makes me happy.

 

Meet Poet, Writer and Instructor Erica Goss!

Hi Erica!

What inspires your creativity?

One of the ways I get inspiration is by going to museums. I love the idea that beautiful objects are stored and cared for so we can look at them. I wrote an article about how I love to walk through museums, letting myself absorb the atmosphere, maybe reading the informational cards, maybe not.

I’m always trying new things in my artistic practices. I recently wrote my first terza rima, a poetic form Dante invented for The Divine Comedy. It was difficult, took weeks and dozens of drafts, but I finished it! In the interim, I discovered a topic for more poems: I’ve been longing to go somewhere, but since we’re quarantined due to the coronavirus pandemic, all I can do is write about places I miss.

Tell me about your work with Girls’ Voices Matter. Where did the idea come from?

Girls’ Voices Matter is the daughter of Media Poetry Studio, a media arts program I co-founded in 2014 in California. Media Poetry Studio was the result of a brainstorm I had with two other poet friends of mine. We were all Poets Laureate of our respective towns in the Bay Area, and we wanted to do something for young people in the area of the arts. We came up with the idea of a summer camp where teenaged girls could learn how make short films based on their own poetry. It was very successful and we ran two camps, one in 2015 and one in 2016.

In 2017 I moved to Eugene, Oregon. I spent some time just getting acclimated, and then worked with a business consultant named Kaya Singer, who helped me figure out how to refine the message of what I wanted to convey. Girls’ Voices Matter came out of that work: it’s more focused on storytelling, feminist film studies, and various forms of media. I’m lucky to have the talents of Dr. Claire Graman, whose specialty is women in film. She’s created several classes and is a wonderful teacher.

Are there any surprises — or setbacks — That have fueled you to continue to build it?

In the beginning there were nothing but setbacks. It seemed that no one was listening to my very important message about teen girls and media. It took a lot of work, and continues to, to get people to understand that we have a serious problem with the inequality in the film industry. There’s just one female director for every twenty-two male directors, for example, and speaking parts for women have actually declined in the past twenty years.

What do you do for a living, and does that play into your artistic life?

Luckily for me, this is what I do for a living, as well as freelance writing and teaching.

What’s the earliest memory you have of the arts? Music, dance, theatre, visual art — Whatever!

I was an art-nerd as a kid. I took piano lessons starting at age seven, wrote my first poem at age eight, and wanted to be a dancer. I still love music and dance, but writing is what stuck. In my late 40s, I got curious about photography and video, and now those are part of my creative practice as well. I love the combination of visual art and writing.

Looking ahead, what do you feel most excited about creatively?

I’m thrilled to be in the process of developing a series of courses for Girls’ Voices Matter, which we call our “Feminist Film Curriculum.” The curriculum will be available in 2021, will be taught online, and focuses on the history of women in film. There will also be a workshop on how to make a film in one week.

I’m writing more short personal essays and trying to get a poetry collection completed and sent out by the end of 2020. I also have some poetry videos I’d like to complete. I’m thrilled to have my first major screening at the Zebra Poetry Film Festival in Berlin in November. This is for a short video I made from a poem by Canadian poet, Al Rempel, with voice by Sandro Pecchiari from Italy. My youngest son made the music. So it’s a truly international effort, and I enjoyed making the video very much.

How do you balance creative life and all of the rest of it?

That’s not easy, ever. I think it’s especially hard for women, as we’re tasked with so many family responsibilities. I think of the sculptor Ruth Asawa and her many children, working at night when the kids were asleep. This robs your physical and emotional energies. When I was raising my kids and working full-time in the computer industry, I rarely had time for creative pursuits. Gradually my life changed: the kids grew up, my work life changed, and I was able to move writing back to center stage.

I have many of the small notebooks I wrote in during those busy years, full of tiny fragments of ideas next to birthday gift lists, Christmas cards, reminders to do so many things. Even then, I was trying to capture the ideas that went through my head. This makes me think of a quote from Ruth Asawa: “Sculpture is like farming. If you just keep at it, you can get a lot done.” That goes for any art, whether sculpture, writing, or dance.

What’s it like making art in your community? Tell us about where you live!

I live in Eugene, Oregon, a very art-friendly town. One of the things I love about living here is the giant murals painted on walls all over the town. I don’t even have to go to a museum to see art—all I have to do is drive the streets of Eugene! However, I would make art no matter where I lived. I even think living in a less art-aware town would probably make me even more stubborn about making art. But I really like it that I’ve met so many writers, poets, painters, and others involved in the arts here in Eugene. My husband and I have a little joke about that: in Los Angeles, everyone’s an actor, even if they work at other jobs. In Eugene, everyone’s a poet!

How ‘bout your family? Who’s in your inner circle, and how do they support your work?

My husband is my #1 supporter and fan. He’s extremely patient when I barge into his office and demand that he listen to the brilliant thing I just wrote. As a child growing up, my parents encouraged my brothers and I in art, music, reading and writing. My parents made the deliberate decision to not have a television in the house when we were kids, so we had to entertain ourselves. I think that’s one of the most important things they did for us. We had an old Wurlitzer piano that had belonged to my grandmother, weekly trips to the library, a backyard, and art supplies.

These days, my circle of writer friends sustains me. We share poems and see each other at readings. With poet Joan Dobbie, I help run the River Road Reading series, which is now online due to the pandemic.

What art knocked your socks off recently? Could be a play — Or an album, a movie, an exhibit, a novel, anything! — What made you connect with the art and the artist’s work?

I’m in the middle of Sharon Olds’ latest book, Arias, and as always, I’m stunned at her ability to, in a just a few sentences, tell an entire story about her life. I binge-watched The Handmaid’s Tale recently and although much of it was hard to watch, I think it’s the best thing streaming right now. I was very moved by the exhibition “Dreams Before Extinction and Under the Earth, Over the Moon” featuring paintings by Naeemeh Naeemaei, which was at the Jordan Schnitzer museum in Eugene and was the last thing I saw there. I think it’s the tenderness of the paintings that struck me, and how the artist created a link between humans and animals.

What’s next on the horizon for your creative world?

Developing the Feminist Film Curriculum, writing essays and poems, and creating some classes for writers.

Any advice for someone just starting out in this artform?

There’s so much bad advice for people starting out in any art, and so much that’s simply not useful. It’s hard to be an artist. I won’t deny that. It takes an enormous amount of work, and an ability to withstand a lot of rejection. For example, my work is rejected between 75-90% of the time. This is after years of writing and sending my work out. I have a rule: I allow myself to feel sad for exactly ten minutes after receiving a rejection, and then I send the piece out again.

If you are just starting out, I would advise that you make friends with other people just starting out and study the work of those whose work you admire. And don’t give up. Try many things; fail many times. From failure comes creativity, and that’s how you get better. There are no overnight successes!

How do you relax and unwind?

Gardening is the best way for me to relax. I get exercise, fresh air and vegetables from my little patch of land, which makes me very happy, especially after a rejection! I also read, watch movies, and visit friends.

Where can we find your work? In print, and online, to read?

My website: www.ericagoss.com, where you’ll find links to recent writing and all of my books, and at Girls’ Voices Matter, where we post weekly about women in film, video lessons, creativity guides, and more.

Finally – Favorite dessert?

Crème brulee.

Meet Playwright Claudia Haas

Hi Claudia!! Thanks so much for chatting with me. So – First of all, how the heck are you? And, what’s your favorite thing to stress bake? For me lately, it’s a big wide stone fruit cake thing. I make it in a big wide curvy cake pan I bought at Ikea and I pretend I’m in Sweden. It’s nice. You?

Hi Rachael. Covid is one big curve, isn’t it? Waving at neighbors, living in the backyard (and grateful for the yard) and seeing the same six people we’ve been seeing since lockdown. I miss family gatherings. I loved baking for those. I am not too much of a stress baker – I just always baked. Pretty seasonally (very Italian of me). Berry pies in the summer, apple cakes and pies in the autumn… caloric-laden-very-fatty sweets to ring in the New Year. It’s funny you should mention Sweden. Last year on the North Shore (the shore of Lake Superior in northern Minnesota affectionately known as “The Norwegian Riviera”), I bought a baking book: Scandikitchen: Fika & Hygge by Bronte Aurell and have been cooking non-stop from that. Your pan reminds me of the pan desired for the Cloudberry and White Chocolate Cake. Don’t cloudberries sound heavenly? I have yet to find them but maybe one day when Americans are allowed to travel, that will be a new mission for me. I’ve made the simple and the fussy. I love the names of the cakes, “The Sylvia Cake,” “Success Cake,” “Blueberry Studmuffins.” But they’re all meant to be shared. I miss sharing. What do you make with your pan? And I believe you have family at home to gobble it up?

RC: Okay, I’m Norwegian American and I have more family in Norway than in the U.S. and I know cloudberries and they are worth the hype. Their texture’s amazing, like a soft peach with a light, citrusy sweet flavor. They’re so good! In Norway, people will return year after year to their mølte berry patches that only they know about. Like, they’ll write it into their wills, where to go find them. They grow up in the mountains, above the tree line. They’re the best. I’m so lucky to have picked them, and my kids, too. We went to Norway in 2016, so they could meet their cousins. It’s a continuous family connection that’s been unbroken since my grandfather moved to this country as a boy. He promised to stay in touch – And fortunately, they all did. 100+ years later, we are all in close communication. The night after Trump won, I got the best message from my cousin Sigurd. He simply wrote: “Do you want us to put the heat on for you in the basement?” He knew. They knew. Their country had been occupied. They saw the fascism from the other side of the earth. Now – I can’t wait to be able to get there again. First thing, drive to the mountains. Eat some mølte! Now we just sit in our yards and reminisce. Glad we have lots of travel to remember. How ‘bout you: Are you living in the present? Or do you, like me, feel kind of caught between the past, pre-Covid, and the future, like if and when theatres will come out of suspended animation?

CH: Working in theatre makes you live in the present, doesn’t it? And in the future. You write during the “here and now” and edit. And then you submit – giving you a glimmer of hope that something will be accepted in the future. I miss submitting. Because I write in youth theatre, there’s little to submit to right now. All conferences and residencies have been put on hold for a year, and all productions are cancelled or postponed. One year ago, Paul and I had many plans for the Summer of 2020. He retired August 1 and all our best laid plans will not happen. I wrote a play with Eva Schloss about her brother’s paintings that he did in hiding from the Nazis. We had several wonderful visits. Last October she was in Minnesota, spent the day at our home and Paul and I made plans to visit her in London September 2020. She was enthusiastic about showing us her part of London. Then we would be off to Cornwall. I spent my tween years reading Gothic novels and they all took place on the wild and wooly coast of Cornwall and I’ve always wanted to take my imaginings there. Have you ever been? It’s been on my list forever.

Then there’s the play with Eva. It was supposed to premiere March 2021. Eva planned on flying in for talk-backs about her years living in hiding and the ramifications of hate. Of course, that is on hold.  Time is a precious thing and nobody knows how long we have. Paul and I are in our sixties. Eva is 91. She was on the West Coast of the USA giving talks on peace and tolerance when COVID hit. She made it home safely and she writes me that her children have had her “on house arrest” ever since. The loss of one year – no matter where you are in life has been difficult for everyone. It’s the loss of time with people you care about that you cannot get back. We supplement the sadness with gratitude conversations. We are healthy. We stay home and wear masks when out.  We live in hope that this ends and we’re all still here. To write. To play. To search for cloudberries.

RC: I miss travel so much, and I miss the anticipation of travel maybe even a little more. I’m a planner, needing to descend upon my destination armed with a trivial knowledge rivaling any travel book and a physical gumption requiring little rest, food or shade. I subscribe to the “Get there early” and “do everything” tourist plan, unlike my dear husband, who enjoys the pleasure of a good tarry far more than I do. That said, we so enjoyed our holiday together last spring to London and exploring the English countryside. We were there ostensibly to see a reading of my play CANOPY in Cambridge, as part of the WriteOn Festival. Really, we were there to be together for the first time out of the country since we had kids. London is such a wonderful city. We were there in April and it was bursting with springtime flowers and life. Then we did a breakneck tour of Cambridge, Oxford, Bath, Stonehenge, Sussex and skittering down to Brighton, all by car, all driving on the left, all having a minor heart attack at this or that privet hedge or stone wall or house or sheep or fox or roundabout. It was great fun.

I would love to see Cornwall – Your trip must happen one day, and I know it will. I’ve read all those creaky stories, too, and delight in their musty parlor vibe. I just did a million hours of research on Mary Shelley before Covid, but haven’t had the heart or the will to tackle a project on her right now. Too much death and uncertainty swirling around, although that’s certainly what she was living with in her contemporary life and world. It’s fun to imagine the twinkling Georgian manor homes of Austen next to the sinister gothic piles in the books we kinda love…

Are novels an influence for your writing now? With your youth plays, I know you draw lines to history. I’ve read a number of your plays that focus on real people, contextualizing them in narratives that can be playful, relational, creative – that take flight with time and space, character, plot. Tell me about that space, of bringing the past to life, and why do you think plays work well, as a medium for communicating history to children and youth?

