Meet the 2014-2015 R&D Group! The group was chosen from over 130 applicants and features an unprecedented number of musical projects. This year we are also introducing the newly-created "Alumni Spot," going to Juliana Francis-Kelly, a member of last year's R&D Group. Read below to learn more about this wildly talented group of writers, composers, and directors and their projects!
Andrew Neisler is a Georgia-raised, now Brooklyn-based theatre artist and director.
Recent directing credits include NY Times’ Critics Pick Clown Bar at The Box and
Drama Desk nominated Charlatan at Ars Nova. Other projects include Game Play (Ars
Nova), Byuioo (Pipeline Theatre Company, Gym at Judson), The Gray Man (HERE),
Shoot the Freak (Not Just 3 New Plays, Paradise Factory), Tape (Strasberg Institute),
Folk Wandering (Ars Nova/Joe’s Pub), and Bebe Zahara Benet’s Creature (XL Cabaret).
He is currently developing a new piece, Bull’s Hollow, with frequent collaborators
playwright Jaclyn Backhaus and composer Mike Brun. He has worked on new plays with
Naked Angels, Primary Stages, New York Theatre Workshop, Ars Nova, Smith+Tinker
Writers’ Group, The Lark, and Ensemble Studio Theatre. Andrew is the 2014 Director-
in-Residence at Ars Nova. He is a co-Founder/co-Director of Fresh Ground Pepper
(fgpnyc.com) and a Teaching Artist at Playwrights Horizons Theatre School/NYU.
Jaclyn Backhaus is a Brooklyn-based playwright &
performer hailing from Phoenix, Arizona. She is the resident playwright of
Theater Reconstruction Ensemble. Plays for TRE: SET IN THE LIVING ROOM OF A
SMALL TOWN AMERICAN PLAY, THREE SEAGULLS OR MASHAMASHAMASHA!, and the upcoming
YOU ON THE MOORS NOW (HERE, February 2015). Other recent credits include the
Playwrights Horizons/Clubbed Thumb SuperLab of MEN ON BOATS, THE INCREDIBLE FOX
SISTERS at the 2014 Ice Factory Festival, and SHOOT THE FREAK at (not just) 3
new plays. She frequently collaborates with director Andrew Neisler and
composer Mike Brun on musicals including FOLK WANDERING and BULL’S HOLLOW. Her plays have been developed by or presented
at HERE, WalkerSpace, The New York Performing Arts Library, Clubbed Thumb, Ars
Nova, Joe’s Pub, Naked Angels, and the Bushwick Starr. Jaclyn is one of Clubbed Thumb's inaugural
Falcons and co-founder of Fresh Ground Pepper, an incubation system for new
artistic work. When she is not writing, she works at a wine store. BFA: NYU.
Mike Brun is a composer, arranger, and multi-instrumentalist known for the wide range of his projects. In 2011, he moved to New York City for the music and stayed for the people-watching. Recent theater credits include: Music Director and onstage musician for Mr. Burns at Playwrights Horizons; Music Director and onstage musician for Gameplay at Ars Nova; co-arranger and onstage musician for Old Hats at ACT San Francisco; and onstage musician for The Tempest at ART. Mike is Lead Composer of the musical Folk Wandering, most recently performed at Joe’s Pub in New York. As a composer for theatre, his work has been performed at Ars Nova, Joe’s Pub, Soho Rep, HERE Arts Center, and lots of his friends’ apartments. Brun is one third of the Shaina Taub Trio, as well as a sideman for Jacob Snider and Kate Davis among other acts. He has appeared on such podcasts as Emma Koenig’s Fuck! I’m in my Twenties, and The Civilians’ cabaret series Let Me Ascertain You.
Mike Brun is a composer, arranger, and multi-instrumentalist known for the wide range of his projects. In 2011, he moved to New York City for the music and stayed for the people-watching. Recent theater credits include: Music Director and onstage musician for Mr. Burns at Playwrights Horizons; Music Director and onstage musician for Gameplay at Ars Nova; co-arranger and onstage musician for Old Hats at ACT San Francisco; and onstage musician for The Tempest at ART. Mike is Lead Composer of the musical Folk Wandering, most recently performed at Joe’s Pub in New York. As a composer for theatre, his work has been performed at Ars Nova, Joe’s Pub, Soho Rep, HERE Arts Center, and lots of his friends’ apartments. Brun is one third of the Shaina Taub Trio, as well as a sideman for Jacob Snider and Kate Davis among other acts. He has appeared on such podcasts as Emma Koenig’s Fuck! I’m in my Twenties, and The Civilians’ cabaret series Let Me Ascertain You.
