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John William Tuohy lives in Washington DC

Opportuities for Playwrights

 


*** SCRIPTHEALER: NEW WRITING FOR TELEVISION WORKSHOPS WITH FRANCINE VOLPE & AURIN SQUIRE  ***
 
FRANCINE VOLPE (P-Valley, Tokyo Vice) packs everything she knows about developing and writing TV content into this Zoom course.

AURIN SQUIRE (The Good Fight, Evil) shows you how to develop thoughts into compelling ideas that meet industry standards.
 
Session 1: August 4-6, 6-9:30 ET
The right path to your original pilot script: craft a blueprint for pitching your show.
 
Session 2: August 11-13, 6-9:30 ET
Interactive “mock writers’ room” ~ Francine and Showrunners listen to pitches and offer mock general meetings and mock staffing interviews.
 
Pricing $900. More HERE. Sign up: scripthealer@yahoo.com.


*** OPPORTUNITIES FOR PLAYWRIGHTS ***

Attention Playwrights! Memoriam Development is seeking submissions for our fifth production of ‘Nightshade’ a one act horror anthology show.

This year, in addition to the horror genre, we are adding the theme “Love Can Be a Nightmare”. Delve into the darkest corners of your imagination, or just draw from your own experiences dating in 2023 (it's scary out there) and submit your most sinister, disturbing and macabre stories to our jury.

***

PLAYground Festival seeks TYA plays
The Purple Crayon Players are committed to expanding representation for young people, and see PLAYground as an opportunity to to reflect the diverse experiences of young people today.
Plays must be intended for audiences between 5 and 18 years old, though they are not required to appeal to this entire age range.

***

The Gallery Players in Park Slope, Brooklyn, New York, is seeking plays for its 27th Annual Black Box New Play Festival to be held in January 2024. Each play selected will be given a black box production with non-equity actors. Playwrights must be available, if not in person, via Zoom or some other virtual venue for rehearsals and use this as an opportunity to continue work on their play.

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


*** BARBENHEIMER ~ LIVE ON STAGE ***

Barbenheimer is an Internet phenomenon that began circulating ahead of the simultaneous theatrical release of two blockbusters that have been widely regarded as dissimilar in style and content, Barbie and Oppenheimer, on July 21, 2023...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbenheimer


***

When Nora Helmar slammed the door behind her and walked out of her husband’s home in Ibsen’s A Doll’s House, the reverberation echoed through the succeeding century. Since the play’s premiere in 1879, generations of feminists have drawn inspiration from that act of rebellion. Did you know that one of those women was Barbie?

The delightfully twisted vision of Nora in Barbie’s Dreamhouse is the central image of Doll, a new production from Theater Couture, playing through November 19 at PS 122. The high-camp company has come up with equally perverse juxtapositions on previous occasions: Charlie’s Angels working for Charles Manson (Charlie!), for example, or the tabloid story of drag queen Dorian Corey, who had a mummified corpse in her closet crossed with Edgar Alan Poe (Tell-Tale). This time, Ibsen’s classic is dragged kicking and screaming into the next century decked in the trappings of Mattel’s popular plastic toy. “There’s going to be some serious pink!” promises Erik Jackson, the playwright.

“This is Barbie pre-Liberation,” explains Jackson, who also penned Charlie! and Tell-Tale. The idea, he reports, came from the show’s director, Joshua Rosenzweig. “He sees Barbie as the first independent woman,” Jackson continues. “This woman was doing her own thing in the 50s and 60s. She was single, she was a stewardess, an astronaut, and a beauty contestant. She owned her dream home and had a dream car. Sure, she saw Ken–but only occasionally, when the mood struck her!”

More...
https://www.theatermania.com/new-york-city-theater/news/barbie-doll_1045.html


***

Ideas are monolithic in the Keen Company’s revival of “In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer.” Heinar Kipphardt’s 1969 play adapts the transcripts of the 1954 governmental inquiry that questioned whether Oppenheimer — known as “the father of the atomic bomb” — was a true patriot or an unrepentant Communist whose hesitancy about the development of U.S. weaponry constituted treason. Trying to consider the entire McCarthy era, Kipphardt explores not only the question of nuclear war but also the roles dissent and nonconformity can play in American democracy.

The play never simplifies its arguments. Every character — including Oppenheimer (Thomas Jay Ryan), the government attorneys arguing over his patriotism and the panel of scientists who will judge him — delivers an intricate speech on war, weaponry or the value of independent thought. Beautifully wrought, these monologues demand close attention as they wend toward their conclusions, and Kipphardt’s writing always offers the reward of a surprising or inflammatory insight.

Everything about Carl Forsman’s production insists on the gravitas of the words. Nathan Heverin’s four-tier, inverse pyramid set creates an imposing chain of command, from judges to defenders to prosecutors to witnesses. Power seems to crash down on Oppenheimer, a lone figure sitting at the bottom of the heap.

