OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS

 *** OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS ***


The Eric H. Weinberger Award for Emerging Librettists is a juried cash and production grant given annually to support the early work and career of a deserving musical theatre librettist.

The winner will receive $2,000 to help with cost-of-living expenses. The winning musical will receive development assistance in the 2023 New Works Development Program of Amas Musical Theatre, culminating in an Amas Lab production with New York theatre professionals.

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NEXT ACT!, now in its thirteenth year, is an expansion of Capital Repertory Theatre’s (theREP) commitment to the development of new work. The multi-day summit is also designed to complement the Upper Hudson Valley’s rich diverse populations. NEXT ACT! New Play Summit 13 will take place in late April and early May 2024 (exact dates coming soon) and will swirl around the theatre’s World Premiere Production that came from the 2022 Summit. The annual summit will feature readings of several never-before produced plays, with additional events throughout the summit.

theREP is looking for scripts that use theatre to address injustices, inequities, and cultural collisions, providing a voice for the unheard on stage, in the workplace, the Capital Region and beyond. Specifically seeking scripts with racial, ethnic, generational, religious and gender diversity. Scripts that engage art and social justice.

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Every month, Kumu Kahua’s artistic director Harry Wong III will select a writing prompt on the first day of that month. We’re looking for 5-page monologues or 10-page scenes based on that prompt. The prompt for the month of October 2023 is:

A Trick or Treat prompt. Write a ten (10) page maximum scene about a group of kids who retaliate with a trick against a house and someone that didn't give them a treat on Halloween night. As always, have fun with this. Act out your childhood revenge fantasies, but don't forget about the consequences.

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


*** ISRAEL & THEATER ***

My theater company in Needham was created by Jewish immigrants and refugees from Eastern Europe. As a company, we stand with Israel. As an artist and a human being, I stand with Israel. (Are we alone?)

Last Friday, Oct. 6, was our opening night for Arlekin’s production of "Just Tell No One." Written by Natal’ya Vorozhbit and Oksana Savchenko of the Worldwide Ukrainian Play Readings, it premiered at Lincoln Center last year with Bill Irwin and Jessica Hecht, as well as David Krumholtz and Tedra Millan of Broadway’s "Leopoldstadt." "Just Tell No One" is a play about the human consequences of war in Ukraine, my homeland (is it?), which I fled as a Jewish refugee with my family when I was 11, seeking refuge in the U.S. where we thought we’d be safe. Jewish relatives and friends from that part of the world also fled, and many of them are now your neighbors in the U.S.; a few even became a theater company. Others escaped to Israel, a new homeland (is it?) for them, where they thought they would be safe.

More...
https://www.wbur.org/news/2023/10/13/arlekin-players-igor-golyak-israel

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Despite being highly commercial and insufficiently subsidized, Israeli theatre in the 2000s is nonetheless very much alive. On any given day, about half of the plays showing in Israel are original Hebrew works. Foreign directors often envy the brisk, interesting, and involved atmosphere on Israeli stages and in rehearsal rooms. Each year, more theatre classes are given in Israeli high schools and more theatre teachers are trained. Acting schools have to reject growing numbers of theatre aspirants.

More...
https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/israeli-theatre/

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When Seattle-based playwright and theater director Lauren Goldman Marshall first staged her original musical about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in 1991, she had recently embarked on a journey of self-discovery prompted by the First Intifada. Working alongside Palestinian collaborators, she produced a heartfelt show meant to celebrate “seeing the other.”

Thirty years later, that show, “Abraham’s Land,” has been revived for a new generation. A new adaptation was staged in Seattle this summer (2021)...

But much has changed in the intervening decades, from the trajectory of peace efforts to sentiments among American Jews to ideas in the theater world about what constitutes meaningful representation on stage.

More...
https://www.timesofisrael.com/30-year-old-play-about-israeli-palestinian-conflict-resurfaces-minus-palestinians/

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Philadelphia’s InterAct Theatre Co. produces plays that “provoke conversation” about sensitive topics, according to a recent press release.