Project Description: Bull’s Hollow: The Four Fathers
by Jaclyn Backhaus, with music by Mike Brun
Attached Director: Andrew Neisler
Bull’s Hollow Part 1: The Four Fathers is the first part of a new trilogy that chronicles
four musicians who are tasked with founding a new society. Themes of class,
religion, history, biology, nationalism, mythmaking, the Titanic, and soggy
musical instruments come together to weave an intimate portrait of what it
takes to survive in the world, when your world is inside a whale.
Caroline
V. McGraw's plays include Ultimate
Beauty Bible, The Bachelors, Tall Skinny Cruel Cruel Boys, The Vaults, Debut
Track One Chord One Verse One (or, The Shed), and The King is Dead. Her work has been produced and developed all
around the country, including the Cherry Lane Theatre by Young Playwrights
Inc., the Abingdon by Highwire Theatre, the Yale Cabaret, Washington Ensemble
Theatre, New Georges, WordBRIDGE Playwrights Laboratory, AracaWorks, New
Georges, The Intiman Theatre Festival/One Coast Collaboration, Naked Angels, Rattlestick
Playwrights Theater, Washington National Opera/The Kennedy Center, Second
Stage, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Studio 42, Page 73, and the Yale School
of Drama, among others. She has been in residence at Portland Center
Stage’s JAW Festival, Wordbridge Playwrights’ Lab, and SPACE on Ryder Farm. Her
feminist pop spectacular …baby no more
times, co-created with Melissa Lusk and Mary Birnbaum, was seen at New
George’s Jam on Toast and Ars Nova’s ANT Fest, and will pop up again in late
2014. She is an alum of the New George’s Jam and Interstate 73. Caroline was
the 2013 Page 73 Playwriting Fellow. Caroline currently
teaches playwriting at Marymount Manhattan College, her alma mater. She is a
graduate of the Playwriting MFA program at the Yale School of Drama, where she
studied under Paula Vogel. A native of Cleveland, Ohio, she lives in Brooklyn.
Project Description: Believeland by
Caroline V. McGraw
“I am looking for a comet on a shelf full of quarters.” So
writes d.a. levy, the unofficial poet laureate of Cleveland, Ohio. More than four
decades later, a playwright named Caroline struggles to
conjure d.a.’s Cleveland—a landscape of promise, disappointment, and mystery. Weaving
interviews and texts with fantasy and metatheatrics, Believeland explores literary inheritance in a city famous for its
river catching on fire.
Donnetta Lavinia Grays is Brooklyn based actor and playwright. Her plays include SAM (2014 Eugene O’Neill Theater Center National Playwrights Conference Semifinalist), THE REVIEW OR HOW TO EAT YOUR OPPOSITION (2013 Eugene O’Neill Theater Center National Playwrights Conference Finalist) THE NEW NORMAL, THE COWBOY IS DYING, THE B FACTOR and ABSENCE OF FAITH and a short story entitled PEACHES WITH KING. She is the inaugural recipient of the Doric Wilson Independent Playwright Award, a member of the Actors Studio Playwright/Directors Unit, a 2013-14 Women’s Project Playwrights Lab Semifinalist and is a terraNova Collective Groundbreakers Playwright group alum. Her work has been produced or developed by [the claque], Naked Angels, Classical Theater of Harlem, Slant TheatervProject, terraNova Collective, Theatre 4 the People, TOSOS and Coyote REP with upcoming work for Pure Theatre Company in Charleston, SC and The Group Lab. Acting credits include Broadway’s IN THE NEXT ROOM OR THE VIBRATOR PLAY and WELL. NY performance credits with Clubbed Thumb, Primary Stages, Ars Nova and The Civilians as an Associate Artist. Regionally she is a 2-time Connecticut Critics Circle Award recipient and Helen Hayes Award nominee. Film/TV credits include WILDCANARIES, THE ENGLISH TEACHER, THE WRESTLER, BLUE BLOODS, THE BLACKLIST, all LAW & ORDERS, MERCY, RUBICON, THE SOPRANOS and A GIFTED MAN. www.donnettagrays.com
Project Description: Laid to Rest by Donnetta Lavinia Grays
The years have past, the outrage has eased, the cameras have left and the verdict
handed down. In a real life encounter, an armchair activist fails to recognize the
woman she so passionately supported online and it alters her definition of true
social engagement.
