Monday, April 2, 2012

A Girl Wrote It: Laura Maria Censabella, Playwright



Laura Maria Censabella’s plays have been produced or workshopped by The Philadelphia Festival Theatre for New Plays, The Women's Project & Productions, The Working Theatre, Interact Theatre in L.A., the American Living Room Series at The Ohio, the AthenaWorks Marathon, the Belmont Italian American Playhouse (which commissioned her play Some Girls), the Pacific Resident Theatre, The Festival of Faith and Writing at Calvin College, and Ensemble Studio Theatre, where she is a member and runs the professional Playwrights Unit.  Her one act play Interviewing Miss Davis was produced in 2010 in Ensemble Studio Theatre’s One Act Marathon of Plays.  She is currently working on an EST/Sloan Foundation Commission to write a new science-based, full-length play.  Her children’s musical O’Sullivan Stew, written with composer Frank Cuthbert, was produced in 2010 by Greene Arts Foundation and an abridged version toured the NYC public libraries under the auspices of Urban Stages.  Her new children’s musical commission from Urban Stages The Last Pine Tree on Eagle Mountain, (also written with Frank Cuthbert) will begin touring the NYC libraries in April.

Ms. Censabella has been awarded three grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts: two in playwriting for Abandoned in Queens and Three Italian Women (a/k/a Carla Cooks The War), and The Geri Ashur Award in Screenwriting for her original screenplay Truly MaryTruly Mary was subsequently developed at The New Harmony Project with director Angelo Pizzo and producer Michael London.  She has also been a two-time participant in the O'Neill Playwrights Conference for Abandoned in Queens and Jazz Wives Jazz Lives and has received writing fellowships from Yaddo, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, The New Harmony Project and the O’Neill.  Her short play Posing was nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and The Actual Footage won the Tennessee Chapbook Prize for Drama.  Both plays are published in Poems & Plays (Numbers Five and Seven), as is her play Stones Fall, Birds Fly (Number Sixteen).  Her play Interviewing Miss Davis will be published in the St. Petersburg Review this spring.

Ms. Censabella's teaching experience includes the New School for Drama (current), Sarah Lawrence College, the Actors Studio Drama School, Columbia University's School of the Arts, Columbia College's Undergraduate Writing Program, City University's MFA Writing Program, The Sewanee Writers' Conference, and Summer Literary Seminars in St. Petersburg, Russia.

She has written the short film adaptation Physics for HBO's Women: Breaking the Rules series, and for two years she wrote for daytime serial television, winning two Emmy Awards.  Her half-hour independent film Last Call (directed by Robert Bailey and starring Jude Ciccolella and Dana Dewes) was an official selection in festivals throughout the world, including the Avignon Film Festival, the Other Venice Film Festival, the Hermosa Shorts Film Festival, the Sedona International Film Festival, the Queens International Film Festival, Anthology Film Archives’ New Works Series, Long Island International Film Expo, Cinema City International Film Festival, and the Breckenridge Film Festival where it won the Best Short Drama Award.  It is released by Cinequest on a compilation DVD entitled Second Sight: Cinequest Favorite Short Films, Volume II and is available on Netflix (search: Second Sight, Vol. 2) or for download on Jaman.

She is a member of the Dramatists Guild, the Writers Guild of America, East, and the League of Professional Theatre Women.  She received a degree in Philosophy from Yale University.