More...
https://variety.com/2006/legit/reviews/in-the-matter-of-j-robert-oppenheimer-1200515667/


***

On April 29, 2002, the woman who created Barbie died. I guess I missed the news that day. A New York Times op-ed written about Ruth Handler said that “perhaps Barbie’s most significant attribute is her capacity to make people wonder what she would be like if she were really human. But to imagine Barbie as a real woman is to imagine her subject to time itself. It is to imagine her with real politics, real worries, a constant struggle with the memory of her own once ideal figure. Above all, it is to imagine her with a voice.”

I went to a play this past Friday night called “I Am Barbie,” and we no longer have to imagine Barbie with a voice. She spoke, via actress Ivy Castle-Rush in the titular role, and she had lots to say about her life & times.

Notes from the playwright, Walton Beacham, say:

“Barbie celebrates her 50th birthday by reminiscing about her careers, her relationship with Ken and other characters from her life, who express their own opinions about Barbie. An important motif is Barbie’s breasts as cultural icon, symbol and statement of feminine status, power and vulnerability. Two of the characters, Midge’s mother and Barbie’s creator Ruth, develop breast cancer.”

More on that in a sec.

The play was my introduction to Ruth Handler. I must admit, I’d never given Barbie’s creator much thought. Although more than 1 billion Barbies have been sold in more than 150 countries, and although Barbie even has her own Hall of Fame, in Palo Alto, CA, I never thought much about  her. I have bought Barbie dolls, clothes, and accessories as birthday gifts for Macy’s friends, but knew nothing of Barbie’s story or that of her creator.

More...
https://pinkunderbelly.com/2011/05/23/i-am-barbie/


***

The Love Song of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Carson Kreitzer explores the life of one of the greatest American scientific minds of the twentieth century. J. Robert Oppenheimer, the lead scientist in the quest to unlock the secrets of atomic energy in the 1940s, spent the latter part of his life trying to make sense of the impact of his research. Under his direction, a number of the greatest physicists of the day, some Jewish and exiled, where secluded in the American South West and given unprecedented resources to pursue their research. From their work emerged one of the most terrible weapons the world has ever seen—the atomic bomb. Speaking about his work on the project, Oppenheimer famously quoted from the Bhagavad Gita, “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” What happens when the pragmatic forces of the military co-opt unshackled scientific freedom?

More...
https://www.browntaps.org/the-love-song-of-j-robert-oppenheimer/


***

Barbie, it turns out, is a brunette. That is, Erin Elizabeth Coors, the actress playing Barbie here, has short-cropped brown hair tucked under her flowing blond wig.

That's right. After 47 years as a perky-breasted plastic prop, and six as an animated fairy-tale princess on the small screen, the consummate pink icon of little-girlhood is breathing, singing, dancing and even flying across the stage in her first live show. Actress Barbie Has a Dark Little Secret

"This one talks and you don't have to press anything," Abby Reinhart, 9, said after the opening performance of "Barbie Live in Fairytopia" here on Saturday at the 80-year-old Palace Theater, the start of a planned two-year tour across 80 cities. "We've never known she would come to life. Now I finally get to hear her in real life."

Taking product placement to new heights, the show -- called a "kidsical" for combining traditional children's-theater interaction with Broadway-caliber costumes and 12 original songs -- is Mattel's latest effort to buttress a brand battered by competition in recent years. Nowadays, a doll is never just a doll but a multimedia experience, so perhaps it was inevitable that Barbie, whose Web site and DVD's already top the charts with the under-6 set, would join Dora the Explorer, the Rugrats and Winnie the Pooh on stages around the country.

More...
https://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/03/theater/actresss-dark-secret-remains-secure-in-barbie-live-in-fairytopia.html


***

The most gripping moments in “Oppenheimer,” the sprawling drama by British playwright Tom Morton-Smith about the man dubbed “the father of the atomic bomb,” are the brainstorming meetings of scientists racing against their German counterparts during World War II to invent the most destructive weapon in the history of humanity.

The play, a Royal Shakespeare Company hit that is receiving its American premiere by Rogue Machine Theatre at the Electric Lodge in Venice, doesn’t need any prerequisites. Theater and history majors will find as much to chomp on as engineering students in a script that at times resembles an overstuffed course catalog. While the science isn’t exactly sexy, it’s often dramatically scintillating.

Physics is made fascinating as characters with PhDs and awkward social graces gather to illustrate with their bodies the process of splitting the atom. These eggheads have an electric current running through them as they map out equations, their eyes agog not so much with patriotism as with math.

More...
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/arts/theater/reviews/la-et-cm-oppenheimer-review-20181005-story.html

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