Tim Rosser and Charlie Sohne have been finalists for the Fred Ebb Award, the Ed Kleban
Award and the Jonathan Larson Grant. Together, they have written: The Boy Who
Danced on Air (2013 NAMT Festival of New Works and 2014 Writers Residency Grant,
2013 Rodgers Award Finalist, 2013 ART/NY and NYTB Workshop, The Lark Play
Development Center’s Monthly Meeting of the Minds), The Profit of Creation (2011
Yale Institute for Musical Theater, one of ten finalists for the O’Neill Music Theater
Conference 2011 and 2012, developed at The Lark and through ASCAP’s 2010 Johnny
Mercer Songwriters Program) and the short musical Political Speeches (The Culture
Project’s IMPACT Series). Their work has been seen in a sold-out 54 Below show, at
Birdland, Cutting Edge Composers at Joe’s Pub and 54 Below, NYTB at the D-Lounge,
NEXT’s Emerging Composers Series, and The Holiday Concert at the Lincoln Center
Library. They were members of the Advanced Class of the BMI Workshop.
Separately, Charlie has developed work at New York Stage and Film, the O’Neill National Music Theater Conference, The Lark and the Cherry Lane Theater – and has had his work sung in concert at Second Stage (DCMTW’s “The Concert”) and through BMI’s Smoker and Showcase. His song “I’m Just Glad You’re Here” (music by David Gaines) was named one of the Top 25 Songs in the Directory of Contemporary Musical Theater Writers.
Tim has music directed the Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS benefit BROADWAY BACKWARDS at the Palace and Al Hirschfeld Theaters. He has played keyboards for ROCKY and THE ADDAMS FAMILY on Broadway and CARRIE at the Lucille Lortel, and he's played rehearsals for A GENTLEMAN'S GUIDE... on Broadway, City Center's ENCORES series and THE BLUE HILL TROUPE.
Alex Keegan’s directing includes Bekah Brunstetter’s Drunk, Kara Lee Corthron’s Mercury Is Perpetually in Retrograde…, and Oscar Wilde’s The Canterville Ghost (Williamstown), Kim Davies’ Miss Authenticity (Stable Cable), Jessica Dickey’s The Amish Project (Circuit Theatre), and new plays with the O’Neill Theater Center YPF, Abingdon Theatre Company, UglyRhino Productions, Writopia Lab Worldwide Plays Festival, Primary Stages ESPA, and Manhattan Theatre Source Estrogenius. Recent assistant directing – Broadway: 24 Hour Plays; Williamstown: A Great Wilderness
(dir. Eric Ting), The Dixon Family Album (dir. Jordan Fein); O’Neill NMTC: The Noteworthy Life of Howard Barnes (dir. Gabriel Barre); La Mama: Burnt Umber (dir. Mia Rovegno). An alum of the Williamstown Theatre Festival Directing Corps and the O’Neill’s National Theater Institute, Alex has worked with Women’s Project, New Dramatists, and The Civilians. She is currently developing a project that explores anxiety disorder and depression in young women, and received her B.A. from Brown University where she studied mental illness’ portrayal in contemporary theatre. *Unattached to a project
Praised as “strikingly original” (NY Times), Kamala Sankaram has received commissions from Beth Morrison Projects, HERE Arts Center, and Anthony Braxton’s Tri-Centric Orchestra, among others. She is the recipient of a Jonathan Larson Award from the American Theater Wing, and has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, MAP Fund, the Foundation for Contemporary Arts, Meet the Composer, and the Asian Women’s Giving Circle, as well as residencies from the MacDowell Colony, the Watermill Center, Con Edison/Exploring the Metropolis, the Hermitage, and the American Lyric Theater’s Composer Librettist Development Program. As a resident artist at HERE Arts Center, Kamala created MIRANDA, a steampunk murder mystery, which was the winner of the New York Innovative Theatre Award for Outstanding Production of a Musical. Her second opera, THUMBPRINT, premiered in the 2014 PROTOTYPE Festival, and was featured on NPR’s Morning Edition, as well as media outlets around the world.