  • You are Wide Eyed’s resident playwright this season. How did that come about? Can you tell us a little about it?
I saw Tim Butterfield’s production of This Is My Gun by Dan Bernitt at the New Voices Festival at the New School for Drama and highly admired it.  I felt that he had penetrated the essence of the play, and gotten moving, specific performances from the actors.  He then told me about Wide Eyed Productions and asked if I had any one acts to submit for their upcoming festival.  The Wide Eyed company responded to the pieces I submitted and selected two for A Girl Wrote It.  Tim then spoke to me about the mentorship program for early career playwrights that Wide Eyed runs and asked if I would act as Playwright in Residence for the company to provide another perspective for those playwrights.
  • Our upcoming production of A Girl Wrote It features two of your pieces: Posing and Stones Fall, Birds Fly.  What inspired you to write each of these pieces?
Posing came out of a dream I had where I heard the 19-year-old girl—who is the protagonist of the piece—speaking to me.  She is reminiscent of many of the girls I knew growing up in Queens.  Girls with incredible heart who have big dreams but lack the guidance and support to make those dreams a reality.  Also, girls who have fallen into really bad patterns with men as a way of getting the love and support they so crave.  Tim has told me she reminds him of many of the girls he knew in Arizona, and others have told me that she reminds them of the people they knew where they grew up, so I believe she is an American archetype.

Stones Fall, Birds Fly is inspired by my uncle who grew up on the lower east side and once confessed to me that he believes he is the reincarnation of Leonardo Da Vinci!   For me that’s a metaphor for all of us.  We all long to soar in this world, but gravity is always pulling us back to earth.
  • Stones Fall, Birds Fly was performed as part of the Ensemble Studio Theatre Playwrights Unit March Madness Festival 2008. Do you have any thoughts yet on the previous mounting versus this incarnation of your piece?
That was a script-in-hand workshop.  I’m looking forward to seeing a full production with Curzon Dobell who is an actor who is new to me, but whose work excites me.  I’ve admired Sherri Eden Barber’s work as a director for a number of years now and can’t wait to collaborate with her as well.
  • When did you know that you wanted to be a writer? What made you want to start writing plays?
I was an undergrad at Yale in the Theater Studies department and wanted to be an actor.  However, when I compared myself with some of the talents in my class—David Hyde Pierce, Bronson Pinchot, Ellen McLaughlin, Kate Udall—I realized I didn’t have what it takes.  I was too self-conscious and the school didn’t give training in how to break out of that.  However, we were all required to take a Collaboration Course where we got to write and direct as well.  Suddenly, when I began writing, that self-consciousness fell away and there was no wall between the audience and me.   I felt utterly free to be who I am and express what I need to express without worrying what anyone else thinks.  I also had a range of experience that was different from my average classmate.  I grew up in a lower middle class immigrant environment, which was a new perspective for them.  In addition, I had taken time off from college and had lived in the Bowery at the tail end of the jazz loft scene, when Keith Haring was still chalk painting on the sidewalk and hard core punk rock was beginning.  I lived right down the street from the jazz club the Tin Palace and CBGB’s.  It was a wild time when the only store on Broadway was Canal Jeans, and it opened my eyes to so much in the world.  Not least, my mother and grandmother are war survivors—my grandmother worked with the partisans in Northern Italy during WWII—and they shared many of their stories.  Additionally, as I grew up I was nurtured by my Aunt Marie who was severely disabled and that gave me another perspective on the world.  My mother also suffered from PTSD from the war.  Perhaps all that is more than enough to create a writer out of anyone!  When I became a writer, I vowed that I wanted to give voice to the people I grew up with—people who have no voice.
  • In terms of your creative process, do you have a particular ritual when it comes to writing? If so, can you share it with us?
If I have the time, I love to write a story out as a prose piece first, either a personal essay or a short story.  This allows me to explore the back story and themes first.  Once the back story gets out of my system I can figure out what the present action is and use the themes that I discovered from the prose rendering as my guiding threads.

That’s the ideal situation and I’ve used it for a number of successful pieces.  It’s not always possible to do that though.  For a longer piece, I like to think about it for quite some time and collect notes in a notebook or computer file, whether ideas for scenes, bits of dialogue, research, and/or character detail.  A lot of what I collect ultimately doesn’t wind up in the piece.  At a certain point—and it can take quite a long time—I start to feel a story structure coming on.  This last part, unfortunately, can’t be rushed and lots of times I get impatient and decide to plunge into the story even though I can’t see its broad brushstrokes.  Most of that gets thrown out but those false starts help me see what the play is not, so I’d like to imagine they’re valuable.

