*** OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS ***

 




Broom Street Theater in Madison, Wisconsin is working on a multi-year short play project to try and make sense of states.  Every summer for the next several years, we're going to run a short play festival based on the states. Our inaugural festival was in 2023.

Here's how it works:
You're from a state. You passed through a state. You left a state. You love a state. A state left its mark on you.
Write us a short play. Something to do with that state.
This summer, we're looking East. We're accepting plays about these states, and especially looking for plays by denizens (or former denizens) of these states:

Connecticut
Maine
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New York
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
Vermont

***

The Centenary Stage Company, a professional theatre in residence on the campus of Centenary University in Hackettstown, NJ is accepting submissions for the Women Playwrights Series (WPS) and Susan Glaspell Contest.

The WPS is a developmental program dedicated to providing a working forum for the unique and under-served voice of women writing for the theatre today. Each season 3 new plays are selected for a collaborative workshop process, with a professional director and actors, which takes place in a brief rehearsal period of approximately 1 week, allowing time for the playwright to hear and adapt their work with other professionals. The process culminates in a presentation of the work for the general public as part of the series, giving CSC audiences larger exposure to new work, as well as offering the playwright an opportunity to get feedback from the audience during the development process.

***

The 2024 WATERWORKS Festival is now accepting submissions

~ CATEGORIES ~

EMERGING ARTISTS
For writers and writing teams 16 to 25 years old

DEBUT ARTISTS
For writers and writing teams over 50 years old.

UNSTAGED WORKS
No age restrictions for writers or writing teams.


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


*** WHY MUSICALS? ***

In the fall of 2015, the original Broadway cast recording of Hamilton: An American Musical was released. This was the first ever broadway recording to reach the top 100 on the Billboard rap charts. It was a success that was unheard of for any musical.

With this success, musicals have become central figures in our culture. Hamilton has become the catalyst that blew them into the limelight.  They have become entertainment for people of all ages as they have become more accessible with cast recordings becoming available via streaming services and recordings being published.

Then, in 2016, the Hamilton Mixtape brought focus to the problems of modern day America. Starting in December of 2017, Hamildrops, a service that provides new Hamilton content every month, lead to 2018 being dubbed the “Year of Hamilton” A song narrating Benjamin Franklin’s life, Ben Franklin’s Song, and a music video for “Wrote My Way Out” from the mixtape were some of the popular early releases from the content creators, who include the writer and original star of the Broadway production, Lin-Manuel Miranda.

More...
https://standard.asl.org/10311/culture/impact-of-musicals-on-culture/


***

This, says Boag, is something that’s universally human. It’s why dance and music can connect us when words alone can’t, or language barriers get in the way. It speaks to us on a deeper level – and this ability to connect and express emotionally through movement and music is something we develop as children, long before we learn to intellectualise or articulate these things. “Think of how we communicate with our children when they’re non-verbal, in a sing-songy voice. And how we learn our ABCs: we sing them,” says Boag.

So, there you go; it makes sense that kids will sing songs from their favourite musicals to within an inch of their life and watch those movies on repeat. I, like many, haven’t grown out of it.

More...
https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/linmanuel-miranda-birmingham-city-university-hamilton-broadway-elsa-b1875343.html

***

From The Beggar’s Opera to Avenue Q., musicals have commented on social issues for as long as there has been musical theater in America.

People have always gone to the theater expecting to be entertained. What do you find interesting about theater which talks about social and political issues as entertainment? Why do you think we have such a long history of doing this? How does this relate to our first amendment right of freedom of speech?

Avenue Q broke many barriers in terms of subject matter for musical theater. Can you think of a subject matter that has not yet been addressed by musical theater that now could be? Do you think there is a subject that might still present challenges as a tale for a musical venue or that would still be considered taboo for musical theater? How do you think we benefit by examining these difficult subjects through the lens of story, song and dance?


There will always be issues of huge social importance to face; wars, poverty, injustice to name a few. At the community level there are also always topics of contention between people or groups like budget issues, environmental concerns, bullying and the like. What do you think might happen if your school, or community (or family) got together to put on a musical to deal with pressing issues you are facing? Could this be a way to learn about and talk about a difficult topic in a creative and maybe even a humorous or light hearted way?

