Welcome

Welcome
John William Tuohy lives in Washington DC

Isis-Aphrodite Roman, 1st century BC- 1st century AD.


 

palazzo colonna, rome, italy.j


 

Write on

 


I really do

 




Greetings NYCPlaywrights

 

 

*** FREE THEATER ONLINE ***

 

Wed, Mar 3, 2021, 8:00 PM EST

PULP VÉRITÉ by Crystal Skillman is a race against time: an examination of activism. The play unfolds and unravels in startling ways. It's a call to action.

Joy, an active member of the filmmaking collective Pulp Vérité, is captured and held overseas for four years. After being released from captivity, she returns to the United States to reunite with her friends and restart her life. But when the group realizes Joy has gathered them together for the impossible—to bring her sister who is still a captive with ISIS home—their strength as a collective, youthful ideology, and commitment to the cause are shaken to the core.

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ruth-easton-pulp-verite-by-crystal-skillman-tickets-120330486725

 

 

*** DRAMATIST GUILD ***

 

Wed, February 24, 2021

6:30 PM – 8:30 PM EST

New York State Fest Night 3: Musical Theatre Writers and the Future Of Live Stage Productions

We know so much about how writers have pivoted and created "virtual theatre" during this time---but how are writers currently working toward future live stage productions of their work?

Brought to you by the New York State DG Regional Rep and Ambassador team, this webinar is free and open for all to attend from any location.

Hear from Dramatists Guild members Amanda Green, David Henry Hwang, Joe Iconis, and Michael R. Jackson about the stage musicals they're working on, how they've persevered and found unconventional ways to work during the pandemic, and what they envision for their shows during the next era. Moderated by theatre historian and producer Jennifer Ashley Tepper.

 

Register:

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/dg-webinar-musical-theatre-writers-on-the-future-of-live-shows-tickets-140433260663

 

 

*** PRIMARY STAGES ***

 

NYCP DISCOUNT: Writing for Zoom & Fundamentals of Playwriting at Primary Stages ESPA! 

March is almost here and so is the start of some exciting online classes at Primary Stages ESPA! Take $100 off each of these classes using the code NYCP at checkout! Get back to the basics with Fundamentals of Playwriting taught by Dennis A. Allen II (Writer and Director, Atlantic Theater Co, National Black Theatre) or delve into the new art form that is Writing for Zoom with Lia Romeo (4-time Kilroy's List writer). Classes begin in March. 

Flexible, artist-friendly payment plans available. 

http://primarystages.org/espa/writing

 

 

*** OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS ***

 

In a joint project between the Little Theatre of Alexandria (LTA) New Voices Series and The Arlington Players (TAP), we are looking for your original 40-60 minute Audio scripts. We will select one show to be performed in May. We are hoping to broadcast a recorded performance on a local radio station, but if not possible, we will air via Zoom.

 

***

 

National Arts Diversity Integration Association (NADIA) is accepting script submissions for a new play or musical to be recorded and presented as a staged reading in their Spring 2021 Amplified Currents Festival of the Arts, which will be held online, April 17th-25th, 2021.

 

***

 

Studio Players, Kentucky’s Oldest Community-Involved Theater, located in Lexington, is proud to announce their Annual 10-Minute Play Festival, to be performed in July 2021. This event is growing yearly, with vibrant public response and Donor/Sponsor support. 

We are looking for 7 strong plays to feature so, once again, we are holding a competition. This competition is for 10-minute plays only; it is open to any playwright. There is NO submission fee. The judges will be members of the Studio Players theater community: board members, directors and patrons.

 

*** FOR MORE INFORMATION about these and other opportunities see the web site at https://www.nycplaywrights.org ***

 

 

*** BLACK PEOPLE / BLACK HISTORY ***

 

Frederick Douglass: Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory

As part of Black History Trilogy, a series of virtual productions from Flushing Town Hall, in Queens, the 2019 Tony winner André De Shields will portray Frederick Douglass in a stirring one-man performance. The transcendent “Hadestown” star also wrote the show, which explores the achievements and ingenuity of the abolitionist leader, as well as the darkness and horror that he experienced. The program comes after Flushing Town Hall’s “Divine Sass: A Tribute to the Music, Life and Legacy of Sarah Vaughan” from Lillias White on Feb. 18. All performances are free. February 26, 7 p.m., 

flushingtownhall.org/black-history-trilogy-iii

 

***

MY GENERAL TUBMAN is the first play Penn faculty Lorene Cary has written, and the first new play that director, performer, and playwright James IJames has brought into production. Playing to sold-out audiences, “My General Tubman” has been extended twice since opening night in January and is now scheduled through March 15.