Once I have something that I believe has a pulse—and it could be just the initial start of something—I bring it into the Ensemble Studio Theatre’s Playwrights Unit, which is a group that I founded and that I continue to run.  I watch people’s body language to see where they are engaged and that can be just as helpful as any comments that are given.  I also collect the group’s criticisms, and particularly treasure their clarity questions, which tell me where I’ve communicated and where I haven’t.  Generally, the work to be done is all about going deeper, but sometimes it needs a complete restructuring.  If the piece already has a beginning, middle and end, I’ll usually call a director and arrange a private reading with actors and then sort through the Playwrights Units’ comments with the director.  If the piece is just a fragment, I’ll think about which comments seem most right to me and proceed from there.

It’s never a certain process—there’s always groping for the story and its real meaning.  There’s always apprehension about going into uncharted territory, and you have to renew your courage daily to continue to face what you fear most.
  • Who or what has been your biggest influence as a writer? What inspires you to get to the page?
My grandmother who lived through and fought against Fascism during World War II.  She was a great storyteller and had phenomenal adventures that she actually lived.  My father who loved theatre so much as a young teenager growing up in Greenwich Village that he would second act Broadway shows or use the money he saved from numerous jobs (he grew up without a father and was quite poor) to see as many plays as possible.  Although I didn’t see a lot of theatre as I grew up in Brooklyn and Queens (by then it had become too expensive), he and I did watch old movies together.  Although he only had a vocational high school degree, we used to sit together and discuss the story.  He was quite astute as to what wasn’t working.  He had the soul of an artist even if he could never get the training he needed.  He always supported the dreams of my brother and me.  There are so many talented, insightful people in this world who don’t get the chances they deserve.
  • Can you tell us about other projects you are working on right now? 
I’ve done many drafts of a new one act play called Dumb Bunnies about two scholarship coeds at Yale in the 1970s who decide to pose for the very first Women of the Ivy League issue of Playboy.  It’s a 35-minute study of what happens when intelligence and opportunism collide.  I just finished the third draft of a new one act play called Chicky about the night that Chick Corea comes to perform at the famous New Haven music club Toad’s Place and two young Yale lovers (in a multi-racial relationship) decide to rehabilitate a down and out, alcoholic jazz musical genius.  The play is all about getting him to the club to stage his comeback and the truths the young adults discover about themselves along the way.

I am in the middle of production for a 35-minute children’s musical called The Last Pine Tree on Eagle MountainIt was commissioned by Urban Stages’ Outreach and was written with composer/lyricist Frank Cuthbert.  It will tour the New York City public libraries beginning April 4th in honor of Earth Day!

Finally, I have an EST/Sloan Project full length commission to bring science and science-related topics to a wider audience.  My play focuses on the biochemistry of romantic love and currently focuses on an inner city teenager who wanders onto the Columbia University campus, and as a lark, decides to sign up for an experiment in the psychology department.  She winds up changing a professor’s life, and hopefully, he changes hers as well.  We’ll see.

Friday, March 30, 2012

"A Girl Wrote It" Returns!



A Girl Wrote It is back again after its critical success in 2011. This year, Wide Eyed Productions has upped the ante by bringing together some of the most gifted emerging and established female playwrights being produced today.

From first flings and early love to failing bonds, exploration, and erotic courtship, the five stories in this year’s A Girl Wrote It will present comedies and dramas that explore relationships and contemporary issues which press and spark our imaginations.

Performing at the Richmond Shepard Theatre
Manhattan April 19 - May 13, 2012
Thu - Sat at 8:00 pm, Sundays at 3:00 pm



Last Year's Show
 Read up on the great press we gathered for last year's run of A Girl Wrote It! Our hit run of A Girl Wrote It was so well-received, we had no choice but to bring it back to the New York stage with a whole new slate of plays by female playwrights.