CH: Travel feeds my love of history. There’s something about being “at the place where it happened” that takes away the dry-textbook aspect of it and brings it to life. Sophie Scholl’s memorial in Munich shook me. There, outside of the University of Munich where she was arrested, there is a memorial of the pamphlets she helped produce interspersed with photos of all of the White Rose Society members. I looked at those young faces – university students – trying to bring down the Nazi government – and I wondered, why didn’t I learn about them? These young people lost their lives trying to bring attention to Nazi atrocities and I had only seen brief mentions of them here and there. (Yes, they are studied in Germany but even that took decades.) The day after returning home from Germany, I wrote Antigone in Munich. I received help from people at the University of Munich – there’s a lot of misinformation on the internet! And wrote nonstop for weeks. It was a mission.

And then there are the newspaper articles. My play about Mary Anning (paleontologist) was from a news article. When you see that a thirteen-year-old young girl made a huge discovery in 1812 and then was ignored in the science books for over two hundred years, I pay attention. Similarly, my play about Anne Frank’s pen pal in Iowa was from a BBC article. I was able to visit the town in Iowa where Anne had her pen pal (Juanita Wagner) and talk to people, visit their little museum and dig deeper into Juanita’s life. Juanita’s childhood was not easy but it was in stark contrast to what Anne was going through under the Nazi occupation.

At the museum in Iowa, Eva Geiringer Schloss had donated replicas of her brother’s paintings that he created in hiding. Heinz Geiringer’s paintings stuck with me. How can you self-teach yourself art while hiding from the Nazis? There was no correspondence course. And through the paintings, I could see not only his artistry develop, but watched Heinz grow into an observant, thoughtful young man. His paintings alternate between hope and despair and I just wanted to reach out to him. I did reach out to his sister and as stated above, the paintings were the backbone of another youth play, My Brother’s Gift.

All the plays feature these remarkable people as children. I think young audiences relate quickly to another young person onstage. Whether it’s Mary Anning’s determination at age 13 to discover fossils or Heinz Geiringer working to better himself while in hiding from the Nazis, young people can relate to their resolve. A young person is not “on hold” to start their life at age twenty. Obstacles are everywhere. And so is creative thinking. Sophie Scholl went to talks and meetings to learn about her government. Mary Anning chipped away at the Lyme Cliffs in England to find her fossils. Anne Frank had her diary. Heinz Geiringer wrote poems and painted. I wish I had seen more young people on stage growing up. And so now I make sure I make time to write what I wish I had seen.

RC: These themes — Of youth overcoming societal expectations, oppression, occupation — can be seen throughout your work, and I’m so glad I’ve had the chance to read a lot of your plays. So, tell me, what makes a solid ‘Youth Play’? And how do you write for young audiences?

CH: A solid “Youth Play” is really the same as a solid play for adult audiences. What differs is the world of the play. You have to look at the age group and understand their world. A play about Nazi Germany will not resonate with K-2. That is out of their scope. That is why residences and conferences for theatre for young audiences have separate slots for Grades K-2, 3-5, 6-8 and high school. One play cannot possibly fall into all of those categories. Children grow and develop at astonishing speed. At a young age, they could be fascinated by the natural world, good vs. evil, or magical occurrences and by grades 6 they could be starting to look at social issues. When choosing to write a play for the young, really give some thought to the age range of the audience. Can they connect to this material? Will they care about the outcome? Children deeply care about the outcome. They invest their heart and soul in a story and their characters. Oh! And now there’s “Baby Theatre.” That’s a whole new ballgame. It’s a sensory introduction to theatre.

RC: I need to know more about “Baby Theatre”! – Is that like the live version of My Little Pony I saw when my kids were small, that was an existential pastel horror show with hooves? I’m just being silly, but your thoughts on developmental age groupings are interesting. We don’t think about that with adult audiences, though they differ wildly, too, don’t they? The demographics vary. That might not influence my writing, but it does influence what I send where. And I really resonate with what you’re saying about what younger audiences are ‘ready’ for – although that varies, too. I remember when I was a teaching artist in the schools, I couldn’t believe how many really young kids had seen really gory TV and movies. With omnipresent screens, tablets, phones, etc, how does theatre still entrain young hearts and minds? And why is it important?

CH: Ha! I don’t think that live version of My Little Pony would fly at a theatre dedicated to young audiences! Live theatre is so immediate. You watch the characters go through obstacles, inner and outer conflicts, changes, growth, right in front of you. There are no barriers. No screens. You are in their world. I love the study that was done that found “audience hearts synchronize while watching live theatre.” Their hearts literally beat together and their pulses speed up and slow down together as the story unfolds. That coming together cannot be overestimated in our growth as humans. One huge bonus in writing for teens: letters and emails telling you how a play of yours affected their life in a positive manner. That just may be the pot of gold at the end of a rainbow.

 

Meet Playwright Donna Hoke!

Rachael Carnes (RC) Hi Donna! Thanks so much for connecting. How the heck are you? We’re both writers and we’re also juggling the needs of kids or grown-up kids at home. How’s that all going? If I write half a page, I feel like a rockstar these days! How has Covid created obstacles for you? Any surprising new developments in your creative practice? 

Donna Hoke (DH) Ahhhh… yes. I went from getting ready to put the house on the market and be a full-time-ish writer with a half-empty nest to having all four kids at home and being convinced to get a kitten for everybody’s mental health. So to say there is very little me time is an understatement. In fact, I think I’m the only one in the house who doesn’t have a way to find productive escape. That said, we are doing just fine. We have food and means and health insurance and each other and we are mindful of and grateful for that.

And THAT said, I’m still a writer and want to write! For the first month or so, I was in a fog, but I committed to writing a play on my blog and sharing the process. That forced me to write about three pages a week because I knew people were expecting the next post (there are about 500 people following quietly as I know from Google Analytics lol) and lo! I finished a play. I’d chosen this one because of all my works in progress–which literally included a play about a family trapped inside during a virus–it was a comedy and I felt like maybe that’s something people would want to read. And I also felt comfortable sharing the process because it was a lark of a play.

Once the fog kind of lifted, I dusted off a one-person show and that’s the next thing I want to finish. And I have two little commissions for Buffalo companies I’m working on. My days are kind of back to routine, but I’m still interrupted constantly and I write best in an empty house so it’s an ongoing challenge. And maybe the biggest challenge is that I can’t seem to convince myself that there’s no rush, because there really isn’t. But I’m a workaholic so I don’t believe myself when I say it.

Since quarantine began, Donna wrote a comedy play called FINDING NEIL PATRICK HARRIS over 23 episodes on her blog: http://blog.donnahoke.com/category/finding-neil-patrick-harris/

RC: I feel the need for an empty house to get writing done. That’s been my routine for a while, to write in the early mornings, when everyone’s asleep. But since Covid, wow, we all seem to be just around all the time! I leaned into the Baby Animal panacea, too, procuring a baby kitten and a new puppy. Maybe that’s why my mornings aren’t quiet anymore? Ha. At least I wake now to cute puppy energy and playful kitten goofiness instead of the dread I’d been experiencing. 

I echo your gratitude: A comfortable home, a big backyard, food on the table, simply having company, all these things are simple gifts that I appreciate every day. But there’s still this moment each day, where the totality of our collective losses, the insanity of our political moments and this conjoined pandemic sink in, and it’s hard to shake it. The puppy helps.

With theatres shuttered, the art form can feel a little like it’s in suspended animation, yet development continues. I feel really busy with collaborations and projects. Are you writing for now – Zoom theatre stuff – Or for when we can get back on stages, or both? How do you feel about Zoom Life, as a new medium? I’m embracing it, but gosh, I miss being in theatres!

DH: Yes, we probably talk about COVID every night at dinner in some capacity–but this is probably the longest string of family dinners we’ve had since the kids were much younger. I also haven’t traveled in four months after having been gone once or twice a month for the past several years. And everybody seems to go through their down phases at different times. I think we’re all looking forward to the kitten, but need to get the other cat on a stricter food schedule first–step one of the Jackson Galaxy introduce-a-new-cat plan!

But yes, I am really busy! The magazine I work for has resumed printing so I have that work again. My crosswords for Soap Opera Digest never stopped. I’ve had private crossword clients, as well as people wanting script feedback, even now. Then my own work. But it feels like ten times more than usual because I never have steady-state time to work. I also share an office with my one daughter, so there’s no real alone time. If I could get up early, that would be great, but we are all night people and with everyone here, we naturally gravitate toward a later schedule. Getting to bed at midnight is early and, of course, because there’s no real reason to get up. I’ve been getting a full eight hours every night. Oddly, that has affected my ability to fall asleep, which is frustrating because I’ve never had that problem.

I have not written a single Zoom-specific thing and that hasn’t seemed to affect my busy-ness. I’m not a super fast adapter prolific writer and I do feel like Zoom plays are temporary. I think Zoom will remain for developing work, and maybe streaming for those who can’t get to theater, but I just can’t believe it’s ever going to be the preferred art form. I’ve had quite a few Zoom readings since this all started, and attended quite a few as well, and they are of varying quality. The “production” I had recently was a nice use of the platform but, again, that play wasn’t written specifically for Zoom.

The two commissions I have are both alternate ideas–one a five-minute  monologue that will be filmed and released in a unit with fourteen others. The other is an audio play and I really got into that. Audio is such a different medium, more related to screenwriting actually, so there’s a lot of freedom and you have to move more quickly; my ten-minute play has seven scenes which I feel is necessary to keep listener attention but also works because there’s no down time for scene transitions. I’ve listened to a lot of them and so many are just ten minutes of dialogue and they’re not as dynamic; it feels like a wasted opportunity. I have a meeting Monday about a larger, ongoing audio project and I hope it happens because I’m really excited about it. I’m much more excited about audio as the medium of this era than Zoom–and it also seems longer lasting, because podcasts are still on the rise. Have you tried it at all?

Since the pandemic sheltering began, Donna has been given readings of seven different full-length plays, including THE WAY IT IS.

RC: I have attempted audio plays; I have one that’s a longer one-act, and a few shorter pieces. One was a stage play that I adapted for radio. My writing is often very physical, like, weird crazy action built into the dialogue; I think it comes from my years as a dancer/choreographer. I’m expressive/bossy about designing the physicalized play, so audio is an interesting format. My short play “In Training” is written for a dark theatre –like, pitch black– and it’s going to be shared via audio podcast soon. I love listening to audio plays, but it’s not a space I’ve written for much. 

I hear you on the Zoom play phenomenon. I’m grateful for real-time collaboration, and I do enjoy how distances and time zones are melting. I’ve written some short plays and monologues for the Zoom platform, and I’ve been having fun redeveloping a couple of plays for the stage, for Zoom/webisodes. I took a course through the Lighthouse Writer’s Workshop recently, in screenwriting and dramatic writing, and it piqued my interest to learn more about teleplays, another genre I know nothing about! Like everything in this art form, I get curious, and then try to learn more. 

Your busy home sounds a lot like ours. I’m never alone! I miss having new experiences and meeting new people… I traveled almost six weeks for playwriting last year: NYC twice, Cleveland, Kansas City, Los Angeles, twice, Nashville (Sewanee), Seattle, Portland, Chicago, New Haven, even Cambridge U.K. – When both our plays were given a reading, and I decided to make it a holiday! Gosh, I miss travel. Now I feel excited when I go to the grocery store. 

The commissions you’re working on sound cool! What are the projects, and what’s it like making theatre in Buffalo?

A month-long residency at Arts at the Palace became co-virtual production with Women’s Theatre Festival; the show won Best Production at the online Festival in July.

DH: I’m grateful for the ability to collaborate nationally as well. My recent virtual HEARTS OF STONE had people from Oregon, Michigan, Kentucky, New York State, North Carolina–that was really cool. For a reading of BRILLIANT WORKS OF ART, I was able to put together actors who had previously done it even though they were in different locations. I’m glad people still want my name in the mix, and I love the democracy of theaters using NPX to enable direct negotiation with playwrights. But I don’t want to do it forever. 

I miss traveling, too, because I felt more like a working playwright. I think I made 18 trips in 2019 and ten of them were to New York. It’s an easy flight from here; I’ve actually gone back and forth in one day before. When COVID hit, I was two days from leaving for France for a ten-day writers’ retreat with other playwrights, which would have been big for me as I haven’t been out of the country except Canada (which is in my backyard) since I worked for a travel magazine in my twenties. I decided two days before not to go and about half still went and were there when things got crazy. I also had a month-long residency in Hamilton, NY that got canceled and a Screenwriting for Playwrights residency that hopefully is just postponed. Attending conferences isn’t the same online. But… I’m taking the pause. The travel part of traveling is a drag and some things have been just as effective online.