As a performer, Kamala has been hailed as "an impassioned soprano with blazing high notes" (Wall Street Journal). She has performed with and premiered pieces by Anthony Braxton, Beth Morrison Projects, the Philip Glass Ensemble, the Wooster Group, and John Zorn, among others. She is the frontwoman of world music ensemble Bombay Rickey, and appears regularly with Opera on Tap’s New Brew.
In addition to her musical pursuits, Kamala has been a voice actor on Comedy Central’s Superjail and Cartoon Network’s Golden Age, and holds a PhD in Cognitive Psychology from the New School for Social Research.
The Mecca Flats was an infamous apartment complex that existed between the years of 1893 and
1952. Originally built for the Chicago World's Fair to be the most luxurious hotel in the city, it
quickly turned into one of the worst slums after the economy went bust. The Mecca became a
continual source of gossip in the papers as people were murdered in violent love affairs, jazz
musicians and eccentric artists took up residence in the building, and the population swelled to
nearly two thousand (from a max capacity of 400). Inside Mecca Flats, is a song-cycle
chronicling the tenants' shifting social & political dynamic within the building over a 60 year
period.
Separately, Charlie has developed work at New York Stage and Film, the O’Neill National Music Theater Conference, The Lark and the Cherry Lane Theater – and has had his work sung in concert at Second Stage (DCMTW’s “The Concert”) and through BMI’s Smoker and Showcase. His song “I’m Just Glad You’re Here” (music by David Gaines) was named one of the Top 25 Songs in the Directory of Contemporary Musical Theater Writers.
Tim has music directed the Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS benefit BROADWAY BACKWARDS at the Palace and Al Hirschfeld Theaters. He has played keyboards for ROCKY and THE ADDAMS FAMILY on Broadway and CARRIE at the Lucille Lortel, and he's played rehearsals for A GENTLEMAN'S GUIDE... on Broadway, City Center's ENCORES series and THE BLUE HILL TROUPE.
Project Description: For Your Sins
Book/Lyrics – Charlie Sohne
Music – Tim Rosser
A group of prisoners in a Louisiana maximum security penitentiary participate in the production of a passion play. As rehearsals progress and they dive deeper into the story of Jesus Christ, each character must confront past demons and an uncertain future. "For Your Sins" uses song, fantasy, and the passion play itself to explore the system of incarceration in this country and to ask the questions of whether redemption is every truly possible.
A group of prisoners in a Louisiana maximum security penitentiary participate in the production of a passion play. As rehearsals progress and they dive deeper into the story of Jesus Christ, each character must confront past demons and an uncertain future. "For Your Sins" uses song, fantasy, and the passion play itself to explore the system of incarceration in this country and to ask the questions of whether redemption is every truly possible.
(dir. Eric Ting), The Dixon Family Album (dir. Jordan Fein); O’Neill NMTC: The Noteworthy Life of Howard Barnes (dir. Gabriel Barre); La Mama: Burnt Umber (dir. Mia Rovegno). An alum of the Williamstown Theatre Festival Directing Corps and the O’Neill’s National Theater Institute, Alex has worked with Women’s Project, New Dramatists, and The Civilians. She is currently developing a project that explores anxiety disorder and depression in young women, and received her B.A. from Brown University where she studied mental illness’ portrayal in contemporary theatre. *Unattached to a project
Winter Miller is an award-winning playwright and founding
member of 13Playwrights. Her play In Darfur premiered at The Public Theater for a sold-out run, followed by a
standing room only performance at their 1800-seat venue in Central Park, a
first for a play by a woman. She travelled to the Sudan border with
Pulitzer-winning Times columnist
Nicholas Kristof. Full-length plays include: Seed, Paternity, The
Arrival, Amandine, The Penetration Play and Conspicuous and have been produced regionally and in Canada and Uganda.