 

It was while Cary was with her family at the New Jersey seashore that she first started thinking of writing about Tubman, when she saw a photo of her displayed at Historic Cold Springs Village. The former slave, abolitionist, and activist had worked at the Cape May Hotel during the summers to earn the money she needed to go down south to bring enslaved people up north to freedom. 

 

More...

https://penntoday.upenn.edu/news/time-traveling-harriet-tubman-lorene-cary-arden-theater

 

***

Katori Hall’s THE MOUNTAINTOP contains a strange premise  that moves from  exposing the raw humanity of Dr. King  to sanctifying him as we get a glimpse of his last evening on earth on April 3, 1968. In the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. Dr. King ( David Alan Anderson) is alone working on his speech for the next day’s rally when he orders room service. It is delivered by Camae (Lisa Beasley), a young motel maid.

The two strike up a conversation revolving  around King’s celebrity and his need for a cigarette. Over Pall Malls, we slowly begin to both see the human side of Dr. King and his eventual fate. We see Dr.  King as a lonely man with doubts as to his purpose and the direction of his movement. he is tired and spent. The rainy lightning contributes to his fears for his life after continuous threats on his life. The clap of thunder ignites his fears.

 

More...

https://chicagocritic.com/mountaintop/

 

***

San Antonio's Renaissance Guild has put a powerful interpretation of August Wilson's 1984 MA RAINEY'S BLACK BOTTOM on the makeshift stage at the Little Carver Civic Center. 

This is the only one of the ten plays in Wilson's "Pittsburgh cycle" depicting African-American lives across the twentieth century that is not, in fact, set in Pittsburgh. The locale is Sturdyvant's shabby recording studio in Chicago in the mid-1920's, where the impatient record distributor is waiting for the idolized blues singer Gerturde "Ma" Rainey to show up with her band for a session. Rainey's manager Irvin, a white man, reassures Sturdyvant but frets, worries and jumps about. Soon enough, we'll understand why.

Four session musicians show up on time, with no word from "Ma." Irvin packs them off with a song list and instructions to rehearse until "Ma" gets there. 

 

More...

https://ctxlivetheatre.com/reviews/review-ma-raineys-black-bottom-by-renaissance-g/

 

***

A new play that sketches and celebrates Ida B. Wells’ life, CONSTANT STAR, has been staged in several cities, including Washington, D.C., Hartford and, last month, Pittsburgh. (It goes to Palm Beach, Florida, next March.) Playwright Tazewell Thompson says he was moved to investigate the “insane lawlessness” of lynchings and to write about Wells’ crusade against them after viewing a 1989 documentary, Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice. “It haunted me that this tiny woman had to become the drum majorette for this campaign,” says Thompson, a theater dis rector. “Wells believed it was a land of laws, and by God she was going to see to it that everyone was treated as if ‘all men are created equal.’”

 

More...

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/against-all-odds-65322127/

 

***

Louis Armstrong cusses up a storm in Terry Teachout’s smart, unfiltered one-man drama SATCHMO AT THE WALDORF. The great trumpeter, well known among jazz fans for having a salty tongue, also blasts out red-hot notes of racial slang.

Immersion in such divisive language can pin your ears back, but that’s the way it was, the genial yet feisty Satchmo explains to us in his dressing room during a final gig in 1971. Armstrong may have ruled the music world with his bright, jaunty horn and ebullient personality, but racist American standards had him eating in the kitchen rather than the dining room after too many of his shows.

 

More...

https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/theater_dance/louis-armstrong-play-satchmo-blasts-into-hot-racial-turf-at-atlas-in-dc/2016/08/30/5457d6b6-6eca-11e6-8365-b19e428a975e_story.html

 

***

The lives of actors often contain heady highs and dispiriting lows, so fragile is their hold on the public’s imagination and their access to the levers of power in the industry. But the story of Paul Robeson, the great African-American performer who achieved international fame in the 1920s and ’30s, only to be condemned for his political beliefs and branded a Communist during the witch hunts of the ’50s, is a particularly egregious example of a star falling at warp speed.

The extraordinary arc of Robeson’s life and career is resurrected with grace in THE TALLEST TREE IN THE FOREST, an engrossing solo show written and performed by Daniel Beaty, and directed by Moisés Kaufman. In the production, which can be seen through Sunday at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Mr. Beaty portrays Robeson and various men and women who cross his path, including his father, his brother and his wife, nearly 40 roles in all. 

 

More...

https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/25/theater/review-daniel-beaty-as-paul-robeson-in-the-tallest-tree-in-the-forest.html

 

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