We’re Not Playing: a play by Cecilia Copeland

Not PlayingCecilia Copeland and I have never met, but I’ve been Facebook admiring her for years.  The woman is a force!  Not only is she a powerful writer, but she’s also an incredible theatre maker – this woman gets shit done!  So when I reached out to her to see if she’d be interested in participating in We’re Not Playing, I was absolutely thrilled that she said “Yes.” 

The play she sent, YES THIS SHIT AGAIN, is (unfortunately) incredibly relevant – I felt like letting out a mighty yawp at the end of the piece (and I imagine in performance, I’d be unable to contain myself and would be cheering on the piece like a maniac).  I hope the real world awesome female politicians currently working in DC to protect our reproductive rights know that we are collectively applauding their every effort to stem the tide of misogyny advancing on capitol hill.

A few words from Cecilia about YES THIS SHIT AGAIN.

cecilia-copeland-headshot-by-jody-christophersonMy frustration with having to deal with issues that have been solved in the past, voted on by the Supreme Court, and are now in jeopardy led me to writing “Yes This Shit Again.” The idea for the piece, in the moment I had it, was immediately followed by a need to apologize for writing about abortion rights. I’m tired of having to apologize for writing about women’s issues, as if women’s issues aren’t universal. We are over fifty percent of the population and any governmental infringement upon being in full autonomous command of our own bodies using all of the medicine and science available to our society is an epic humanitarian travesty. It is a cruel subjugation of our rights. The piece I wrote came from a place of shock and horror that our rights are being threatened yet again when at this point in our social evolution towards equality a woman’s right to choose should be enshrined in stone.

More about Cecilia:

Cecilia Copeland is a member of NYWIFT New York Women in Film and TV, the League of Professional Theatre Women, an inductee into the Indie Theater Hall of Fame, recipient of the Lennis J. Holm Scholarship at the Writers Workshop and a Special Effects Grant from Metro Screen Australia, winner Best New TV Pilot for WOMG at Boom! Productions. She is a Kilroy’s List Nominee and Honorable mention for her plays, Light of Night and “R Culture.” Copeland is the Founding Artistic Director of New York Madness, producing over two hundred short plays in over thirty “madness” festivals all over New York from 2010-2016.

Her plays have been presented in New York at Daryl Roth’s DR2, the Cherry Lane Theatre, Culture Project, Ensemble Studios Theatre, The Lower East Side Festival of the Arts, and HERE Arts Center among others.

Regionally her works have been presented at The William Inge Center, Carnegie Mellon University, UT Dallas, Bishop Arts Theatre Center, Cara Mia Theatre, Philadelphia Theatre Company Susanne Robert’s Theatre, University of Iowa and Ohio University.

Internationally her works have been presented at Theatre Royal Stratford East London, Finborough Theatre London, The Anarchist Theatre Festival Montreal, Gun Control Plays Project in Sydney Australia, and featured in the Verlag Textbook on American Drama in Germany. She has been published by the Playwrights Center for Women Writers, NoPassport Press and Amazon.

 

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We’re not playing, and we want you to join us!

Last week a lot of us watched in horror as Donald Trump, a misogynistic, xenophobic, and wildly ignorant human (we think…) man, was elected to be President of these United States.

I’ve been spending a lot of time since then working through all my feelings on the subject, and I’ve managed to boil all my rage, disappointment, and shock into two major thinking points:  “We have to do better!” and “Fuck that guy!”

(Obviously the former is a more actionable frame of mind to be in, but I’d be lying if I said the latter thought didn’t help fuel my desire to follow through on the first)

So I’ve been doing a lot of writing… and not in the “Wow, I’m making some great art from this!” kind of writing (yet).  More like, “Umm, I think I’m writing a mission statement” kind of writing, and it’s based on the following:

We need to heal our divided nation and We need to make our objections to Trump’s dangerous policies heard.

I’m working on strategies for the first, but Little Black Dress INK already had a jump start on the second – and we’d love for you to you to join us!

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Little Black Dress INK invites you to take action by participating in the 
We’re Not Playing initiative.  This initiative began as a way for us to support female voices who were speaking out on important issues through their work as playwrights – and now it’s time for these voices be heard!

Theatres and theatre practitioners across the nation are invited to hold readings of these plays, royalty free, Friday, January 20, 2017 – Inauguration Day.  The only caveat is that we ask any/all monies raised be donated to the ACLU, Planned Parenthood, and/or NRDC – organizations we believe will be integral to fighting the dangerous policies which the incoming administration intends to implement.