Beginning on April 1 (2022), it will take on perhaps the most difficult conversation in Jewish life: the Israel-Palestine conflict.

“Settlements,” written by Seth Rozin, a Jewish playwright and InterAct’s producing artistic director, is about “a resident theater at a Jewish Community Center which finds itself pulled in conflicting directions when it commissions a new play about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” according to a press release detailing the show.
Rozin wrote the play over several years after reading a 2014 Washington Post story about a similar incident, in which a Washington, D.C., theater director was dismissed from his JCC home after commissioning a play about Israeli soldiers killing Palestinians. Rozin said he feels it’s important to explore not who’s right and who’s wrong in the conflict, but why it’s so difficult to discuss.

More...
https://www.jewishexponent.com/new-play-explores-israel-palestine-conflict/

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Contemporary resonances abound for the century-old play The Dybbuk by S. An-sky, as a new collection of research articles implies. Israeli director Diego Rotman, one of the contributors, even notes that in Hebrew letters, COVID is dybbuk spelled backwards.

Similarly, the drama itself retains an eerie historical-contemporary echo. Its plot tells of a young woman possessed by the spirit of her dead beloved in a 19th century shtetl in the Pale of Settlement, a western region of the Russian Empire where permanent residency by Jews was allowed.

In Jewish folklore dating back at least to the 1500s, a dybbuk is the dislocated soul of a dead person that occupies the body of someone still living. In An-sky’s narrative (spoiler alert!) the young lovers wind up dead, with even more lamenting and morbidity than Shakespeare’s ill-fated Romeo and Juliet.

More...
https://forward.com/culture/563005/dybbuk-century-an-sky-caplan-moss-jewish-play/

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iSRA-DRaMA:
International Exposure of Israeli Theatre
November 22-26, 2023

In light of recent events, we wish to address Israel’s current situation. As you may be aware, Israel is currently facing a severe security crisis. In an unprecedented act of war, Hamas launched a massive, brutal attack on Israeli civilians. This attack has resulted in a significant number of casualties, injuries, and the kidnapping of innocent civilians, including children and the elderly.

It is a time of profound sadness and uncertainty for Israel, and regrettably, the crisis is far from over, as a war looms on the horizon.

As for the Theater Exposure, we would like to ask for your patience, as the situation is dynamic, and circumstances may change.
We will keep you updated and informed of any changes or adjustments.

Let us all hope for better times.

More...
https://exposure.dramaisrael.org/

Israeli Dramatists Website
https://dramaisrael.org/en/


***

For the three weeks between the first day of Rosh Hashanah and the end of Simchat Torah, it’s hard to get anything done in Israel. With so many holidays in rapid succession, businesses open sporadically, bureaucratic necessities remain pending and many cultural events are put on hold.

In New York, though, a community of Israeli artists is overflowing with activity: Throughout the month of October, the Israeli Artists Project (IAP) is hosting the Stav Festival: A Celebration of Israeli Arts and Culture at the 14th Street Y. Featuring dozens of artists working in an array of media, festival events include performances by standup comics and musicians alongside productions of award-winning Israeli plays. Artists will provide workshops on everything from folk dancing or belly dancing to painting.

Named for the Hebrew word for autumn, the Stav Festival was originally slated for May 2020, when it would have been the Aviv (or Spring) Festival, but the COVID-19 pandemic meant that it had to be postponed. In his opening remarks at last week’s kickoff event, IAP president Yoni Vendriger said that the more than three-year delay may have been for the best. “We’ve had plenty of time to curate a month of events that bring together artists from so many walks of life,” he said.

Among the many and varied events is the New York debut of “The Holylanders,” an original play by Moria Zrachia. Originally commissioned and presented by Israel’s Cameri Theatre in Hebrew as “Shalom Lach Eretz,” this new, English-language version was adapted and directed by her brother and longtime collaborator, Matan Zrachia.

More...
https://www.jta.org/2023/10/04/ny/a-monthlong-celebration-of-israeli-arts-and-culture-comes-to-the-14th-street-y

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