We're Wide Eyed
 Wide Eyed will be focusing on the behind-the-scenes aspect of "A Girl Wrote It," all the way up until curtain! Check out the blog here to get info on our authors, directors, news, and more.
 
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Thursday, March 29, 2012

A Girl Wrote It: Liz Magee, Playwright


Liz Magee recently received a BA in Theatre Arts with concentrations in Performance and Writing for the Stage from Marymount Manhattan College. Her short play, If You See Something, Say Something won Manhattan Rep’s Fall One-Act Competition and was a semi-finalist in the Riant Theatre’s Strawberry One-Act Festival. While at Marymount, she was head writer of the sketch group “Comedy Schmomedy,” received the award for ‘Best TV Script’ for her spec script of Modern Family, and was the recipient of the Gold Key for Academic Excellence for Writing for the Stage.
  • Your monologue, Jeans, will be performed as a part of our upcoming production of A Girl Wrote It. Can you tell us about what inspired it?
I wrote this monologue during my last year over at Marymount Manhattan College. To be honest, it was written in a “free write” setting, with no direct intention of it being performed. For this particular project, my professor at the time was strongly encouraging us all to write outside of our natural style - just to see what happens. Writing in this manner is rather discomforting at times, but this particular case has resulted in the discovery of a more intimate, stripped, style that I will continue to explore.
  • When did you know that you wanted to be a writer? What made you want to start writing plays?
Well, I started off as an actor. While in college, I found myself being tortured by the physical and emotional demands of my acting classes. I just wanted to be doing script analysis all day. I eventually had to force myself to ask that ever imposing question - why am I doing this? Why theatre? And over time I realized, it was the storytelling. Using people - actual living, breathing bodies - to tell stories or convey ideas is what excites me. So I figured I should be on the other side of all that and start writing…
  • Who or what has been your biggest influence as a writer? What inspires you to get to the page?
Oh jeeze. There are countless writers/authors who provide influence, from Beckett to Tina Fey, the list is endless. But I will say that most of my friends are very talented performers, and more often than not, I find myself writing pieces for them, or creating characters with them in mind and then finding a story from there.  On the other hand, it is a personal goal of mine to bring in outsiders with my writing. Theatre people will come; they always come. Sometimes I attack a blank page with the intent to entertain or enlighten someone who is specifically not of our theatrical community.
  • In terms of your creative process, do you have a particular ritual when it comes to writing? If so, can you share it with us?
Hm. I guess my ideal writing circumstance would be: at home, in my bed with my cat sleeping on my feet. It’s important that my cat be sleeping on me in some way because I don't have it in me to disturb his slumber,  so I always end up pushing out a few more pages. In all seriousness, I don’t really have a ‘ritual’. I prefer to be home alone with snacks, but I also find that I am able to write beside my boyfriend while he plays his grotesque video games.
  • Your play If You See Something, Say Something won Manhattan Repertory Theatre’s one-act competition last fall, and was seen this March at The Riant Theatre’s Strawberry One-Act Festival. How has working on Jeans compared to that process?
If You See Something, Say Something was developed in a playwright/director/actor workshop; meaning, I wrote the piece specifically for a designated director and group of actors. It was very much a collaborative effort throughout the development of the play and I was able to work with the same director and essentially the same cast with both competitions. Whereas with Jeans, this is taking a piece (not even intended for performance) and working with an actor and director who were in no way a part of the piece’s development. It’s very exciting. Having a piece explored with fresh eyes has already been an invaluable experience as far as how my work is perceived on a first impression basis. I am very fortunate to be working with Kristin Skye Hoffmann and Carly Knight, for they have already provided me with insight about the piece that I had otherwise overlooked.
  • Can you tell us about any other projects you’re working on right now?
Right now I am working on a series of lady plays. These plays will consist of only (or mostly) women, because there is simply is not enough plays of this nature. “The Attendant” is the play I am developing through Wide Eyed’s apprenticeship program. It is an examination of a bathroom attendant’s work shift at a trendy bar in an unspecified city.  Yes, the whole play takes place in a women’s restroom. (Readings of "The Attendant" will be held at the Richmond Shepard Theatre Sunday, April 22nd at 6pm and Friday, May 18 at 6pm!) 