Rachael and Donna once shared a program all the way in Cambridge, U.K.!

DH (con’t) On the flip side, the availability of stuff that wasn’t in a pre-COVID world is cool. I drop in on DG events all over. I’m taking a class with Primary Stages. I want to take advantage of that stuff while it lasts, though I suspect online DG events may be the wave of the future because attendance is so much better!

So the commissions are from two theaters in Buffalo who are trying to put together alternate-to-live programming for the upcoming season. Alleyway commissioned fifteen playwrights to write five-minute monologues based at locations in Buffalo and they are working with a film studio to film them all; they’ll be put together under the title CURRENTS: 716 and streamed 11 times over a normal run course, and people can choose a time to watch and there’s a sliding ticket price. The other (and this isn’t public until September 1 so I don’t know when this will be on your website so I won’t name the theater) theater commissioned six playwrights to write ten-minute audio plays under a specific theme that aligns with something they did live before. Those will be released to their podcast in November. (If you want to hear my table read, we’re doing it Wednesday at 7:00 EST, and I can give you a Zoom link; it shouldn’t take too long.)

Buffalo is a tough place to be a playwright. We have no regional theater, no MFA program in anything let alone playwriting (The first acting MFA will begin in fall 2021) despite having a zillion colleges, no nationally recognized development program, no theater-led workshops, very little commissioning of full-length work. All of that means we don’t really get new blood or new work, so while the theater community is active, it’s not vibrant, not dynamic. A lot of familiar things based on what people want to act in or direct. “New” most often means most recently from New York rather than developed and created in Buffalo. 

I think I’ve made the best of it, though, and also been lucky, probably luckier than most. I love my theater community. I have so many artists who are willing to help me develop things, even if they don’t get produced here. I’m on the Artie committee. I’m the theater writer for Buffalo Spree. I became involved with the Guild by repping this region. And, because there was a time when Road Less Traveled Productions did have a workshop, that’s how I got my start when they gave me first-ever production in 2010. Since then, RLTP has produced two more of my plays and a fourth is postponed to November 2021. I had ten-minutes in festivals at Subversive, seven times at Alleyway, and four times at Buffalo United Artists, where I founded BUA Takes Ten: GLBT Short Stories. The AD at BUA asked if I could expand one of those tens to a full-length and he produced my first full-length in Buffalo outside of RLTP. I had a commission from an ex-pat in San Jose to write ONCE IN MY LIFETIME: A Buffalo Football Fantasy, which he produced here. And I had a commission to write PAST MIDNIGHT: A Visit With Larry and Viv, which is supposed to be produced September 2021. 

But it also took a long time for things like that to start happening. Networking, visibility, community building, service, and probably the fact that I didn’t wait for Buffalo to produce me, which is what I try to tell all the playwrights here: there’s a whole world out there. Even if you do get produced in Buffalo, you could wait a long time before the next opportunity comes along. Don’t wait for it. I know you know what I mean because you get produced everywhere. On the other hand, you also get a lot of action in Oregon, but you have a much more dynamic and arts-centered theater environment there it seems.

Even if I could move, at this point, I doubt I would. I’ve talked to a lot of people in New York and they agree that at this stage of my career, it probably wouldn’t help me much to be there. The move toward curated rental and self-production is probably not one in which I’d rise up. There is also a part of me that feels like I started this so late and I’m so grateful for any successes I’ve had because, as I said, even with any potential gender, age, or geographical limitations, I’ve gotten to do a LOT, certainly more than some people without any of those and I’m so grateful for it. If anything, I wish I’d started in the days of snail mail submissions, when you actually could get discovered sending something over the transom. I totally have the stamina for all those post-office visits! But all I really want now is to be able to write more-or-less full-time but that’s on hold until post-COVID.

What about you? What are the goals you have?

RC: As I was reading your response, I was nodding my head ‘yes’ to so much of it. We’re on a similar path, though I just started the journey a few years later than you. Late in life, though (46?) to embark on a new art form. I can’t complain. It’s been fun to land where I do, whether a festival or conference or production wherever. I just try to enjoy it all. When I get weird, when I feel pressure to do this, that or the other, it stops being fun. I try to stay in a mindset that allows for opportunity and shakes it off when they don’t come. (Because, even though I’ve had my share of ‘hits’ – of course that comes with many times more rejections. That’s just the deal!)

My goals during Covid? I dunno. Get through the day? The week? The month. Supporting the family is a challenge. I feel like we’ve gone back in time. I find myself cooking, cleaning up, taking care of custodial and community duties, way more, like when my kids were small. My husband is great, does a lot, it’s just – with all of us home 24/7 – the kitchen, the bathrooms, the spaces are always in a state of entropy. It’s kinda getting to me, does it show? Haha (Welp.)

Artistically, I am grateful for development opportunities that can still continue now, over Zoom. My play WINDBERRY CREEK – you read the first draft last fall – continues to grow and be nurtured by one different theatres. That’s been so helpful, because for that one or two-week time, my mind can focus in on a deeper, wider process. Covid is tricky. Living with constant health and safety issues, the economic pressures that the disease creates (I just got laid off), plus this dysfunction, high-stakes political gambit, are pulling focus away from my work. I still write everyday, but I don’t find I can drop right into the frequency that writes these big, weird, dense, full-length plays. Maybe that’s a good thing. Maybe in my exhaustion and anxiety, I’ll finally write something more produceable! 

Big Picture, like you, I want to write. I want to be paid to write, or to be in a creative team of writers, developing a show or a film. Earlier in Covid, I started writing a novel, but it’s terrible. I was boring myself. I do better with dialogue than purply prose. 

RE the post office, same. I miss the fellas who work at my shipping store. We had big philosophical chats. I hope they’re okay. 

When you look back on this year, say, five years from now, how do you think Covid and quarantine will have influenced your creative practice?

This January reading at Miami’s Zoetic was the last public showing of Donna’s work; LITTLE WOMEN… NOW was slated to world premiere this November.

DH: I didn’t necessarily mean COVID goals, but writing goals. What you want to do or try or aim for. I’d been working toward the writer-life goal for a while but that’s on hold. I always have such a list of projects I want to work on. 

My husband has been doing a lot because he’s actually not working (he’s a Philharmonic musician so he’s literally doing nothing, and, as I said before, I’m a workaholic so he’s been doing a lot of cooking etc.) But I have never been someone who writes every day because I’m always being pulled away and because I write best in an empty house. You are so insanely prolific that I just marvel; in the short time you’ve been writing plays, your body of work is insane and you’ve had so many successes, which is just amazing and I feel like they just keep coming. Plus you do such amazing service as well; I don’t know how you do it all!

Given that during this time, I can’t be too picky, I hope that I can learn to write with more distraction. Be more disciplined about getting things done on a timeline. I had someone off NPX ask me if I had any screenplays and writing one has been on my to-do list forever so I’d love to do that; I think I have a play idea that might make a better screenplay… So many ideas, so little time… 

A lot of my plays stem from presenting those kinds of challenges to myself. I wanted to write a two-hander and that was FLOWERS IN THE DESERT.  I wanted to write a play in real time and that was THE WAY IT IS. I wanted to have a Christmas play and try to write a comedy so I wrote CHRISTMAS 2.0. I wanted to write an all-female cast play and that was FOUR DOORS DOWN. I wanted to write a TYA play so I adapted MEET ME AT THE GATES, MARCUS JAMES. Then I wanted to write a classic adaptation so I wrote LITTLE WOMEN… NOW. I want to write a screenplay so… I feel like giving myself those challenges forces me to write in a different way and learn something new but I also feel like they give me a fresh approach.

Which ideas do you tend to grab?

RC: I love how you’re leaning into trying these different projects! I’ve been curious about teleplays and screenplays, too. Right now, I think the most satisfying thing, the thing that makes me forget I’m in a Zoom meeting, is collaborating with creative teams on full-length stuff. I’ve cranked out a lot of plays, and generally prefer to crack into a fresh project, but Covid is shaving down my time and energy. So, Covid and creative goals are kinda combined right now, or at least related, because I feel like I have to help my family be more or less okay, and then I can write. And there are some days, when getting to “okay” is just a longer distance.

When we get to the other side of this pandemic, what will you want to retain, in your artistic practice? And what would you like to forget?

Passage Theatre will offer a reading of Donna’s comedy, CHRISTMAS 2.0, in December.

DH: If I ever attain it, I’d like to retain an ability to work in any environment. But today, I was trying to do revisions on a play and I kept getting interrupted and I was so frustrated and ready to cry. Like I just wanted to check into a hotel room and catch up. So I haven’t even yet reached the thing I want to attain lol.

I hope that a project I’m starting soon will continue. I hope that learning new skills for audio and screen plays remain useful. I hope I retain the relationships I’ve made with new theaters. And I hope I retain the memory that things don’t have to be urgent. The things I want to forget are all things beyond any artistic practice–the anxiety and stress and sadness mostly. I did read that people who live through collective trauma like this rarely retain the symptoms of it, so that’s hopeful. Unfortunately, that still makes us among the fortunate ones.

RC: Yeah, the adaptability to environmental shifts is so resonant with me. Revisions require a lot of focus, to hold all those threads and complete edits in that creative cognitive space. Interruptions kill that flow and are exhausting. That’s why I’m shying away from bigger projects right now – With everyone home all the time, I can develop existing work with teams, but I don’t have the attention to think Big which is what I need to write a first draft of a new longer work. I don’t know when the house will ever be quiet again! 2022? 2023? Waaaaaa

Like you, I’m focusing on gratitude: My home is a sanctuary right now. (A noisy sanctuary, full of kids and pets!) But I’ve never appreciated our space, and our backyard, more than I do now. I’m grateful for food on the table, for my family’s health. Stress and sadness is real, and I’ve hit deep pockets of both. The puppy’s MVP in my life, he knows his little job is to keep me smiling. 

Maybe last question? 

What’s giving you hope, inspiration and energy right now?

DH: Hope… that our numbers here are still pretty low, so I feel like people are trying? And also that even Fauci says a vaccine is sooner than we might have thought. I don’t dare hope for the election results I want. I’m inspired by the new projects I have going, even the little ones. The actor I wanted for my monologue project just accepted so that’s just a little bump; I can’t wait to see what he does with it. And energy? Honestly, probably just the fact that once my sleep settled down, I’ve been able to get eight hours of sleep a night. That’s probably giving me more energy than I know because I can’t remember the last time I had that kind of consistency. You?

RC: Happy for your monologue project! Yeah, those little moments feel uplifting. A short play reading, a new connection. I think I’m going to focus on Zoom plays with commercial appeal, for kids. So many kids at home – But they still need theatre. 

My biggest inspiration is my kids. They’re losing more than me. Not starting High School? Not going away to college? Can’t see friends? This pandemic is hardest on younger people, and yet my kids have continued to inspire me with their resilience. And when anyone’s having a hard day, there’s always the puppy or the kitten or the puppy AND the kitten. 

The baby animals are really pulling their weight. They’re getting us through. 

 

Meet theatremaker, Shadowboxer, podcaster, singer, joy-enabler, and do-er Tara Wibrew

Note for Readers:

We started this dialogue back in January. It’s been a bit of a season! — R.C.

Rachael Carnes: Hi, Tara!  Thanks for chatting with me! I’m excited to connect. You’re a renaissance human — Acting, directing, singing, podcasting, arts-administering and so much more, all while bringing this amazing enthusiasm for mentoring early career arts professionals, and helping them to believe in themselves. So — Tell me about a typical day, or week, how does creativity find its way into your habits, and how is it a skill you use, in various aspects of your work and play? 

Tara Wibrew: Hi Rach! Thanks for chatting with me! It’s so fun to catch you; I’m amazed by how much you do and absorb and create.

Thanks also for the sweet compliment. I do… a lot. Honestly, sometimes a typical week feels anything but creative because I spend a lot of time organizing my time. I refer to it as being a champion of Calendar Tetris (™). So boring, right?

But I’m so much a creature of habit. Coming up with creative habits keeps me making art, and habitualizing allows me space to be creative. Once I know the metaphorical box, I can think outside of it. Time is the ultimate box. Duke Ellington said something like, “I don’t need time, I need a deadline.” I live by that. With deadlines, I actually create far more than I do in a completely free and open space. I’m allowed to come up with and discard as many ideas as I want, but time forces me to say “yes” more and edit less.

You’re constantly writing, submitting scripts, reading, reviewing—to get all that done, what sorts of habits do you have in place? Do your habits alter your creativity or put pressure on it?