Winter
has been a fellow here: Sundance Institute, Hedgebrook, Blue Mountain Center,
The Lark, Orchard Project, Voice&Vision and a member of the Cherry Lane
Mentor Project and the Playwrights Center’s Core Writers. Winter has created
theater with youth in war-torn areas of Northern Uganda and Palestine as well
as marginalized populations in New York City. She currently mentors young women
through Girl Be Heard and has worked
with LGBTQ youth via Theatre Askew and underserved youth with Stella Adler
Outreach. Winter teaches playwriting at Primary Stages’ ESPA, teaches theater
criticism to urban high school kids and leads a bi-monthly Weekend Warrior
Writing Intensive.
Winter
is a certified Core Energetics Practitioner working with artists to identify
and release blocks in mind and body to create the freedom and space to write
the story waiting within. She has written for The New York Times, New York Magazine, The Boston Globe and other
publications and was once an NBC Page. MFA Columbia University, BA Smith
College.
Project Description: Untitled Abortion Play by Winter Miller
If there is no question, there is no
art.
What
is the cost of silence?
Who
provided the first abortions? When did abortion become a stigma? When did women
fully lose control over a decision about our own bodies? Will access to legal
abortion vanish? What are the underground and aboveground groups procuring
abortions? How do people really feel about abortion—it is so stigmatized, most
people don’t know which of our closest friends, siblings and parents have had
an abortion but statistics say in the U.S. 1 in 3 women have had an one. For
the providers of abortions, who can they talk to about their work? It’s a
stigmatized and often dangerous profession, many people opt to hide what they
do. The debate over reproductive freedom is nuts; the semantics of language
about when life begins has confounded an entire populace and led to the murder
of doctors and the growth of extremist movements in the United States, of which
the Tea Party is the least overtly violent. Expect a non-linear madhouse of a
play that criss-crosses the time and space continuum of the dead and the
living—whatever that really means.
Let’s
make some art.
Rob Handel is a resident playwright at New Dramatists and
heads the dramatic writing program at Carnegie Mellon University. He was a
founding member of the playwrights’ collective 13P, which won four Obie Awards.
His latest play, A MAZE, has been produced by New York Stage and Film,
Rorschach Theatre (D.C.), and Just Theater/Shotgun Players (Berkeley). Other
productions include Long Wharf, SPF, Target Margin, City Lights (San Jose),
Curious Theatre (Denver), Theater Ninjas (Cleveland), Half Moon (Poughkeepsie),
and 99 Stock (San Francisco). His opera libretti have been produced and
developed by NYU School of Music, Opera on Tap at Barbès, North American New
Opera Workshop, American Lyric Theatre, and Opera Theater of Pittsburgh.
Residencies include The Royal Court Theatre, Donmar Warehouse, The O’Neill
Playwrights Conference, Soho Rep, Portland Center Stage, Todd Mountain Theater
Project, and a 'pataphysics retreat. Honors include the Helen Merrill Award and
the Whitfield Cook Award. MILLICENT SCOWLWORTHY and APHRODISIAC are published
by Samuel French. Rob studied at Williams College and with Paula Vogel at Brown
University. He lives in Pittsburgh with his wife, poet Joy Katz, and their son.
Praised as “strikingly original” (NY Times), Kamala Sankaram has received commissions from Beth Morrison Projects, HERE Arts Center, and Anthony Braxton’s Tri-Centric Orchestra, among others. She is the recipient of a Jonathan Larson Award from the American Theater Wing, and has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, MAP Fund, the Foundation for Contemporary Arts, Meet the Composer, and the Asian Women’s Giving Circle, as well as residencies from the MacDowell Colony, the Watermill Center, Con Edison/Exploring the Metropolis, the Hermitage, and the American Lyric Theater’s Composer Librettist Development Program. As a resident artist at HERE Arts Center, Kamala created MIRANDA, a steampunk murder mystery, which was the winner of the New York Innovative Theatre Award for Outstanding Production of a Musical. Her second opera, THUMBPRINT, premiered in the 2014 PROTOTYPE Festival, and was featured on NPR’s Morning Edition, as well as media outlets around the world.