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

A Girl Wrote It: Bekah Brunstetter, Playwright



Bekah Brunstetter’s plays include A Long and Happy Life (upcoming, Naked Angels), Be a Good Little Widow (Ars Nova, Spring 2011), House of Home (Williamstown Theater Festival), Oohrah! (Atlantic Theater, 2009), and Miss Lilly Gets Boned (Finborough Theater 2010, Lark Playwrights Week 2009, Finborough Theater, June 2010). She is a a New York New Voices Fellow through the Lark Play Development Center, member of The Primary Stages Writer’s Group, the Naked Radio writing team. She is an alumni of the Women's Project Playwrights Lab, the Ars Nova Play Group, and the Playwright's Realm.  She is the 2011 Playwright in Residence at the Finborough Theater, London. She is currently working on an EST Sloan commission. BA UNC Chapel Hill; MFA in Dramatic Writing from the New School for Drama. http://www.bekahbrunstetter.com/ 
  • Your one-act, Yes, will be performed as a part of our upcoming production of A Girl Wrote It. Can you tell us about what inspired it? 
I was asked to write a short play for a Valentine’s-y evening of shorts to be performed at a bar, put on by the awesome Counterpoint Theatre. I love writing about relationships, and what lunatics they make us humans. With Yes, I was obsessing over the fact that when humans, or more specifically, me – when I enter a new relationship, I immediately get way ahead of myself and into the future of the relationship, instead of staying present inside of it.
  • When did you know that you wanted to be a writer? What made you want to start writing plays?
I’ve known I was a writer since I was very wee, like 5 or 6. It’s always been how I’ve expressed and identified myself. I started out writing stories and poems, did that through high school – started doing theater in high school, was a REAL bad actor, then wrote my first play first year of college while studying theater at UNC Chapel Hill. I was instantly hooked. It was a much less lonely way to write, and I instantly fell in love with how much plays move and change as you work on them.
  • Who or what has been your biggest influence as a writer? What inspires you to get to the page?
I was definitely inspired by my teachers at The New School – namely Laura Maria Censebella, Pippin Parker, Christopher Shinn and Michael Weller. They were hugely encouraging and challenging during my formative years. Usually a play starts with something that I’m deeply afraid of, or something I read about that I find terrifying. So I guess it oftentimes starts with fear.
  • In terms of your creative process, do you have a particular schedule or ritual when it comes to writing? If so, can you share it with us? 
When I’m writing a first draft, I need to be surrounded by noise. Music, TV, random conversations at a bar. It’s usually at night. I usually have one song that made me want to write the play, and I listen to it over and over and over and over while writing. Later, when I’m rewriting it, this song helps me emotionally re-access the play. When it comes to rewriting, I approach it much more academically and in the daylight.
  • I see on your website that you will write custom monologues for actors. Have any of these custom monologues inspired you to then go on to write a play incorporating that character? 
I haven’t done so yet, but the thought has definitely occurred to me! I LOVE writing these monologues because they’re a very productive form of procrastination for me. I don’t always nail it on the first go, but I really love nothing more than a happy customer.  
  • Can you tell us about other projects you are working on right now? 
Sure! I’m working on a Sloan commission with EST about Global Warming. I’m also rehearsing a play with some incredible high school actors at the Professional Performing School. I’ve recently started working in television, as well – I just finished working on the first season of Underemployed, a show that Craig Wright created for MTV.

(You can also check out Bekah's play Warmth this month as part of The Dorothy Strelsin Fresh Ink Reading Series at Primary Stages.)