“Melancholy Play” by Sarah Ruhl, directed by Tara Wibrew at Oregon Contemporary Theatre

Carnes: Yes! I love that Ellington quote, I want it embroidered and framed and above my desk immediately. Like you, I approach a myriad of projects, and try to throw my whole heart into all of them, so measurable, time-sensitive and actionable to-do’s are key. I live by my Google Calendar, and use it like a bonkers KanBan board. I have standing daily, weekly and monthly tasks for myself, and I keep track of what I’ve done in the events themselves. It’s nuts, but works for me. I also use my gmail inbox as a to-do list, with more time-sensitive needs at the top. I love a zero’d out inbox, but I’m learning to live with leaving some things undone until I can do them thoughtfully. I’m always juggling work-work, freelance writing, playwriting, and of course personal and family stuff, so staying organized helps me feel like I can tread water.

All that is to say – the connections and connectivity – fuel creativity for me. Keeping up with conversations, circling back to collaborators, developing an idea with folx, revisiting someone I worked with, to see if they want to work on something new or bigger, taking on the capacity for new projects, all of that would fall apart, if I didn’t have some pretty dialed systems in place.

I love to say “Yes” — 2019 was the year of the “Yes” and I managed to travel and learn and meet new people and participate in more creative pursuits than ever before. “Yes” is an important first step, and then things seem to sort themselves out. 

What are you saying “Yes” to, that you’re excited about right now? 

Wibrew: So many things! Creatively, I find risk super sexy. I’m all-in as soon as someone on the team is daring to do something new, eager for opportunity, and excited by tackling problems.

A few projects I’m psyched about right now: directing Lucas Knath’s A Doll’s House, Part 2; supporting a timely staged reading of Network; adapting A Midsummer Night’s Dream to focus on the mechanicals, for staging in a winery; supporting a badass young artist (who you know well) putting together an evening of readings of works written by young womxn; and adapting a book series as an immersive theatre experience. I’m also really excited about writing new music with my band, several podcast dreams, musing on new projects… truth be told, “excited” is my natural state.

Tara’s band, Soul Restoration Project


One of my working mantras is “How can I say yes?” I don’t care much for the yes/no binary. There’s always a way to make things happen, so long as you can assess what the core immovable dimensions are and what areas are more flexible. I know my own capacity and try to say “yes” to as much as possible, even if that means several elements of a project but not a process in its entirety. I also have zero interest in attempting things alone. Everything I mentioned being excited about? They’re all projects with amazing teams of people behind them. None of these are creations centered on an individual, even if an idea starts with one–every project grows toward building community.

How do you balance your “yes” energy? Do you pick things to say “no” to? Or do you need ways to turn off or tune out entirely? Does saying “yes” ever tire you out?

Carnes: I am loving this convo, because the heart of creativity is sustaining collaborating energy, which is a dynamic, kinetic experience. I don’t think marathon is the right metaphor, because each project has surprises and hurdles and discoveries. Maybe a marathon does, too? I hate jogging. Anyway, what I love about new projects is that they don’t move in a straight line. There are multitudes of mini goals and every time we get to one, I wanna throw confetti, and often do. My go-to word is “Yay!” — like I’m five, but no really. We have to celebrate! The process is so important, and I just think that the process should be fun. Hard work, focused, all that – but fun. I believe when we’re laughing, we’re learning. We’re still open. That’s a guiding principle for me.

And in terms of choosing what to take on, where to put my time and energy, I’ll try anything, I’m game for whatever. And if I find, in my debrief, that something took more out of me than it put in, I might reassess next time. It’s often surprising what tends to be the most deeply meaningful, in terms of experiences in the art form. The theme is relationships, though, more than ‘collaborators’ – the feeling of trust, humor, goofiness, the esprit de corps that can and does form, right here at home, or thousands of miles away. It’s kind of amazing. And I am with you on team work. It helps me to learn new things, and to not feel so much pressure. A great team makes the road smoother and the journey way lighter and more interesting. I gotta be able to crack jokes with people. For me, that’s bedrock.

I love this thing you said, that you have to assess “the core immovable dimensions are and what areas are more flexible” — YES. So true and so wise. That’s the thing, isn’t it? When I’m sizing up a project, I am willing to apply myself to it, if I know that there can be flexibility I can accommodate. None of us are in a cave working on just one thing. We’re all spinning 50,000 plates, so to add another one, I have to feel okay about my role in the equation. 

I’ve definitely had the experience of piling too many yeses on top of each other, and though I was still fulfilling all the tasks and commitments to various collaborators, I felt like it was taking its toll. Now, I schedule myself out, booking new projects with a bit more of a nod to the space-time continuum. When I just get tired, I crave alone time, my dogs, walks, naps and TV. And good food. A couple of days in my pajamas watching crap TV and eating well and sleeping, and I’m usually back in business. What about you? How do you restore, after a big push? 

A snapshot from Wibrew’s trip to Puerto Viejo

Wibrew: Unstructured time is the best way for me to find rest. It’s a challenge to make myself not plan anything! Usually that manifests as cooking, listening to podcasts, playing with the dog, working on a puzzle–things that can happen any time, feel like “doing something,” and are minimally demanding. Puzzles especially. I love puzzles. (Winter is referred to as “puzzle season” at my house.)

I’ve instated JOMO days for myself each month. Are you familiar with that term? The Joy Of Missing Out rather than its Fear-based counterpart (FOMO). Restoration is an interesting concept, because even at rest, we’re still working, still creating—or I am, anyhow. Traditionally restful activities can be demanding. I recently turned down an opportunity to attend a production because I can’t watch theatre passively. 

But I have to make time for experiences removed from my artistic life so I have something to make art about. Joy has to exist outside of productivity, so productivity does not become the measure of all things. I have to force myself to do nothing… it’s crazy. I’m such a lucky weirdo and am sure I sound like a complete ass. “I’m so busy doing what I love that I have to take a break from what I love.” Geez. Really, I cannot express how grateful and humbled I am to live this life.

You generate mass amounts of creative content, but you have such an active personal life. Do you have a happy space between your creative life and other lived experiences? How do you feed both of those areas, and how do they inform one another (if at all)?

Carnes: JOMO! Heck yeah – Thanks for introducing me to this magical term! Exactly. I recently had a meeting cancelled, and thought, this is the best feeling in the world, to get this hour back. What will I do with it? (Cut to a montage of me, running through fields of flowers, eating FroYo, dancing to an accordian player on the streets of Monmartre, etc.) I mean, time is a gift. 

I didn’t know you like puzzles, and I find this fascinating, because I loathe them! No, really, I cannot stand them, and probably need to explore the origins of why, for at least five or six years.

RE balancing work and creative life and family and friends, I don’t know. Some days are easier than others, but I’m rooted in anchor points. Our busy family checks in at dinner, almost every night of the week. It’s often quick, but it’s phones-free (actually, our whole house is, a rule we implemented when our kids got phones, and it stuck, and it makes a huge difference… We don’t pull our phones out in the common spaces of our home.) This means that when I come through my front door, I can essentially step back in time, and for my kids, they’ve developed the habits not to focus on phones instead of people or places. For us, it helps with the puzzle of our lives.

In terms of my creative life, I get up freaking early, to write, send submissions, read plays, and do all the professional development tasks that require nurturing. And then I hug my kids and go to work! I am not an examplar of balance, probably. But I can really get shit done!

Last question: Advice for someone, who wants to do the kind of work that you do in theatre? Where to start, and how to sustain, that vision and activity level? And — This is a doozer — How does the way we’re making shifts in theatre practices now, help to define the future? 

Operation Shadowbox’s recent performance of ‘Shakespeare Uncorked’

Wibrew: When deciding where to start anything, I return to my grandfather’s advice:

  1. Make a list.
  2. Write it down.
  3. Put numbers on it.

It’s good, practical advice that I rely on daily. As for sustaining vision and activity levels…

A good friend of mine grills me at the start of every project: Why this show, and why now? (Side note: always surround yourself with people who are smarter than you are.) Answering those questions clearly–with creative, personal, and/or professional reasons–forces me to be honest about my motivation and energy for the project. Similarly, my artistic pursuits are underscored by a need to use this medium in this moment toward a better, kinder, more empathetic world. That sense of greater purpose on any scale is necessary to maintain my energetic stride.

Theatre on the whole is redefining itself with similar questions, namely: Whose stories are we telling? Why these stories, why now? And our willingness to really examine those questions helps to keep theatre not only relevant but a vital component of culture. This isn’t to say that we shouldn’t produce “classics” or that every project needs to be a political piece (though it’s arguable that all art is political… but that’s a conversation for another day). We need pieces that simply spark joy, especially when times are dark! We need pieces that shout from the rooftops: beauty exists in everything, love is real, life is worthwhile, you are important! And we need to make sure the voices we amplify, regardless of genre, are more diverse and representative of humanity’s diverse realities. Theatre is working toward defining the future more collaboratively than ever before. How lucky we are to be alive right now.

I love that you don’t pull your punches when it comes to questions, Rach, and I appreciate your courageous curiosity so much! We have to tackle the big queries, over and over again, within ourselves and with one another. Thanks for everything, co-adventurer.

“Middletown” at Oregon Contemporary Theatre, directed by Tara Wibrew
Tara Wibrew is a theatremaker, Shadowboxer, podcaster, singer, joy-enabler, and do-er. After earning her Masters in Arts Management from the University of Oregon, Tara joined the staff of Oregon Contemporary Theatre, where she currently serves as Associate Producer. She is a founding member of Operation Shadowbox, a cross-disciplinary artistic collective focused on flipping tables and invigorating hearts. Tara is co-host and editor of What The Musical, a podcast for musical theatre nerds and newbies. Select credits include: collaboration on the 36-hour play project 90 Minutes, No Intermission: Volume 1 and Shakespeare Uncorked!; direction of Damascus (West Coast premiere), Treehouse (world premiere), Thom Pain (based on nothing)MiddletownMelancholy Play (#GoTeamAlmond), Vanya and Sonia and Masha and SpikeA Bright New Boise, August: Osage CountyPeter and the Starcatcher, and The Pillowman; and acting roles in The CakeThe FlickShrimp & Gritts: She’s Gone and boomIn her spare time, Tara sings lead for Higher Love Band and Soul Restoration Project. @wrkngbrkfst.

Meet Producer/Audio Describer/Artist/Actor Elene Hadjidaniel

Rachael Carnes: Hi Elene! We first met last year, when you selected my play “Egg in Spoon” for your festival. I remember how heartening it was to finally get a production for this little play, that I felt like I’d submitted so many times, and it had just never landed. Now it’s been published and had multiple productions… So, thank you for the encouragement! Now we have a new show coming up, and I’m excited to see what your team does with my play “A Collective Grouping of Animals” — that I wrote on too little sleep, last summer at the Kennedy Center.

“Egg in Spoon” at Saw it Here First Productions, 2019, directed by Olivia Munk

Rachael: So… What inspires your creativity?

Elene Hadjidaniel: Everything! Even what people would consider as simple every day activities – inspiration can come from that.

Along with producing an annual show via “Saw It Here First Productions” and doing my freelancing work, when I can I create my own artwork, recycled material gifts & jewellery, do editing/post production work and have recently started writing.

For example, one day my partner Ian was making a shopping list by using Amazon’s Echo Dot with “Alexa”. I was listening and just thought how it might be the case that “Alexa” may be the only voice that some people hear on a daily basis. It then got me thinking about how some elderly people might interact with “Alexa” – they may find it helps them or it may be confusing, even frightening to hear a voice but not see a face. It then it led me onto an idea about an elderly person who suffers from dementia having a conversation with “Alexa” – and that’s where my short play “All That Is Gold Cannot Stay” came from.

Another example, in terms of my art work, I met up with a lovely friend of mine who had her long hair loosely braided to one side and draped over the front of her shoulder. I absolutely loved the shape and pattern of it – so I decided to draw it! I also remember talking to a friend about studying Shakespeare’s “The Tempest” for our Theatre Studies A Level course (exams taken in the last years of high school). I was still thinking about it afterwards and came up with another design which represents Prospero’s staff. This led onto other Shakespeare related designs which I was then lucky to have sold as cards at the Royal Shakespeare Company Theatre in Stratford Upon Avon, the Samuel French Bookshop in London (as it was) and even other designs related to the Bronte sisters’ novels at the Bronte Parsonage Museum in Yorkshire.

Another source of inspiration are people who have the drive, enthusiasm and passion to go for what they want to do and the people who help them get there. When you don’t have those elements, it’s such a struggle to do anything. I think this is the same for everyone, not just creatives. Projects like putting on a show will certainly have bumps along the way – but other creatives I know kept going and produced such great performances and still do! I can only hope that I can do the same. Also supporting my friends in the entertainment industry and being immensely proud of what they do inspires me and also helped lead to the idea of putting on a show.

So inspiration can come from everywhere – even surprisingly when you’re not actively looking for it!