Little Black Dress INK will continue to post socially-conscious/politically-inspired plays between now and January for interested theaters to select from – or you can challenge your own circles of fabulous playwrights to write plays that inspire action.  Let’s just do something to help process the rising tides of panic gripping the nation.

Let us make our objections loud and clear, and let us put our humanity center stage on January 20th, 2017.

We can be better.  Let’s be better.  Let’s invite our audiences to be better with us.

Want to get involved?  Sign our pledge HERE  Then start reading and selecting plays from those we’ve published, or invite other awesome female playwrights in your area to contribute work!

And if you’re a female playwright who wants to contribute short plays or monologues to the initiative, please send them, along with a photo and brief paragraph explaining what inspired you to write the piece to Submissions@LittleBlackDressINK.org – make sure your subject line reads: WE’RE NOT PLAYING SUBMISSION.

#WereNotPlaying #WritingForChange #TheaterCanHeal

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And the 2017 Festival theme is…

HOLY MOLEY!  Is it that time again already?  It feels like we just wrapped up our 2016 ONSTAGE festival… oh, wait… we did!

ohboyAnd it was such a huge success!  We seriously cannot thank our 2016 supporters, playwrights, partner producers, and artists enough.  This year was one for the record books and we are truly grateful to everyone who made it possible.

SO, what do you need to know about the 2017 Female Playwrights ONSTAGE Fest?  Well, check out our handy-dandy submission call below.  Then get writing!  We can’t wait to see your work in this year’s fest…

FP ONSTAGE submission call 2017

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We’re Not Playing: a new play by Rhea MacCallum

Not PlayingRhea’s play, ASKING FOR IT, was an instant hit in this year’s peer review process.  There are usually a few obvious standouts during the eval process – some plays just hit all the right notes!  Which is why I knew right away, when I was aggregating this year’s scores, that Rhea had sent us something special.  Her play about rape culture in America is bitingly on point, even though it manages to keep us laughing throughout. So it was no surprise to me that when Rhea sat down to address our recent political climate, what she came up with was some genuinely powerful (and hilarious) satire!

Rhea on her play, Law and Order:  Trump’s Immigration Team (TIT) or Keepers of Klassic Kulture (KKK) and the Smarter Smart Gun.

 There’s been the conspiracy theories… who is ‘Becky with the good hair’, could Ted Cruz really be the Zodiac Killer, and what exactly is in those missing emails?

The interruptions to daily life… Windows 10 ‘Nagrade’, exploding phones, intersecting with Pokemon Go addicts.

The unpredictable… Brexit, lying Olympians, the presidential candidacy of a reality TV star.

But also the tragic… Orlando, Syria, Alton Sterling and Philando Castile and… too, too many more.

Processing all of the super crazy lemons into limoncello caused me to embrace the humor.  How can I highlight the absurdity of 2016 and purge myself of the apocalyptic nightmares it has left behind?  Thus was sprung Law and Order:  Trump’s Immigration Team (TIT) or Keepers of Klassic Kulture (KKK) and the Smarter Smart Gun.

Check out more plays from our We’re Not Playing Initiative HERE.

 

 

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We’re Not Playing: a play by Tiffany Antone

Not PlayingWell, what can I say?  Getting back on track after last week’s festival-craziness (coupled with the sheer insanity of “OMG, I’m travelling with an infant, for the first time, on my own!” whirlwind) has taken longer than I thought.  I wrote a blog post a few months ago about how the baby and my penchant for over-committing myself to things have been in opposition lately, so I won’t belabor the point again here – but let me just say that keeping all of the LBDI balls rolling has been a challenge.  Never a question – just a challenge.  And doing so in a timely manner… well…

In any case, we have a FANTASTICALLY fun play by Rhea MacCallum to share with you – but because I didn’t ask her to write a little introduction for it until, oh, yesterday, it’s not ready to post.  Instead (and because I don’t want to skip a week!) I’m sharing a play I wrote a few years ago about a woman running for president.  I have a feeling the piece won’t be as relevant in a few months, because (if the polls are right) we’ll have our first ever woman president (trememdously exciting!) and my little play will be old-hat (t0 a degree) – but the double standard witnessed in this election has been brutal and so I’m sharing this piece in tribute to that.  (If you don’t believe me, just read this article about sexism in high-school debates, or this article about why Hillary is held to such different standards than Trump.)