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

A Girl Wrote It: Judith Goudsmit, Playwright



Judith Goudsmit holds an MFA in playwriting from the New School for Drama, which she received with a Steinberg scholarship. She has collaborated with Orkater, a prominent Dutch theatre company, on shows that were seen at the New Island festival on Governers Island and at The Parade festival in the Netherlands. Her plays and readings have been produced by The Shop Theatre, The New School for Drama, AENY (Spanish Artists in NY) and the Shelby Company and were performed on site specific locations across the city.
  • Our upcoming production of A Girl Wrote It features two of your monologues: Being Late and Robot. What inspired you to write each of these pieces? Do you see either as being part of a larger piece? 
Being Late was a monologue that I had been wanting to write for a long time. As most of my friends and colleagues know, I’m late to pretty much everything. I’ve missed flights, trains, parties. The strange thing is that I don’t like being late, it’s not a pleasant feeling, and yet I can’t seem to shake it. That was a concept that I wanted to explore. As far as Robot goes, that just came about when I was doing a workshop about theatre and technology and we were forced to think a lot about technology and how it changed our ways of thinking and communicating. All these ‘smart’ objects we have in our lives are slowly but surely taking over certain tasks we used to do with our brains. It’s not so difficult anymore to imagine a world with robots, or programmed clones of ourselves. Both monologues were written as individual pieces, although I can imagine expanding Being Late into a longer play.
  • When did you know that you wanted to be a writer? What made you want to start writing plays?
I always loved reading, and I think that’s where it all sort of started. When I just had email for the first time (strange to think of a world without it now) and I was figuring out its purpose, I started emailing a lot with one of my friends. One day he was upset about something and I wrote him a long elaborate story about a fantasy world where little creatures lived on a monkey’s nose. He wrote me a story back, and our stories became longer and longer and we did this for about a year. I think that was a defining moment, where I experienced both the pleasures of writing, as well as my writing providing some sort of enjoyment and entertainment for someone else. As I went on writing short stories outside of the email realm, they were always sort of theatrical with lots of dialogue and odd characters. The stage felt like the perfect place for those characters and their stories to live.
  • Who or what has been your biggest influence as a writer? What inspires you to get to the page? 
When I just started writing plays I read Albee’s Delicate Balance, which opened my eyes to the sort of plays I wanted to write. The humor and style of his writing spoke to me in a way not many other plays had. I grew up loving movies, so filmmakers like Jean-Luc Godard and Roman Polanski have been influential in terms of style and atmosphere. When I get stuck or down about whatever I’m working on, I’ll read one of Pinter or Carol Churchill’s plays to remind me of how it’s done. Ideas for plays usually come from a feeling I have. A fear or a desire, a confusion, or anger about something. Then I try to encapsulate and extract that feeling and find the story or character that suit it best. That sounds rather mysterious and vague, because it is.
  • In terms of your creative process, do you have a particular schedule or ritual when it comes to writing? If so, can you share it with us? 
I wish I had more of a steady ritual, or process when writing, but unfortunately I’m not as disciplined as I would like to be. It’s always difficult to get started. As soon as I sit down to write I think of twenty other things I should or could be doing. Like clean my bathroom or go to the grocery store to buy a mango. I suppose that could be called a ritual too. But once I actually start writing, it’s like walking a tightrope. You don’t want anyone to distract you, or you might lose it. 
  • You grew up in Amsterdam and were active theatrically in the Netherlands. What was that like as opposed to the theatre scene in New York? Do you miss it? 
The theatre scene is very different in Holland due to the public funding. Theatre artists can experiment a lot more, and try out different things, since they’re not predominantly dependent on ticket sales like in New York. That has also been the source of a lot of debate in the Netherlands recently, because they are cutting a lot of funding. The right wing party’s argument is that the government spends all this money on shows no one is interested in seeing. It’s a fine line, because this funding also creates opportunity for some of the most interesting and talented writers and directors to create their vision without having to worry about the audience. I do miss that at times in New York, where theatre tends to be very realistic, both in form and directing style, mimicking television or film. It’s been very interesting working both in Amsterdam and New York, because I’ve learned different things from both communities.
  • Can you tell us a bit about other projects you are working on right now? 
This summer I will be working with Orkater (A Dutch theater company) and five American actors, whom I met at the New School for Drama, on an interactive show about emigration. It will be part of a prominent Dutch theatre festival, Over t’IJ, and will include a boat ride, a walking tour, and a spectacle in a big warehouse. Besides that I am working on my own play, which is based on something that happened to my cousin last year. I like the combination of doing my own writing project and collaborating with other theatre artists on something. Keeps loneliness and insanity at bay.