Tell me about your work with “Saw It Here First Productions”. Where did the idea come from

The idea actually came from scratch nights which were taking place in London, where brand new short plays were being performed. I didn’t even realise that scratch nights existed until I performed in a play by the lovely Laura Shoebottom about 3 years ago . This made me realise that I was missing the stage and I thought that a scratch night project would be a perfect opportunity to do something theatre related again. I spoke to my partner Ian Black (who is an actor) and others in the entertainment industry to see if they would be interested in taking part and they were keen. I also used social media to drum up interest in the project and thought that I would only hear from maybe around 10 people…. but I actually heard from over 100, so I thought that this was a project that could work! I wanted to make our company different though, so as well as giving creatives the opportunity to have their work showcased, I decided that we would donate the money from our ticket sales to local charities. Playwrights have their work staged; directors, actors and stage crew get to do what they love doing; the public get to see a show and money goes to charity – it’s a win-win situation for everybody! 

Saw it Here First productions 2019

Are there any surprises — or setbacks — that have fueled you to continue to build it?

At the time when I was contemplating starting SIHFP, I was actually in the middle of being made redundant from my full-time job. It was a pretty lengthy, uncertain and stressful process and I had gone through this experience before. It certainly was not pleasant on both occasions, so I really wanted to focus on something else rather than having the fact of not having a job soon playing on my mind and keeping me awake at night. During my first redundancy period and even after it, it was a pretty bleak time and not having something to focus on made me slip into a bit of a downward spiral. But the second time around, though that too was a challenging time, this project kept me going and gave me something to aim towards. Also, the knowledge that so many talented and professional creatives are involved in the show (we’re talking at least 50 of them) and the thought that charities rely on us to raise as much money as possible gives me the drive to make this show happen. The charities we have supported so far have had a personal link to me, so gave me the extra motivation to make sure this show takes place.

A lovely surprise which has been a great boost to keep our project going was that a short play called “Scab” by Luke Stapleton had its debut at our show last year. After Luke saw it performed (many thanks to Steve Blacker and Diana Vucane!) it encouraged him to make the 15 minute play into an hour long play…and it’s being staged at the London Vaults Festival this year! To know that we helped a writer see their work performed and to encourage them to continue with it and send it out into the big wide world of entertainment is a huge boost and we feel very privileged that their work was seen here first……and now you can see why we chose the name “Saw It Here First Productions”! I hope that us staging these plays gives others encouragement and motivation; whether it be playwrights submitting their plays elsewhere or continuing to write; directors and actors to continue with what they love doing and to even collaborate (which did actually happen with a number of our members from last year’s show!); and also to the public to see something new and different via us and supporting some wonderful charities at the same time.

Saw it Here First Productions 2019

What do you do for a living, and does that play into your artistic life?

My “survival job” is as an Audio Describer. Audio Description is a narrative style voice-over that describes the visual elements of a programme or film for the blind and partially sighted community. So a voice-over is used between dialogue to describe what’s happening in the scenes. It can be used for TV, film (cinema and DVD) and for the stage.

In a way, this work has played a part in my artistic life even more so recently, as I use my words and my voice (which will be pre-recorded for one of the characters) in my very first written play “All That Is Gold Does Not Stay”, as mentioned earlier. It will be staged at our show coming up in March at the Theatro Technis theatre in London. I’m very excited to see how director Christine Mears and her chosen actor will decide to perform it!

Art by Elene.

What’s the earliest memory you have of the arts? Music, dance, theatre, visual art — Whatever!

I would say the earliest memory I have is a show in the late 80s in a very small puppet theatre called “The Little Angel Theatre”, which is based in Islington in North London, and specialises in puppetry shows for children. I remember seeing “Amahl and the Night Visitors” there. I was fascinated by these life-size puppets, their movements, their songs, and the fact that you could actually tell a story on a stage. In 1991, my family and I moved to Cyprus and lived there for about 6 years. Whenever we came back to England to visit family, we would always try to catch a show; and every time I returned, my love for theatre grew even more. While we lived in Cyprus, theatre performances were scarce. But I do remember British touring companies visiting every summer and they would put on a show – usually a Shakespeare play. Though my understanding of Shakespearean language was limited, I still always looked forward to it. We moved back to England when I was 14 years old – and I knew that I was always happy whenever I went to the theatre.

Tiny Elene and family.

Looking to 2020, what do you feel most excited about creatively?

I am very excited about our next show coming up called “From Script to Stage”, which will be showcasing 8 brand new short plays in March – each night will be different! We have a wonderful group of playwrights (including your lovely self, Rachael!), directors and actors whose work will be featured over these two evenings, along with our fabulous technician Xander. Money from our ticket sales will be going towards a fantastic charity called “The Moira Fund”, who help those traumatically bereaved by the manslaughter/murder of a loved one (e.g help with funeral costs, counselling, respite and needs which may arise and for which there is no current provision.) This is run by Beatrice and Hu Jones who set up the charity in memory of their daughter Moira who was murdered in 2008. As well as for Moira, we are dedicating this show to a friend and work colleague of mine called Cathy, who was murdered in 2017. The fact that we are all going to come together to put on a show for such a wonderful cause is truly incredible and I am truly touched and humbled by everyone donating their time and talent towards this.

How do you balance creative life and all of the rest of it? 

Haha! – this is a hard question to answer…as I don’t really have an answer! I don’t even know if I’m getting the balancing right myself. It’s been just over a year since starting the freelancing life and I’m still trying to get used to it. I think I’m getting there, but one thing I believe it has taught me is that giving your every hour of the day to earning a living…is not living. You need to make some time to do the things you enjoy – though this is a lot easier said than done. I’m still guilty of not doing this and find that I still work late into the evenings and that work can overtake things. So, in all honesty, I don’t know if I’ve got my balancing act in shape – but I do try!

Jewelry by Elene.

What’s it like making art in your community? Tell us about London! 

To me, London is a bit like a kaleidoscope. At every turn, you get such a fascinating range of patterns, colours and shapes. So through art, we have such a mix of creatives, talents, cultures and backgrounds…and we are extremely fortunate to be able to have the freedom to express these, be it through plays, dance, music, poetry, paintings, sculptures etc. There is certainly a lot to see in London which can give creative ideas and inspiration. Though a lot of art is underfunded and it seems that it is becoming a diminished subject in the educational system, it’s refreshing and reassuring that people are determined to keep it going and share with the public. Even people who cover a range of talents and backgrounds come together to make plays, films and other forms of artwork with whatever they have to hand. For example, every couple of months, my partner Ian and I meet up with a wonderful group of friends who each have their own unique skills – we have a cinematographer, a film director, an investment operations manager, a mask and puppet maker, a potter, a music composer, a photographer, a sound designer/producer, a copy-editor/proofreader, an archaeologist by day and milliner the rest of the time (I kid you not!), a massage therapist, Audio Describers, actors and writers! There have been a few times when we have got together to make some short films, which have been accepted into film festivals – and a number of these fabulous people have also helped with our show too! So it’s a fantastic example of how people can collaborate and how art can be made in London with such diversity, freedom and combining of ideas and inspiration – you’ve just to get out there and explore it!

Teatro Technis, London, home of “Saw it Here First Productions”

How ‘bout your family? Who’s in your inner circle, and how do they support your work?

There are 5 main members of my family/inner circle….

– My father Christakis: a retired (then not retired – then might retire – then “I’m still thinking about it”) electrician from Cyprus.

– My mother Briony: a retired primary school teacher from Kent, who was also an interior designer. A champion knitter, sewer, card maker, patchwork creator – you name it, she can make it!

– My older sister Youla: a teacher and Head of the Science Department in a secondary school. Singer, beekeeper, globetrotter and awesome maker of Christmas Puddings!

– My partner Ian: Actor, gardener and chef extraordinaire and of course an absolute trooper (i.e he puts up with my worries, my insanity and my mad cat lady moments)

– My cat Theodopolopodopodopodous….Theo for short! Hobbies are: eating, sleeping and answering to calls of nature.

As well as being an actor, Ian also used to run his own touring theatre company, so knows how to deal with the administrative, financial and creative side of putting on a show. His advice towards SIHFP’s events has been extremely invaluable and without his support, our events would not happen. With my family, they have attended almost every show I have performed in – even when I had one of my biggest roles as the narrator for “A Story, A Story”…when I was 6 years old! When I tell them about my work for SIHFP, they have been enthusiastic and tell their friends about it, so everyone’s support has also meant the world to me.

Elene and Ian.

What art knocked your socks off recently? Could be a play — Or an album, a movie, an exhibit, a novel, anything! — What made you connect with the art and the artist’s work? 

Ahhhhh – there’s so muuuuch!!! Does it just have to be one thing?!……Hmmm…….well, something that being an Audio Describer has made me more aware of (and I honestly didn’t think it would)…is paying attention to music and soundtracks in a film/programme. There are some absolute gems I have been introduced to which fit the piece perfectly through its lyrics or melodies. It may even reflect on something I may have been thinking about, or the way I am feeling at that particular moment, or evoke a certain emotion. I remember when I was an offline video/film editor, I absolutely loved editing to music – the satisfaction there is when cutting to a beat or matching a certain motif with a facial expression or a specific motion is indescribable.

Some brilliant pieces/bands which come to mind are Wardruna, Greta Van Fleet, Tyler Bates, Hans Zimmer, The Weepies, Alexandre Desplat, Daniel Pemberton, Gustavo Santaolalla, Avi Belleli, Thomas Newman, Evanthia Reboutsika, Lord Huron, Barns Courtney, Perkelt, The Hu………

….I’m sorry, I know you said one, but I just can’t, I really can’t!!! Haha!

Oooooh, there are also so many films and programmes that are amazing to watch too!….but I’ll stop there…

……but I would really recommend – no I’ll stop…

….I will……….

What’s next on the horizon for your creative world?

I would like to get back into my art work, as I’ve been missing it. I do have ideas that I’ve picked up from visiting places and would like to get down to creating more designs. Also we are hoping to stage another weekend show for SIHFP in 2021. We will be doing a playwrights’ call out around May/June time. We ask for scripts that are between 10 -15 minutes long, have a maximum of 4 characters and have minimal effects in terms of set, sound, lighting and music – we would rather the focus be on the words and performances themselves rather than the set and effects……so follow us on our website at www.sawitherefirst.com and on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram @sihfpro and stay tuned!

Any advice for someone just starting out in this art form? 

Be prepared! (Don’t worry, I won’t burst into Scar’s song from “Lion King”) What I mean is start planning early, research early and put the feelers out early. In my opinion, the key is to plan and keep on top of things, as the last thing you want is to lose control of your own show. Also, a lot of people are giving up their time to help put the show together, so always appreciate what they are doing and let them know this, as I feel it’s really important to keep a good relationship with those who are taking part.

How do you relax and unwind?

Doing my artwork is quite therapeutic, as my designs have repetitive patterns, so it’s a good way to unwind. I have also been getting into audio books and when I can, I go for a walk and listen to them. Ones I’ve been enjoying and can recommend are “Parsnips buttered” by Joe Lycett, “From Here to Eternity: Travelling the World to Find the Good Death” and also “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes” by Caitlin Doughty and “Things No One Will Tell Fat Girls” by Jes Baker. Audiobooks seem to help stop my mind from having thoughts buzzing around and they actually help me drift off to sleep at night, as I do have episodes of sleeplessness due to thinking about things and re-evaluating too much!

Art by Elene.

Where can we find your work?

With SIHFP, you can find us on www.sawitherefirst.com and on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram @sihfpro. We hold annual shows (usually at the start of Spring) and raise money for local charities as well as showcase creatives’ short plays and perform ances. This year our weekend show will be on Saturday 7th and Sunday 8th March at the Theatro Technis theatre in Camden, London. The shows start at 7.30pm. (On the Saturday my play “All That Is Gold Does Not Stay” will have its debut!) Tickets can be bought via our website too and money goes towards “The Moira Fund”

In terms of my Audio Description work, I think it depends on which region you live in, but you’ll be able to hear my voice on certain films, DVDs and TV channels. You may hear me every now and then on ITV’s “Endeavour”, “Emmerdale” and other programmes. (You will need to choose the “Audio Description” option on your TV settings) With films at the cinema, it will all depend on which film I have been allocated to work on, but with DVDs, you’ll be able to hear me on Disney’s “Frozen 2” and “Aladdin”, Warner Brother’s “Wonderwoman” and all four Lego Movie films (“The Lego Movie” 1 & 2, “Batman” and “Ninjago”), Pawel Pawlikowski’s “Cold War” and Park Chan-wook’s “The Handmaiden”. (Again, you will need to switch on the Audio Description setting on the DVD’s menu). There are some programmes and films which do not have my voice featured, but I have written the full script for the audio description or have contributed in the writing. Two such films are Netflix’s “Dancing with the Birds” and a full length documentary called “For Sama”, which recently won a BAFTA award and is nominated for an Oscar award.