And yes, I’ve been tooling around on a piece actually inspired by this insane election cycle, but the baby (yes, that adorable little time-taker) and my students and the ONSTAGE fest have made finishing it a challenge.  I do hope to share it before our We’re Not Playing Initiative closes, but in the meantime, here’s Sour Fruit.

 

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ONSTAGE 2016 in Prescott – We Did It!

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Mary Timpany and Frank Malle in CJ Ehrlich’s THE LILAC TICKET at the Prescott Center for the Arts October 6-8, 2016

Wow… WOW!  We did it – our 2016 Female Playwrights ONSTAGE Festival rocked the stage at the Prescott Center for the Arts, thanks to a team of incredibly talented, fun, and passionate artists.

And it was awesome!

This year’s line-up was seriously one for the record books: 12 short pieces that travelled to the moon and back, made us fall in love with the sassiest and sweetest octogenarian couple ever, let us know what our boobs were really thinking, and a whole lot more.  And we did it all in under 2 hours – perfection!

Of course, getting there wasn’t a piece of cake… I was wrangling the creative circus in Arizona from Arkansas (even directing a few pieces via FaceTime and Google Hangouts) with a baby on my hip.  Which is why I owe a HUGE thank you to our Prescott team of directors, actors, and tech rock stars!  (Check out this year’s program at the end of this post)

And although we didn’t get but a few actual stage pictures, I did snap some pics of the casts backstage.  Here’s a peek at some of our awesome actors…

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The cast of Rhea MacCallum’s ASKING FOR IT – Mikki Russ and Michael Holevar

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Cast members Janelle Devlin, Don Langford, and Gina Steverson from Amy Drake’s MODEL BEHAVIOR

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Frank Malle and Mary Timpany – cast of CJ Ehrlich’s THE LILAC TICKET

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Alexes Niekamp, Kathey Derry, Jon Bryan, Mat Montgomery, Daria Chlebecek, Logan Olson, and Michael James – cast of Donna Hoke’s JACK PORK

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Jon and Angi Bryan, cast of Rachel Hall’s THE MOON.

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Amber Bosworth and John Spence – cast of Anne Flannagan’s THROWN FOR A CURVE

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Annabelle Veatch, Michelle Grubert, and Gina Stevenson – cast of Sharon Goldner’s BAZOOKAS

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Sean Jeralds and Bruce Thomson – cast of Nancy Cooper Frank’s IN THE LOOP

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Robyn Allen, Kevin Nissen, Amber Bosworth (playwright), Angie Bryan, and Sean Jeralds – cast of Amber Bosworth’s HERE THERE BE CURVES

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Rob White and Allie Kate Elliot – cast of Tiffany Antone’s THE EGG

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Tyler Bond, Linus Porter, Don Langford, Marnie Uhl, and Katie Van Boening – the behind the scenes genies who made this year’s Prescott production possible!

Huge thanks to all of our artists and to each playwright who participated in this year’s fest!

And if you’re in NYC, don’t miss the final reading of the 2016 ONSTAGE plays: Curves Ahead, with Stairwell Theatre on October 26th!

curves-ahead-stairwell-theatreNow, time for a bit of rest before we gear up for 2017…

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We’re Not Playing… this week

We have been pleasantly overwhelmed with the enthusiasm for our latest new play project!

Not PlayingAnd we have more new plays coming your way, starting next week!  BUT, since this is our final production week for the 2016 Female Playwrights ONSTAGE Festival: Curves Ahead in Prescott, Arizona, we thought we’d pause just long enough to share some thoughts on how incredible this year’s line-up is (and how wonderful the artists and playwrights and audiences have been!)

Every year I wait in near-breathless anticipation to see what kind of wacky, wonderful, moving, and straight-up hilarious plays we’re going to get… it’s kind of like Christmas, only the presents are from daring writers and the joy of opening them is shared with all of the playwrights who participate in our peer review process.

This year’s line-up features a lot of comedies… We have a few really poignant pieces in the line up as well – enough to make us think, maybe get a little indignant, a little misty-eyed – but there are hands down more comedies than dramas.  Last year, we were heavy on the latter.  I don’t know if it’s this year’s theme, the socio-political realities we’re dealing with, or just a general mood that’s somehow set in, but I think we need funny this year.  I think there is a lot going on in the world to make our hearts weary.  As the We’re Not Playing initiative proves, there’s plenty of need for catharsis too, but sometimes the need to go to the theatre and just laugh with friends and strangers is strong.  And sometimes doing so can be reaffirming in a way that allows us all to walk out of the theatre a little lighter.