As a performer, Kamala has been hailed as "an impassioned soprano with blazing high notes" (Wall Street Journal). She has performed with and premiered pieces by Anthony Braxton, Beth Morrison Projects, the Philip Glass Ensemble, the Wooster Group, and John Zorn, among others. She is the frontwoman of world music ensemble Bombay Rickey, and appears regularly with Opera on Tap’s New Brew.
In addition to her musical pursuits, Kamala has been a voice actor on Comedy Central’s Superjail and Cartoon Network’s Golden Age, and holds a PhD in Cognitive Psychology from the New School for Social Research.
Project Description: Private Manning
by Rob Handel / Kamala Sankaram
By clicking this button I agree to the terms and conditions. I agree to let my email be
used to search for personal information about me. I understand that this
information may be used in song lyrics in tonight’s performance. Of all the gin joints
in all the towns in all the world, Chelsea Manning walks into mine.
Ilana
Becker is a NYC based director. She has developed new work at Lark Play
Development Center, Dixon Place, 54 Below, The Flea Theater, TinyRhino, Communal
Spaces: garden plays, Theater for the New City with Piper Theatre, O’Neill
Theater Center’s Young Playwrights Festival and National Theatre Institute,
Disney/ASCAP Musical Theatre Workshop, Samuel French Festival, FringeNYC,
Pittsburgh Fringe, Galapagos Art Space, Hunter College, and NYU’s Dramatic
Writing MFA program. She is developing Argument Sessions, an ongoing
series of immersive events taken from SCOTUS transcripts. Other projects as
co-producer and director include a site-specific production of Waiting for Lefty at the Hartley House; Beer Plays, an evening of craft beers
paired with short plays; and Around the Block, a roaming collection of investigative
short pieces about and performed in New York neighborhoods. Ilana is a member
of Bastard Playground, Lincoln Center Theater Directors Lab, Directors Lab
Chicago, and was the ’11-‘12 Playwrights Horizons Robert Moss Directing
Resident. *Unattached to a project
Described by the New Yorker as “equal parts bohemia and Broadway,” Max Vernon is a
songwriter/performer, playwright, and visual artist based out of New York City. His work has
been performed and developed at places such as Ars Nova, New Dramatists, Two River Theater,
Dixon Place, LaMaMa, Pride Films and Plays, Goodspeed Opera House, and Joe's Pub (Public
Theatre). His music can be heard on the TV-series EastSiders (Logo). This past year he was a
Dramatist Guild Theatre Fellow and an artist in residence at Rhinebeck Writer's Retreat. He also
recently finished his first commission for Disney Creative Entertainment.
His full length pieces include The View UpStairs (NYU-Tisch, Two River Theater, Pride Films
and Plays, 2014 Eugene O'Neill Conference finalist, 2014 Jonathan Larson Grant finalist,
ASCAP musical theatre festival finalist), WIRED (Ars Nova, 2013 NAMT finalist), and Who is
Rhonda Rwanda? He is also the composer for the film musical, State Debate, which won the
best original score award at the 2012 First Run Film Festival.
He hopes to one day dismantle patriarchy and steal yr grandma's sequin blazer. MFA: NYU-
Graduate Musical Theatre Writing Program. www.maxvernon.com
Project Description: The Mecca Flats by Max Vernon
Krista
Knight's work includes PRIMAL PLAY (New Georges, Playwrights Center of MN),
SALAMANDER LEVIATHAN (Joe's Pub, Ars Nova, Fingerlakes Musical Theatre
Festival, Inkwell, KCACTF Musical Theatre Award from the Kennedy Center),
CLEMENTINE AND THE CYBER DUCKS (Ontological Hysteric Incubator, Hangar Theatre,
Inkwell), PHANTOM BAND (The Claque, Walden Theatre, Voice and Vision, Dixon
Place), ANAEROBIC RESPIRATION (Playwrights Center of SF, NYC Fringe
Festival), and UN-HINGED (Wily West, Playhouse Creatures, WordBRIDGE), among
others.
Commissions include The Berkeley
Rep School of Theatre, Case Western Reserve University Biomedical Engineering
Department, The Assembly, Live Girls!, Class Act, SF Friends School, and a new
musical with composer Dave Malloy for YMTC. Krista has been in Residence at La
Napoule Art Foundation, UCROSS, Yaddo, and MacDowell.