With my art work and jewellery, you can go to my page on Facebook www.facebook.com/eleneartwork

If your cat could describe you in three words, what would he choose?

I’m. Judging. You”

I realise that this is not describing me, but I have an ongoing joke about Theo – there are certain looks and stares he gives me that just look like he’s judging me. I even take photos (when he lets me!) and add on little quotes that I think he might be saying to me at the time. Goodness knows what goes on inside his cute fuzzy head (and he even has a marking on his back that looks like a big arrow pointing to his head!) but we love him!

Meet actor/director/producer/activists Kimberly Atkinson and Amir Levi

Hi, Amir and Kim! After working with you last year — and on our upcoming show — I thought it would be cool to get to know more about you as creative humans. Thanks for taking time out of pre-production to chat!

So, tell me about We The People and the L.A. theatre scene.

Amir Levi performing as Fox in Rogue Artists Ensemble’s production of “Wood Boy Dog Fish” by Chelsea Sutton at the Garry Marshall Theatre. Photo by Chelsea Sutton.

Amir: It’s scrappy! You really have a community of artists here trying to find one another and being hungry for good and new art. I lived in NYC for several years, and the landscape here is a cleaner (literally) more artistically-fulfilling version of what the small theater scene in NYC used to be before gentrification killed every small theater company, along with the impossible demands of Actors Equity…which we’ve been trying to fight here. There are a lot of amazing companies here doing innovative work and it’s inviting and there’s always a play going on that you can go see, or a theater company looking for writers, etc. It’s just a matter of jumping in and getting involved.

We want to start a revolution. I co-produced an After Orlando night at Sacred Fools, and after that process and seeing all the new faces coming into our space, and people being hungry for relevant art and having their stories told… I felt that After Orlando needed to be just the beginning: There needed to be more done. We The People [WTP] has a goal to not only make sure we’re reaching out to different communities to see if our prompts will inspire them to write for us, but also to bring more diverse faces and voices to our theatre community.

I’m tired of seeing cis het white men be the only ones on stage or having their voices heard. Some theater companies have been great about working hard for representation…while some have not. We of course want to bring more diverse voices to our home base of Sacred Fools, but our eventual broader goal for We The People is that other theater companies throughout the country will start chapters there. We want dialogue and we want theater to make the impact it has the potential to make. We had the opportunity a couple of summers ago through Celebration theatre to teach teenagers through the LGBT Center. We worked with them to create their own We The People style show, and I think having more of those opportunities in giving blossoming and hurting voices more tools to express themselves could really have a ripple effect on their communities. I’m rambling here, but basically I want us to be a virus of revolutionary dialogue and art.

Kim: The landscape is varied and dense. There IS theater in LA—that’s not an oxymoron. The community is positive, supportive, proactive, determined, and extremely talented in my experience. I’ve performed all over the states but Sacred Fools has given me the most amazing opportunities to create, perform, produce, and administrate. It’s been my artistic home in many ways. And while much of my time is spent working with Sacred Fools I’ve been very fortunate to work with writers and artists from all over Los Angeles and the country, chiefly through WTP.

Andrea Nyguen in “Latent Rapists” by Carene Rose Merkertichyan. Photo by David Haverty.

What inspires your individual creativity?

Amir: Pain? Ha. It varies. As a performer, I love roles I can sink my teeth into and that work me over completely physically and emotionally. I love shows where I am utterly exhausted at the end of them. I also love being a part of a great story. Really smart and captivating storytelling inspires me. I’m also completely taken with moments or scenes that I’ll watch where a performance is so nuanced and brimming, that it’ll give me goose bumps. I’ve been bingeing The Morning Show, and there are so many amazing moments and relationships on that show, AND it’s relevant, I feel like I’m learning so much I’ll be excited to unpack at some point.

Kim: The world around me. More specifically: Pain and love. Pretty much anything that makes me hurt or burst with joy. In 2015 I became mother to the most extraordinary being who happens to be female and mixed race, my daughter. Her presence in my life as a privileged white woman completely changed my perspective and consequently my artistic lens. As it should. So much of my life now is dedicated to trying to give voice to the underrepresented through arts and education. Personally, I’m a sensitive marshmallow who is drawn to dark stories—never met a paperback thriller I didn’t like and seriously have a ‘problem’ with true crime podcasts. I’ve been a professional actor for over 20 years so I’m somewhat geared to jump into story and feeling without pause. And as a theatre arts professor and acting coach, I find helping artists recreate the human condition and add the element of service to their artistic journey is infinitely challenging and indescribably inspiring and fulfilling. Currently I’m really motivated to help shift society’s presumptions and brainwashing regarding women over 40 propagated by pop culture. Go figure. Ugh. Don’t get me started.

Lana Rae Jarvis performs her song “The People in My Mind.” Photo by David Haverty.

These are pretty challenging times. Why do we need to be making art?

Amir: We need an outlet. Art brings people together and allows the frustrations and buzzings around in our head to be put in more tangible forms we can look at and experience together. Art touches people in ways that civilian (non art) interaction does not. In giving people chances to see themselves reflected on stage, on film, etc., we’re giving them an opportunity to process different possibilities or to finally see themselves reflected in a way they couldn’t fully express themselves.

It makes sure that the screaming going on within us is not into some void, and that we are not alone in this horrendous chaos.

Corey Klemow and Marta Portillo in “The Ring” by Diana Burbano. Photo by David Haverty.

How do you work within the limits of time, money, space etc., as producers?

Kim: Frantically. Our production schedule is pretty insane because each show is a curated selection of BRAND NEW, FRESH theatrical scripts based on a prompt we disseminated roughly a month before the show. Fortunately, our producing theater company and its members, Sacred Fools in Hollywood, are huge believers in WTP and what it not only does for the community at large, but what WTP has done for the company itself. We get new volunteers every season wanting to be of service and help us create each show. And we created WTP to be low cost so it wouldn’t have the same risks expensive ongoing productions face—ie cancellation, and, also, in the hopes that its manageable format and cost could eventually be carried on by other theater companies around the country and beyond.

It’s not easy to produce under budget and time constraints like ours, but the purpose isn’t production value related. It’s so much more than that. Artists get to use their talents for a great cause, audience get to donate and be provocatively entertained, and we all get to be part of a conversation that will hopefully bring about change. You can’t put a price on that.

One of our next steps is to create a WTP curriculum and a WTP HOW-TO to pitch to high schools, colleges, and other intimate theaters.

Amir: We are very fortunate that Sacred Fools donates its space, so we don’t have to worry about money. For the last couple of seasons we’ve had a donate-what-you-can model so that any and all proceeds go to the non-profit. This year we’re trying a suggested donation because people seem to value art more when they pay for it, even if it’s a tiny amount. All the actors who have participated know it’s for a fundraiser, so they are generous with their time, and it’s also one of the reasons we try to have as little rehearsals as possible. We value our actors and as working actors ourselves, we know time is limited. Based on the amount of time we can get in the space, we usually rehearse a piece for half-an-hour or an hour, and then do a cue to cue the night of, and there we go! AND in terms of deadlines, we work backwards from the show date. So x amount of days before the show are x amount of hours of rehearsals, which means that x amount of days beforehand we should be completely cast, and then before that plays picked, which means deadline is y and prompt goes out z.

Therese Olson, Sigute Miller, Ruth Silveira, and Cristina Frias in “For Their Own Good” by Therese Olson. Photo by Maryanne Householder.
How do you relax and unwind? What are your self-care goals in 2020?
Amir: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA. I try to take naps with my cats. Muay Thai has been a great outlet for me for the last 7 years or so. I love
going to the movies. I spend time with that friend I mentioned earlier.  As for self-care… perhaps a goal could be to think of self care? Maybe get massages
more frequently? Make more time for reading.

Kim: Writing more. And I love yoga, running, and long baths. So this year, more of all that.

Dogs, cats, or both? (I’m both.)

Amir: While I love both and spend a good amount of time with both (my survival job is as a dogwalker/petsitter, and also I have 2 cats and my roommate’s dog), I do have more of a symbiotic relationship with cats. We get each other.
Kim: One 14-year-old Chihuahua named Angus Whitefoot Young. And our family is thinking about adopting a kitty into the clan. So we may be both soon!!!
Representatives of the Central American Refugee Center in LA talk to a WTP audience. Photo by Ben Rock.

What’s the earliest memory you have of the arts? Music, dance, theatre, visual art — Whatever!

Kim: While I’m sure there has got to be something earlier than sixth grade this stands out: I played Puck in a very, very adapted and abridged version of Midsummer. My mom made my costume, of course, and my teacher/director had to feed me my lines from offstage. Very Shakespearean honestly. I can’t say that that was when I got bit by the performance bug though. Writing is what really propelled me into the arts—Poetry was my first artistic love.

Amir: A blur of memories – listening to cassette compilations of Disney songs, seeing a high school production of Into the Woods and leaving at intermission (only learning about Act 2 several years later), swinging on the swing-set every day after kindergarten and singing mostly songs from the 1982 movie version of Annie (still the best version of Annie there is!), being terrified of the dog creatures from Ghostbusters of the Mork from The Neverending Story. Watching all the VHS tapes of recorded Disney movies, including several Disney shorts.

I’m with you on “Annie”. Looking back on 2019, what do you feel most proud of that We the People accomplished?

Kim: Good lord I can’t remember what I ate for breakfast today…

Amir: It’s tough because no matter how much we accomplish, I will never feel like it’s enough. Every day there seems to be a new catastrophe that makes it feel like we’re all just screaming into the abyss. So perhaps I’m most proud that we’ve kept going. That we’ve brought in new talent and new voices into our worlds, and as a result they’ll introduce us to more talent and voices, and maybe at some point that revolution we so desire will happen.

How ‘bout family and friends? Who’s in your inner circle, and how do they support your work?

Amir: My mom and I are pretty close, and she’s also been a fan of WTP since the beginning. She tries to make it to LA for any performance/show I’m proud of. I also have a few close friends (some I’ve made through WTP!), and I have one friend in particular who’s been my rock and my go-to person. He comes to every one of my shows, and we lean on and support each other. And we also try to make sure life isn’t just about work and throw in some LA outings and escapes every once in a while.

Kim: My husband is an actor, writer, and goal setting coach. He is endless inspiration even when he doesn’t mean to be. And my daughter, while only 4, has an idea of mommy’s work—she understands I have ‘auditions’, ‘rehearsal’, ‘do shows’, have ‘students’ etc. Most importantly she sees me doing what I love and I know that will have a lasting effect.

Kimberly Atkinson performing in Sacred Fools’ production of “A Gulag Mouse” by Arthur Jolly. Photo by Jessica Sherman-Prince

What art knocked your socks off recently? Could be a play — Or an album, a movie, an exhibit, a novel, anything! — What made you connect with the art and the artist’s work?

Amir: Madonna – the Madame X album and tour. She’s always been my hero and an inspiration to me in the sense that she’s always trying something new and never ‘settling’ on what has worked for her in the past. Her work continues to stay relevant, and with this new album, she’s back in the activist/shock you into reality arena, making you pay attention to the disenfranchised and violence happening daily, as well as also finding a way to inspire you to action. I had the fortune of seeing this tour twice – once because I won the ticket lottery, and once because a friend gifted me floor seats.  There’s an amazing marriage/synchronicity between the amazing art and choreography and visuals you are experiencing, as well as the messages coming across. She pushes herself beyond her limits because she believes in what she’s doing and saying, and she does that because she takes in the world around her. I could go on for paragraphs and verses on how much she’s moved and inspired me, and continues to do so.

Kim: Billy Eillish is killing me right now!!!! Her music reminds me of the dark femininity I personally feel and write about.

What’s next on the horizon? Tell me about the performance that’s upcoming later this month. 

Kim: The January show will actually be our season opener. And for that reason we will be staging, with full tech and costume, some of our favorite pieces of the last two seasons. See, our shows are usually staged readings but we thought we’d take it up a notch with our first show of 2020. And we are benefitting an amazing organization called Integrated Schools.

Amir: For me, outside of WTP, I’m performing in a workshop of Cowboy Elektra at the Getty Villa with a theater company that I love playing with, and being an Associate Member of – Rogue Artists Ensemble.  After that… who knows *starts feverishly sweating at the thought of nothing past January*

As for this January show, it’s the kick-off to our 3rd season!!! So we’re doing something a little outside the usual format, in that we’ve picked pieces that we’ve already done that have really stayed with us, and are fully staging them, and the actors will be fully memorized! I wouldn’t call this a Best Of because  we’ve been moved by every piece we’ve picked for the last 2 seasons, but more of a… Holy Shit, this Piece is Still Relevant and Even More Relevant Today, kind of night. After that, we go back to the usual staged reading format. Only this season will be once a month instead of every other month, so get ready for those deadlines, folx!