I hope that our Prescott audiences enjoy this year’s festival.  It features plays by some truly talented and passionate women, and our production features some of Prescott’s finest directors and actors!  The fact that these plays have already been produced in Louisiana with Acadiana Repertory Theatre makes it even more exciting.  And to know that they’re going to be wrapping up their whirlwind national-tour with a reading in NYC makes me incredibly proud!  Of course, I couldn’t do any of this without the amazing help of our Partner Producers: Steven Landry and Etienna Wright with ART in Lafayette, LA; Darcy Martin Rose with Acting Out NY in Ithaca, NY; Christine Breihan and Samuel French Bookshop in Los Angeles, CA; Kate Hawkes with Red Earth Theatre in Sedona, AZ; Charissa Menefee with Iowa State University in Ames, IA; Amber Hanel with Sculpted Entertainment in Auburn, AL; Katherine James, who put together a seven theatre collective to produce a reading in Los Angeles, CA; and Sam Gibbs with Stairwell Theatre in New York City, NY.  These people and all of the incredible actors and directors they brought together in order to breathe life into our festival are the reason the ONSTAGE Fest is such a success!

And now we’re about to rock these shows in Prescott – and I couldn’t be more proud!  I hope that if you’re in the Prescott area, you will join us this week (Oct. 6-8 at the Prescott Center for the Arts)  And if you’re in attendance on opening night, I especially hope you’ll join us after the show at El Gato Azul for some delicious treats and mingling with our talented artists! PrintThanks for all of your support for Little Black Dress INK!  We love what we do, and we love sharing it with you!  Come back next Monday for a play by Anne Hamilton – the next piece in our We’re Not Playing Initiative.

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Guest Post By Jen Huszcza: More Adventurous

Jen2I apologize for stealing the title of Rilo Kiley’s 2004 album for this blog, but I couldn’t think of a better title.

Back in August, Tiffany emailed me to ask if I would write a blog post for the upcoming Prescott production. She suggested that I talk about some of my adventures. I like to walk long distances and sail boats down to Mexico (I live in Southern California, so it’s not that far). Okay, yes, some folks might call that adventurous, but to me, it’s what I do. At the same time, I look at Tiffany who has just had a baby, and I think, whoah, that’s adventurous.

So what does this have to do with women’s playwriting (which is why we’re here)???

If in life, there is more than one way to be adventurous, then the same holds true for play scribbling. When I sit down to write a play, I strive to push the form, to be innovative, and to redefine what I’m doing. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn’t. Sometimes I end up with a pile of muck. Adventure isn’t perfect all the time.

But.

A lot of the time, adventure is a lot of fun. It’s worth it to be more adventurous in everything I do.

So if I can say anything to you, gentle women’s playwriting blog reader, it would be: be adventurous, be bold, and don’t forget to just be. You never know what you’re gonna end up with.

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We’re Not Playing: a play by Barbara Blumenthal-Ehrlich

When Barbara sent me her short play, Sacred Space, I had to read it twice because the first time my eyes were too blurry to make out every word.  There is power in tradition.  There is power in grief.  There is power in words.  Barbara’s piece tackles something a lot of us wrestle with when tragedy strikes outside our own circles, yet leaves us with grief just the same – and she does it with grace.  This is a beautiful play, inspired by an ugly event, and I encourage you share in its strength.

Barbara on Sacred Space:

barbara-blumenthal-ehrlichWhen my father died last May, I was introduced to the world of Jewish rituals for the dead. First, as the soul can’t be alone until burial, someone called a “Shomere” sat with my dad 24/7, reciting psalms. Second, an ancient cleansing ritual, known as “Tahara” was performed. In this sacred prayerful ceremony, his body was washed and dressed in simple white garments, emphasizing the spiritual and sublime over the physical and material.

The morning of my dad’s funeral, I braced for full-on dread. Instead I was comforted by the care he received. At the cemetery, I made eye contact with the Shomere. With her long skirt and cloth bag of prayer books, she looked like she’d just stepped out of Fiddler on the Roof. She nodded but didn’t speak. So much dignity there. I haven’t been able to get her image out of my head.

After Orlando, there was another image I couldn’t get out of my head, something I’d seen on the news — a text thread between a victim and his mother, Eddie and Mina Justice. “In the club,” he wrote. “They’re shooting.” “I’m gonna die.” Her belated response came too late. As a mother myself, the pain of that missed connection was unbearable. I wanted Mina Justice to know the peace I knew, and Eddie Justice to have the dignity in death that my dad had. Of course neither of these things could ever be.