    "A Girl Wrote It" opens April 19, 2012


    Wide Eyed Productions
    Presents

    A Girl Wrote It

    An Evening of One Act Plays Written by Women

    April 19th-May 13th 
    Thursday-Saturday: 8pm 
    Sunday Matinee: 3pm

    Richmond Shepard Theatre
    309 E. 26th Street (at 2nd Avenue)
    NYC

    Tickets are $18 ($10 for students/seniors Sunday matinees only)
    To purchase tickets, please visit https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/pr/912627


     * * *

    A Girl Wrote It is back again after its critical success in 2011. This year, Wide Eyed Productions has upped the ante by bringing together some of the most gifted emerging and established female playwrights being produced today.

    From first flings and early love to failing bonds, exploration, and erotic courtship, the five stories in this year’s A Girl Wrote It will present comedies and dramas that explore relationships and contemporary issues which press and spark our imaginations.

    Kicking off their fifth season with new Artistic Director Tim Butterfield at the helm, Wide Eyed Productions looks to establish itself as a new staple of the Off-Broadway scene with risk-taking, relevant theatre that highlights a richly talented and established ensemble of actors, directors, writers, and artists.

    BEING LATE by Judith Goudsmit
    Directed by Kristin Hoffman
    Featuring Liz White

    YES by Bekah Brunstetter
    Directed by Brian Hanscom
    Featuring Andrew Harris and Sarah Cook

    BOLOGNA SANDWICHES by Erin Singleton
    Directed by Kristin Hoffman
    Featuring Amy Lee Pearsall

    PENICILLIN by Deirdre O’Connor
    Directed by Rebecca Hengstenberg
    Featuring Michael Komala and Ali Scaramella

    JEANS by Liz Magee
    Directed by Kristin Hoffman
    Featuring Carly Knight

    EARLY MICHIGAN by Heather Lynn MacDonald
    Directed by Paul Takacs
    Featuring Judy Merrick, Sky Seals, Lisa Mamazza and Patrick Bonck

    ROBOT by Judith Goudsmit
    Directed by Judy Merrick
    Featuring Savvy Clement

    POSING by Laura Maria Censabella
    Directed by Tim Butterfield
    Featuring Nate Faust and Dana Mazzenga

    STONES FALL, BIRDS FLY by Laura Maria Censabella
    Directed by Sherri Barber
    Featuring Curzon Dobell

     
    THOUGHTS ON A GIRL WROTE IT 2011:

    "If you are looking for something refreshingly different, look no further." - The Huffington Post

    "The team at Wide Eyed deserves to be commended for putting together an evening of such out and out quality" - offoffbroadwayworld.com

    "An enlightening evening of theater filled with both hilarity as well as heartbreak" - The NewsGallery

    "The entire acting ensemble deserves high praise for giving all their stories such vibrant life...the most fun we've had in a theater in a long time." - The Happiest Medium

    "All the plays in this program succeed in being wonderfully theatrical" - nytheatre.com

    "Keep your eyes wide open." - Chelsea Now


    For more information, contact Neil Fennell, Communications Chair.

    Friday, March 9, 2012

    POW: Powerhouse Of Women Cabaret and Art Show

    Phenomenal pipes. Original art. Stocked bar. Cheap Drinks. $5000+ in raffle prizes. $10 gets you in the door + 1 signature cocktail. This Sunday, March 11, 7-10pm. Be there.