An ensemble of We The People artistic activists. Photo by David Haverty.

Any advice for someone writing plays for your audience?

Kim: Don’t make Trump a character. We will not put his semblance on our stage. Otherwise, have fun and enjoy the ride.

Amir: Why now? How relevant is the play you wanna present? Also…even though you have a message, assume your audience is intelligent, and don’t hit them over the head with it. They’ll get it.

In Los Angeles?

Catch Foolish Thursdays: We the People
At 8:00pm Thursday January 23
At the Broadwater Theatre, 6320 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90038, created, curated & directed by Kimberly Atkinson & Amir Levi

This theatre action is a curated staged reading series of new works theatrically exploring – sometimes loudly, sometimes quietly, and everything in between – the social and political concerns facing our country today. WE THE PEOPLE: Where artists and audiences come together to Resist, Persist, and Express It. To find hope, unity, and to take action. Every other month, artists will receive a prompt and a deadline. The 3-5 minute pieces will then be curated into a night of theatre. Tickets are donate-what-you-can, and all proceeds will go to a related non-profit.

Can’t get to L.A.? Read my play “Forcefully Denied” on New Play Exchange.

More about Amir & Kim:

Amir Levi is a non-binary performer and activist based in LA. TV: Fresh Off the Boat, Speechless, Brooklyn 99, New Girl, The Middle, Casual, Transparent, Game Shakers, 2 Broke Girls. LA theater credits include Miss Lilly Gets Boned (Rogue Machine Theatre), Come Back! (Sacred Fools/Hollywood Fringe), Wood Boy Dog Fish (Rogue Artists Ensemble & Garry Marshall Theatre), Kaidan Project: Walls Grow Thin (Rogue Artists Ensemble), Amir Levi: The Unforgiven (Rockwell Table & Stage), Old Man in a Big Car (Fanatic Salon, starring Paul Dooley, directed by Dan Castellaneta), Craftsman (Lightning Rod Theater), Something Truly Monstrous (the blank), Clown Bar (Pasadena Playhouse Red, White & Bluezz), The Behavior of Broadus (Sacred Fools & Burglars of Hamm), Absolutely Filthy (Sacred Fools), The Phantom Tollbooth (MainStreet Theatre), Robin Hood (South Coast Rep.), The Chrome Warrior (LyricHyperion), Male Matriarch (Long Beach Playhouse), Balm in Gilead (Coeurage), Four Clowns (South Coast Rep, etc.), Last Days of Judas Iscariot (Urban Theatre Movement). New York: Four Clowns (La MaMa), Male Matriarch (FringeNYC 2011), Te Busco (45Bleecker), Age of Pie (Atlantic Theater Conservatory), Turning (Working Man’s Clothes), several performances as a dancer with companies Ann & Alexx Make Dances, Philippa Kaye Company, and Amir’s company, The Poisonous Ladies. Film: Head-Tie, Courting Chaos, Special Needs. Amir is represented by Smith & Hervey/Grimes, and Debra Manners Talent. theamirlevi.com. IG: @theamirlevi. Twitter: @lunifiedmaggs. Facebook: facebook.com/theamirlevi

Kimberly Atkinson is a professional actress, director, and educator based in Los Angeles with over 20 years and counting of stage, film/TV, commercial, and voice over experience. She recently appeared on Shonda Rimes’ For the People and Eva Langorias’ Grand Hotel. Other television credits include Criminal Minds, True Blood, and NCIS to name a few, VO campaigns with FOX, the NFL, TNT, and TBS, and years of national commercials. Kimberly is a 15 year member of the award winning Sacred Fools Theater Co. in Hollywood. Favorite ‘Foolish’ roles include Masha in A Gulag Mouse, Rachael/Pris in Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep and Gertrude in Hamlet Shut Up (LA, NYC), for which she earned LA Weekly Award nominations. In addition to her work as an actor, director, and producer for Sacred Fools, Kimberly is also the founder and coordinator of the Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee. Kimberly is a private acting coach and professor of acting at College of the Canyons and Azusa Pacific University. She is represented by Danis-Panero-Nist in Beverly Hills. Please visit www.KIMBERLYATKINSON.com for more. IG&FB: @thekimberlyatkinson

Meet historian, writer and educator, Sarah Abrevaya Stein!

Rachael Carnes & Sarah Abrevaya Stein talk growing up in Eugene, OR and the down and dirty of writing creatively

Sarah Stein:  Rachael, so good to be in conversation with you!  We both grew up in Eugene, OR back in the day. I remember it as a bit of a hairy free-for-all, not far from the Rajneeshpuram (Wasco Country, OR), or the temporary home of the religious, milinerium, UFO cult Heaven’s Gate (Waldport, OR), and also the place where–if memory serves–more people on the FBI’s Most Wanted List were found living under adopted aliases (and, no doubt, buying feta in bulk from Kiva Market) than any other location in the country. (The numbers were thrown off by the preponderance of Weathermen, but the point remains).  We both grew up in bookish families, went to public schools in a city that had no private school options, spent a lot of time outdoors, and moved ourselves around by bike, quite freely. All told, I think this made Eugene a powerful nursery for original thinking and creative thinkers. How do you understand the relationship between the place you grew up (and still live in today), and the playwright you’ve become?

Rachael Carnes: Locality is such an interesting question. Growing up in Eugene, I wanted to leave for college and beyond, skipping first to Portland, then onto Seattle, then taking the plunge and packing all our earthly belongings (and a border collie, and two cats) into a moving truck, and moving to NYC, with no jobs and no prospects. It’s good to do that kind of thing when you can.

Still, when our daughter was smallish – almost two? – the city became a little less charming and a lot more expensive. We loved our friends there, and our work, but the dulcet life of Eugene won out, and we moved back home. It’s bonkers that we’ve been here long enough that now our daughter is a High School senior who cannot wait to leave Eugene, preferably to head back to NYC for college! Haha. Between her, and our 8th-grade son, this has been, and I quote, “A great place to raise a family.” — And it is. But even though we’ve lived here for 15 years now, there’s a part of me that wishes for something bigger, more art, more culture, more museums, theatre, dance, more stuff to do. I don’t like sports, and this is a sports town. So, the writing scratches that itch, because through the research, the writing, the revisions, I am fully-involved in a brand-new world. It’s 1000-percent more engaging than reading a novel, or any of the transporting activities I enjoyed before playwriting. When I’m working creatively, I feel better. And when a play gains traction, a production in a new city, that equates to a new relationship that I can foster and develop. That’s fun – Through writing, I’ve met and worked with people, literally, all over the world. In terms of our shared experiences, your description of a childhood here is perfect, I don’t know that what we grew up with quite exists anymore. This community feels a little more split, like the hippie culture is fading, replaced by nicer malls and better restaurants. I like that change, but it’s also a little sad. Eugene used to feel weirder, for sure. Still, when I think about my upbringing here, I do think back to the many adults just doing their own weird thing: Music, visual art, dance, improv, writing novels, making art. I probably took it for granted, but everyone was dancing to their own drummer. So, I guess, now I am, too. 

Why do you think certain communities tend to encourage creative thinking? And can it be encouraged anywhere? What kills it? 

SS: Interesting questions.  I think the creative spirit can grow anywhere, but I also think certain communities foster it–and others seek to tamp it down.  There’s a Happiness Index: maybe there should be a Soul Killing Index too, so people can strategically avoid places that breed conformism. 

One of the things I think Eugene offered me, and perhaps still does offers kids today despite the gentrification, is the freedom to chart one’s own path.  Granted, everyone always (always!) thought I was FROM somewhere else growing up (read: New York Jew, though you’re more New York than me!) but the wild wooliness of 1970s and 1980s Eugene impacted itself deep within me.

You write “When I’m working creatively, I feel better.”  I share that sentiment entirely. Creative work energizes me, makes me want to return to my desk day after day.  (Though needless to say, not all work days are good work days.) Sometimes folks have a sense that historians like me are laboring to tell the truth (ugh!) but of course it’s entirely a creative enterprise; all about telling effective stories, even if stories rooted in historical realities. 

I’m curious why you are drawn, in work after work, to historically informed stories.  How do you understand your characters’ relationship to the past and to historical legacies?  

RC: I share your interest in storytelling. I get obsessed with our current moment, by looking to the past, and that focus can take me all over the map, from Georgian England (My play “The Perfect Wife”) to Oregon’s exclusionary laws and Klan presence in the 1920’s (“Yoncalla”) to the institutionalization of mothering (“Practice House”) to 8th-century Vikings with Smartphones (“Fumblewinter”) — I just enjoy crawling into a new era and looking around. Did you know that Vikings invented meetings? That’s just a fun-fact that led me to explore our precarious environmental situation through the lens of the absurd. That was one of my first plays, and it got me to the Inge Festival, in 2018. I kept looking around, thinking, “How can I be here?” 

To your question about characters, and their connection to their time and place, people are pretty transparent, with only about four basic emotions: Fear, anger, sadness, fatigue. I guess people love, too, but really, love is just living with someone else’s foibles. The fun of playwriting is plunking people down in these settings: A mountain cabin, a spaceship bound for Mars, the early universe, the future, and letting them walk around and cope with wherever they are. 

I have always enjoyed history, beetling away on whatever trivial layers that interest me. Playwriting is a great space to play with world-building: The textures and colors, the sights and sounds that bring wherever it is that we’re going into the present tense.

Playwrights, and their buddies the dramaturgs, will talk about “the rules of the play” – And defining and adhering to these rules can be simple, or crushingly complex. I’m working on a full-length right now, set in a mountain cabin in the Cascade mountains. It’s summer, and the play only spans a day and a night. Pretty easy to define. That play is about relationships, the conflict that arises among the characters – classic “What I want is opposed to what you want” yadda-yadda. 

But another play that I’m working on has brittle, complicated rules, because it’s a future dystopia, that feels like it’s taking place 100 years ago. That one is cerebral and a giant pain in the butt. Holding fast to the rules — In a disorienting, weird play — Will bake your noodle. 

Tell me about how you define your own path in your work? 

SS:  I’m a peripatetic writer in that I’m always interested in a new place, time, sets of dynamics, and historical characters–I wouldn’t be content stirring and re-stirring the same pot through various projects, as some historians do.  This is incredibly challenging because each time a project begins, you are a student all over again, albeit one with ever more experience.  

I’ve gone from pondering the meaning of corset ads in the late nineteenth century Yiddish press in the Russian Empire (Making Jews Modern, my first book) to learning more about ostrich farming in southern Africa than I ever thought possible (Plumes), and from there to the complex social and legal complex of the French colonial Algerian Sahara (Saharan Jews). I spent some years trying to understand how legal papers mattered to everyday Ottoman women and men as the world of empires was giving way to the modern passport regime and people were moving across borders and continents–carrying, losing, and sometimes falsifying legal documents as they found their way (Extraterritorial Dreams).  My recent book, Family Papers, has me tracing the history of a single family over a century, through six generations, and across the globe, seeking to understand world history from the perspective of individuals and their private lives.  In short, I’m always on the move, and therefore always obliged to be learning more (more meticulous historical details, more broadly arching stories, more about human nature) in order to spin a compelling yarn.  I seem to exist well in this dizzying, ever-shifting reality, though it certainly wouldn’t suit everyone.

I love your insight that “people are pretty transparent, with only about four basic emotions: Fear, anger, sadness, fatigue. I guess people love, too, but really, love is just living with someone else’s foibles.”  If I had to add a fifth, it would be yearning. I find that so many of the private histories I’ve uncovered during my archival dives are propelled by desire–for a better life for oneself or one’s children, for emotional connection or power or money or survival, or by that yen to create artistically or otherwise. They yearn for options, however defined.  

The final thing I’d add is that my path in my work is defined by a mixture of meticulousness and instinct.  I’m a voracious researcher, but it’s not enough simply to gather materials. You have to know when you’ve found something interesting–and you have to be able to tell a story in compelling fashion.  Without those skills, you just end up with a bunch of historical stuff. And all of us already have a lot more stuff than we need.

We converge in our beetling, and in our embrace of imagination;  perhaps the divergence is in the extent to which we’re comfortable residing in narrative potentiality.  I won’t put words in a character’s mouth that were not their own, for example, though I will try to get inside their head and heart through as many creative directions I can possibly imagine.

Can I lob a closing question?  You came to playwriting after first pursuing a lot of other creative avenues, at an age when most folks aren’t taking that many chances. What impact does that have on your writing or vision?

RC: I want to read all your books!

The place where history and playwriting meet is in dramaturgy, and I try to be correct, if/when a piece demands accuracy. For example, I wrote a piece on Sally Hemings, and collaborated with historians at Monticello, to ensure that the play reflected current research. It was the first play that their team had read on the subject, that’s for sure.