More...
https://www.kennedy-center.org/education/resources-for-educators/classroom-resources/media-and-interactives/media/theater/musical-theater-in-america/

***

As in many subcultures, musical theatre lovers have secret handshakes that allow us to recognize each other. Say you are speaking to a group and out slips the phrase, “And things being as they are…” If, before you can utter another syllable, someone emphatically interjects, “The back of the police station is out!”, you know you are with your people.

We are a relatively tiny group that glories in our smallness, who can recite in our sleep every nuance of every lyric from every great cast album. Arcane trivia spills from us like charm from Robert Preston. Kevin Daly, a theatre connoisseur on Twitter, has become something of an artist in this form of classic musical speak. He punctuates some of his funniest comments with, “This is for about six of you” or, “I was very popular in high school, can you tell?” He presides over a universe that worships lady deities of a certain age: Bea Arthur, Dorothy Loudon, Barbara Harris, Barbra Streisand, Imelda Stanton, Chita Rivera, and of course Angela Lansbury, the one and only Mame (Daly is still incensed that the costumes weren’t acknowledged by the1966 Tony nominating committee). One day he might observe, “Sigmund Romberg didn’t have to go that hard when he composed the ‘French Military Marching Song’ for The Desert Song.

More...
https://www.americantheatre.org/2023/01/30/is-the-musical-progressive/


***

If you have never been or seen a Broadway musical show, then you don’t know what you are missing. For those that haven’t, they may think that these events are overrated or not for them. Others may feel as though nothing beats seeing a movie. However, these 6 reasons why Broadway musicals are so great, may change your mind.

Before you say “what’s so special about Broadway”? or “what makes a live musical show so popular”,? there are few things you need to know. Do keep in mind that if the show you want to see is very popular, you may have a hard time getting a ticket. Most performances are sold out days or weeks in advance. Also, Broadway shows can be expensive, depending on the seats and show you see. Still, it is still an experience which can be worth it and will last a long time. Although these are some of the top reasons why theater or Broadway shows are so popular and great, there are many others.

More...
https://blog.ambient-mixer.com/benefits/6-reasons-why-broadway-musicals-are-great/


***

“Here Lies Love” is hardly the first musical to be rooted in dark history. “Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson” looks at the life of the seventh US President, satirically depicting his deadly campaign to drive Native Americans out of their land.

“Cabaret” is set in Weimar Berlin, on the eve of the rise of Hitler, and more recent productions feature heart-stopping visual references to the concentration camps where 6 million Jews were systematically murdered. “The Sound of Music” is about a family’s flight from Austria ahead of its annexation by the Third Reich.

“Allegiance” highlights the experience of Japanese Americans who were unconstitutionally uprooted from their homes and incarcerated in camps during World War II. And in “Assassins,” Stephen Sondheim manages to upstage his earlier “Sweeney Todd” by making a musical focused on real-life murderers and attempted murderers of American presidents.

Each of these, like “Here Lies Love” and “Evita,” have also been accused of insensitivity and bad taste for turning tragic events into hummable, choreographed spectacles. Each has been attacked for simplifying, romanticizing  or outright misrepresenting facts in their efforts to make history into entertainment.

And yet, there’s also the reality that these entertainments often push audiences with limited awareness of these real-world events to become interested in them and investigate them further.

More...
https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/07/opinions/here-lies-love-philippines-marcos-broadway-yang/index.html


***

 

There is nothing…and I mean NOTHING like a song that you can sing along with at a full belt, no matter how bad a singer you are. Broadway songs are mostly built for this kind of thing. It all began with Ethel Merman, balls afire, sending that big sound (sans microphone) over an entire orchestra of musicians. We all want to be Merman. We want to be heard. How many of you have belted “Defying Gravity” and were so caught up in the belting that you were pretty sure you would fly at the end of the song? Deny it if you like, but your rubber ducky audience and shampoo bottle microphone tell us otherwise!

 

More...

http://markrobinsonwrites.com/the-music-that-makes-me-dance/2014/12/3/the-top-ten-reasons-why-we-love-broadway-musicals

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