BA: Brown University. MA:
Performance Studies from NYU. MFA Playwriting: UC San Diego. Page 73
Playwriting Fellow (2007). Shank Playwriting Fellow at the Vineyard
Theatre (2011-2012). Member of Youngblood and New Georges JAM. Krista
teaches playwriting, screenwriting, and digital storytelling at St. Mary’s
College and SUNY Oswego. www.KristaKnight.com
Project Description: Hotel Apocalypse by Krista Knight.
My
handicap father lives in the San Francisco Airport Hyatt with his Ethiopian
nurse/girlfriend. He can’t afford to live in a hotel but he’s had a theory for
the last 29 years that he is not going to live much longer. The catch is that
he continues to. He lives every day, in his joyous broken body, like he is
going to die tomorrow. At his behest, I am writing a play in which my father is
giving the audience a tour of the hotel on his–and the hotel’s—last night on earth.
In the morning, like Brigadoon, it will take flight with the jets that parallel
it.
Jay Stull is a Brooklyn-based director
and playwright. Recent New York directing credits include Mark Roberts’ Enter
at Forest Lawn (The Amoralists), Emily Schwend’s Take Me Back (Kindling),
Mark Roberts’ Rantoul and Die at The Cherry Lane (The Amoralists), Fever!
Three Plays by Tennessee Williams (Girl In Red Productions), and Michael
Rabe's The Future Is Not What It Was (Kindling). His play, The
Capables, was produced in 2013 by Neighborhood Productions and the GYM at
Judson and will be produced by the Bloomington Playwrights Project in 2015. The
first episode in his cycle of STREEPSHOW! plays was produced this past
summer as part of ANT Fest 2014. His written and directing work has been
seen at or developed by the Lark Play Development Center, Ars Nova, Fresh
Ground Pepper, Ugly Rhino, The Culture Project, and Joe’s Pub with The
Civilians. He is the former Literary Manager of The Amoralists, where he
curated the Amoralab and Amoralfest seasons between 2012 and 2014. He is
a member of the performance collective Bastard Playground at The Drama League. *Unattached to a project
Juliana Francis-Kelly
is an actor and a writer. She has originated roles for many great directors,
including Reza Abdoh (as a founding member of the internationally renowned Dar
A Luz Company); Richard Foreman (in “Paradise Hotel;” “Bad Boy Nietzsche;” “King
Cowboy Rufus Rules the Universe” and “Maria Del Bosco” – for which she received
an OBIE Award) and for Anne Bogart, Karin Coonrod, Young Jean Lee, Pavol Liska
and Kelly Copper, Lear DeBessonet, Normandy Sherwood, Charlotte Braithwaite,
Hal Hartley, Meredith Drum, Mary Billyou, Marie Losier in collaboration with
Guy Maddin, and David Michalek (for the 2011 Lincoln Center Festival’s
“Portraits in Dramatic Time.”) Ms. Kelly also writes, performs and directs her
own work, has written for several film companies, and has received project
support from the N.E.A., NYSCA, The Durst Foundation and The Jerome
Foundation. Her plays include: “Go Go Go”,
directed by Anne Bogart at PS 122, reprised at The Institute of Contemporary
Art for London International Festival of Theater; “Box”, directed by Tony Torn
and performed at The Women’s Project, PS 122; and The Fontanon Festival in
Italy; “The Baddest Natashas”, performed at The Ontological Theater and
published by Open City Magazine; “Saint Latrice”, at PS 122 (for which she
received a Sundance Screenwriters Fellowship for the film script
adaptation.) Recent performances include
”Feather Gatherers” for the Drunkard’s Wife, “Woman Bomb” by Ivana Sajko,
directed by Charlotte Brathwaite at Baryshnikov Arts Center, and “Ajax” for
Theater of War (outsidethewirellc.com). Ms. Kelly also builds dolls, and one of
her dolls is installed at the American Museum of Natural History’s Interactive
Educational Wing. Julianafranciskelly.com
Project Description: The Antigones by Juliana Francis-Kelly
The Antigones will seek out a unique web of collaborators - from prison inmates to migrant farm worker activists to radical nuns - to rewrite Sophocles iconic dialog between Antigone and Creon from their own perspectives.
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