And yes, yearning. That’s a great word. And it’s apropos to the energy I have to be a novice, 

being “a student all over again,” as you say. I spent so many years encouraging people to tap into their creativity through arts education, and I was always fascinated by the creative process, and spent many years writing journalistic features about performing and visual artists and arts organizations, highlighting the wondrous work they were doing, and the often bumpy paths to get there. Then one day –  I had an “Aha!” moment.

Today’s dark December morning I’m writing this reminds me that my dad’s death, Dec 27, 2016, marks a kind of transition from a life where I helped other people find the arts, to where I became an artist myself. Losing my dad, physically, was an intense parting, because his mental illness, a lifetime of profound schizophrenia, had kept him from being able to be the loving, present father he probably had wanted to be. I was ten, when he was first institutionalized, and for 35 years, I thought about him and my responsibilities for him, pretty much every day. 

In his last few years, he lived in a small, locked group home, in Eugene. It was a safe environment, clean, cozy, a regular house in a regular neighborhood, with a friendly kitchen and as much dignity as could be afforded to residents. Those visits were hard. My dad didn’t have much language left, and we had hardly any shared memories. But I’d bring photos of my kids to look at, art that they’d made. We’d drink coffee. We’d look out at the birds. 

My dad was creative, when I was a kid. He had a lot of imagination – Probably too much. He had a spark, though, a creativity and drive. When I was a kid, he seemed fearless. 

When my dad died, I felt like I could set down the need to worry. And I started writing. Not about other people, and their hopes and dreams, but plays. Comedies, dramas, histories — Exploring new genres, trying to figure out form, trying to get better at the craft. I’m still doing that. I’ll keep doing that, probably forever. Every play I write gets a little less shitty. 

But being willing to be brand-new at something has given me new energy and opened up the world. I have friends and colleagues everywhere — That’s absolutely the most exciting and rewarding aspect of being a playwright. I care deeply about my community. 

And when I open up a new document and start writing dialogue, jumping into a moment —

I feel alive. 

Thanks for chatting, Sarah! 

Happy New Year. xo 

SS: Yay! The last answer you offer is the very best of the whole conversation. Beautiful, painful, raw. Thanks for this opportunity!

xoxS

Sarah Abrevaya Stein is a historian, writer and educator whose work has reshaped our understanding of Jewish history. Her commitment to research is matched by her love of teaching. At UCLA, she is Professor of History, the Director of the Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies, as well as the Maurice Amado Chair in Sephardic Studies. She is the author or editor of nine books, including Family Papers: a Sephardic Journey Through the Twentieth Century and Plumes: Ostrich Feathers, Jews, and a Lost World of Global Commerce.

Sarah has received many awards including the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature, two National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowships, a Guggenheim Fellowship, two National Jewish Book Awards and the UCLA award for distinguished teaching. 

She and her family live in Santa Monica.

 Sarah’s website

 

Meet directors Elizabeth Helman, Inga Wilson and Carol Dennis!

With two productions running in the same small city, Eugene, OR, I thought it would be fun to feature the three directors, all women, and a bit about their creative process. Not only do these shows have women directors, but they both have women stage managers, lighting designers, costumer designers and box office managers. Pretty cool. Let’s meet the teams, starting with Elizabeth Helman!

Elizabeth Helman

Hi, Liz Helman! What inspires your creativity?

Liz: In short, inspiration is everywhere.

The longer answer about inspiration and creativity is that these are, in many ways, two separate issues. For me, part of working in the arts means I need to live my life in such a way that I am constantly receptive to the world around me and that I have a responsibility to learn whatever I can wherever I can. Inspiration in and of itself, can come from anywhere at any time if I am open to follow it. Making theatre is a combination of telling stories and teaching empathy, so learning different perspectives and how to communicate is invaluable when it comes to reaching an audience. I consume all types of media and the study of history, art, philosophy, politics, religion, literature as a means of increasing my ability to tell different stories through theatre. Creativity itself is an ongoing process that requires dedication and the ability to solve problems. It’s work. It takes focus, time, energy, and a willingness to work through challenges with a playful sense of curiosity. Form forces creativity so it’s actually a lot easier to work on a commissioned project where the parameters are already set (ie. “you will direct this play in this space at this time and you have five dollars to do it” or “you will write a script with four characters about such-and-such historical figure and it opens in two weeks”) – while every project has its challenges, usually when I’m hired to direct a play a lot of the unknowns are already taken care of and I can focus on filling in the rest of the blanks to tell the story. In the cases where a project is more open-ended, I need to be disciplined enough to build the sandbox myself for everyone else to play in.

Tell me about your directorial process tackling the short plays in Bunfight

My process for Bunfight wasn’t that much different than I usually work except that the plays were shorter and new. There was no production history or preconceived ideas about what any of these plays were supposed to be. Because these are all new works, I felt it was my job to try and get into the playwright’s head and communicate their vision of reality in an honest way rather than hyper-conceptualize them as I might do with a Shakespeare play. I start with any play by just reading through the script a few times to discover the story. What is this play really about? And I mean in the simplest of terms. Love. Friendship. Loneliness. Fear. Whatever. And then I build out from there to the more specifics of time, place, sociopolitical realities, gender relationships, etc. For example, at its center, I think that Contrapposto is a play about control.

Both Sandy and Venus want to control the narrative, but in the world of Renaissance Italy, only one of them can. While Sandy is enough of a humanist to appreciate Venus for her role in inspiring artists, he is still very much a part of a world where the idea that men and women could be equal or that women are full-formed and rational human beings is inconceivable. He sees this painting as an honor, but unfortunately by placing her on a pedestal, he dehumanizes her and denies her own agency. While she can be defiant, he still “wins” in the end. At some point in every process, I remind the cast, when it gets down to it for all the rehearsal and bits and business and work, just “tell the fucking story.” That’s how I start every play, asking myself “what’s the fucking story here?” And then working with the cast and designers to just tell the fucking story through rehearsals, trial and error, design, etc. It’s a process. One where I am constantly reevaluating where we are to make sure we haven’t forgotten that essential story.

The Bunfight directors, designers and production team are all women. What is parity, and why does it matter? And what’s it like to collaborate with this team?

By definition “parity” is the condition of being equal. In terms of a theatrical production process, it matters that artists from different backgrounds and identities have equal access and opportunities to collaborate and contribute. The world is a diverse place and theatre companies have a responsibility to reflect this reality in terms of leadership and creative teams if they want to truly explore the human condition. I think the work tends to be more interesting and thoughtful when the team that created it brings different perspectives to the table. The Bunfight team was a delight to work with, but not just because it happened to be an all-female production team. It was because everyone was excited and dedicated to doing good work. Frankly, I think it was a good sign than none of us really noticed until tech week that the production team was all-female. It’s becoming more common to see representation of female and non-binary artists in creative and leadership roles and, thankfully, this wasn’t my first experience working on a (mostly) female team. That said, there is still a long way to go and people in positions of leadership still need to consciously look around the table at the production team and ensure they are hiring artists from diverse backgrounds in the first place.

Inga Wilson

Hey, Inga Wilson! You’re an actor and a director. How does one inform the other? Can you relate this to the rehearsal and development of any of the short plays in Bunfight

Inga: As an actor I like to have space to explore the character within the framework the director provides. So as I director I like to give actors that same space. I believe so much magic happens in the tiny accidents that come up in rehearsal. One example happened in your piece Cornucopia… one actor was trying to get the other actor to hand him a specific piece of the broken table and doubled the line unintentionally. We ended up keeping it because it helped facility the other actor in getting upset and motivating their movement. I believe the happy accidents help create the feeling of “now” that is so exciting in theatre and helps audiences feel like they’re watching something true unfold before their eyes for the first time.

“Cornucopia” at Oregon Contemporary Theatre

How do you balance creative life and all of the rest of it? 

Hmmm… I don’t know. “Work life balance.” How do you do it? I rely heavily on my google calendar and I schedule all of it – work, creative projects, time with family and friends. Working a gig lifestyle, I don’t typically get whole days off, so I try to make the most of whatever down time I can get! 

What’s it like making art in your community? How does a project like Bunfight tell us about where you live? 

“Join the Movement” at Oregon Contemporary Theatre

The theatre community in Eugene is very supportive and because our community is so small, we’re a pretty tight knit group. That closeness really helps in projects like Bunfight that lack tons of prep time, and allows for a kind of short hand in creating relationships on stage. Take your piece Join the Movement – all of the actors had worked together in some capacity before so we were able to focus on other elements besides creating a group of close friends. For most of us, theatre is a tiny piece of all the rest that we’re doing, so it’s clear that folks really want to be there.

Carol Dennis

Hi Carol Dennis! Tell me about Minority Voices Theatre, the Very Little Theatre, and the people in our community that’ve helped to bring At Winter’s Edge to the stage. 

Carol: Minority Voices Theatre (a community outreach project of the Very Little Theatre) was born in January, 2017. Co-founded with my friend, Stan Coleman, MVT has two main goals: to use community members as actors in staged readings of plays that represent marginalized and underrepresented populations; and by doing so, build an audience and a more diverse pool of actors in this very white part of the country, encouraging other theatres in the area to be more representative of the whole community.

The Very Little Theatre is one of the longest continuously running community theatres in the country – currently in its 91st season.

Last year, I proposed the idea of directing a play at VLT in the “holiday” slot that was not just about Christmas (which had been the standard fare in that slot for years), but would instead explore the myriad ways people get through the holiday season. The previous year, I had help to create a new play (Now, I Am Your Neighbor by Nancy Hopps) about the experiences of immigrants living in this area. Interviews were conducted with local immigrants, and a play was woven together using their stories. I proposed using a similar process for this new holiday play, and the idea was accepted. At that point, I contacted you with the basic story (late December – people stranded at an airport) and asked if you’d be interested in writing this new play. You said yes, and MVT commissioned the play.

I started contacting people from the Neighbor project, and other actors I had seen in productions at the VLT, asking each to be in this new play and to lend their life stories to the characters they would play. Soon we had a list of people to interview and the process began.

What’s it been like, to develop a brand-new play? 

Developing At Winter’s Edge was more challenging than expected, maybe because in this project I wore different hats. First, I was the commissioning party (on behalf of MVT). In the six months of writing, we would would meet to review the draft and I would give feedback and make suggestions for changes. I had very specific ideas about the message I wanted the play to send, at the same time, I wanted to give you the creative freedom to write “your” play.

As the director, I worked closely with you for the first two weeks of rehearsals, and you made changes to the script based on what you saw, and on my and the actors’ feedback. As the director, it was exciting to help shape the story, but my work really started the moment you handed off the play and I could fully embrace my vision of the play and bring that to life.

“At Winter’s Edge” at the Very Little Theatre

Your career as a director spans decades. Any advice for someone just starting out in this art form? 

My bible is Harold Clurman’s book On Directing. In it, he talks about finding the spine of the play – the central theme that every storyline and every character revolves around. When the core of the play is solidly defined, it informs all of the moment-to-moment decisions you’ll be making as you guide actors through the play and create the arc of the story. Also, I don’t try to discover what the playwright was trying to say with the work. If we all did that, then every production of a play would be the same. Discover what the play is saying to you, and trust that that message or theme will be universal enough to speak to your audience.

WHO’S WHO?
Elizabeth Helman received her BA in Theatre and English (Creative Writing) at Santa Clara University and earned her MA and Ph.D. in Theatre Arts at University of Oregon in 2006. She is the Theatre Arts Area Coordinator at Oregon State University and teaches courses in history, literature, performance, directing, and playwriting. She has worked as a director, actor, playwright, costume designer and educator in the theatre for nigh upon these many years and makes the most of her Oregon life through long-distance running, cooking, attempts at gardening, and keeping chickens. She shares her adventures with her beloved husband, Matt, and rescue terriers, Wheatley and Emma. She blogs about directing here: My Rad Life and she blogs about directing Shakespeare here: Project Shakespearia

Inga Wilson received a BFA in Theatre Performance from Drake University and went on to study at the O’Neill National Theater Institute and Chautauqua Theater Conservatory. Inga has worked professionally as an actor and director in California, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, and Oregon, as well as, teaching theatre for diverse audiences of all ages. Inga’s LinkedIn

Carol Dennis is the co-founder of Minority Voices Theatre, a director and producer of theatre that creates a sense of belonging. New York City Off-Broadway and National Tours in the 1970s; the Mark Taper Forum, Las Palmas, and Doolittle Theatres in Los Angeles in the 1980s; Eugene, Oregon community theatre for the past 30 years. Minority Voices Theatre

TICKETS!

BUNFIGHT, featuring four short plays by Rachael Carnes and four by Paul Calandrino, and AT WINTER’S EDGE, both continue Thurs-Sun, 12/12-12/15. Tickets at Oregon Contemporary Theatre and The Very Little Theatre.