From there I conceived SACRED SPACE, a surreal piece in which the verbatim text conversation between Eddie and Mina Justice intrudes on the peace and quiet of the Tahara. Ultimately I hope the play addresses the escalating horrors of gun violence and the need to honor the sanctity of all lives.

More about Barbara:

Full lengths have been produced at Northern Light, Overtime, Trustus, Trinity Rep, the New York International Fringe Festival, the off-Broadway Summer Play Festival, and more. Her plays have been developed in NYC at Playwrights Horizons, Second Stage, ARACAworks, Stella Adler, and Rattlestick, and regionally at Actors Theatre of Louisville, Geva, Victory Gardens, Elephant Theatre, among others. She won the 2016 Beverly Hills Theatre Guild Julie Harris Award, the Capital Stage Playwrights Revolution, Six Women Playwrights Festival, and was a runner up in contests that include the Sundance Playwriting Lab, O’Neill Playwrights Conference, Bay Area Playwrights Festival, the Heideman Award and Princess Grace Fellowship. Her play STILL LIFE was named to the Kilroy List and was nominated for the Susan Smith Blackburn Award. Published by Smith & Kraus, Applause, and Indie Theatre Now. barbarablumenthalehrlich.com

 

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Curves Ahead is heading to Prescott Center for the Arts!

curves-ahead_pca_webLittle Black Dress INK and the Prescott Center for the Arts are partnering once again to produce the 5th annual Female Playwrights ONSTAGE Festival, Curves Ahead, Oct. 6-8 with shows at 7:30 p.m nightly and a 2 pm matinee on Oct. 8. Little Black Dress INK, a female playwright producing organization created by Prescott native Tiffany Antone, is bringing these 12 new short plays by female playwrights from across the country to the PCA for one weekend only!

The Curves Ahead festival is the fifth installment of the Female Playwrights ONSTAGE Project, with past festivals including last year’s Outside the Lines, along with Planting the Seed, From the Mouths of Babes, and Dirty Laundry.

The festival features plays written by playwrights from around the country, but Prescott remains an important part of LBDI’s ONSTAGE Project.

“Even though I’m working in Arkansas now, Prescott always will be ‘home,’” said Antone. “Not to mention the community of artists here is so supportive and welcoming.”

Prescott is well-represented in this year’s line-up, with plays by both Antone and local playwright Amber Bosworth in the festival. Not to mention, over 25 Quad-City area artists will work together to bring the plays to life through a partnership with the PCA. Directors include Don Langford, Frank Malle, Karen Murphy, Layla Tenney, Julie Chavez Harrington, and Mary Timpany.

In the past, each festival has included semi-finalist readings across the nation before the final staged performance in Prescott. This year’s festival featured readings of 41 plays in 6 different cities before the winning line up was selected.

“By partnering with artists in multiple US cities, we are able to bring these plays to more audiences than we would ever be able to do on our own,” notes Antone. “This year we were actually able to add an additional production with our partners, Acadiana Repertory Theatre, in Lafayette, LA.”

A reading of the 12 winning plays will also take place in New York City on October 26th at Standard ToyKraft in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

Inspired by how few female playwrights actually get produced, Little Black Dress INK strives to create more production opportunities for female playwrights while also strengthening the female playwright network.

“Little Black Dress INK wants to bring new work by female playwrights to expanded audiences, and the ONSTAGE Project allows us to do just that,” said Antone.

And as for this year’s theme, Curves Ahead, Antone notes that, “being both a woman and a very visual playwright, I really liked the multiple meanings of ‘curves ahead.’ There were a few plays that took place in cars, which I expected, but there also were many writers that took the theme to really wild, surprising places.”

“The thing that’s most exciting about our ONSTAGE festivals is the broad range of genres on display,” said Antone. “Each play is under ten minutes, so you are able to experience an eclectic range of work. A lot of the plays this year are really funny. Even the plays exploring big issues are doing so with a lot of laughs, so there is poignancy there but we’re getting it with a healthy dose of the giggles. This year’s festival really has something for everyone!”

An added bonus to the fest is that there will be an opening night post-show reception at El Gato Azul, this year’s sponsor. Audiences will be able to mix and mingle with the cast and a few of this year’s playwrights while enjoying light snacks at the restaurant!

Be advised: Some plays do contain mature subject matter and language.

Get your tickets HERE

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