An Interview with Shellen Lubin (Reposted)

We’re very excited to have the opportunity to develop 365 Women a Year, The Bennington plays, further with Hubbard Hall as part of their Winter Carnival.

In preparation for the performance, we’re reposting this interview with Shellen Lubin regarding her play After the Thin Man. This interview was originally published on the site in 2015.

You can see After the Thin Man, and the other 365 Women a Year plays, on Friday, January 29th and Saturday, January 30th at 8pm.

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Interviewer: Natalie Osborne

Q: How did you hear about 365 Women a Year?

A: On facebook — not even sure whether it was a post in the Playwriting group there — or just noticing one of Jessica’s posts — but I immediately became involved.

Q: Why did you choose Stella Adler and Sylvia Gassell as your historic women? What drew you to them?

A: I studied with Stella Adler when I was younger, and she was in her 70s. Sylvia Gassell was in a play of mine when she was in her late 60s. Sylvia told me about Stella coming back from Hollywood and telling her not to go out there as a “character actress” because there are no parts for them. It’s something that has stayed with me all these years. I decided to imagine the moment when Stella gave up on acting as a profession and decided to teach, and that decision became the center of this play. (Also the fact that she was right, because, as brilliant as Sylvia was, how much did she really get to work in New York?)

Q: Can you walk me through the process of adapting a persons life for the stage? What were some of the challenges? What parts really clicked together?

A: I read and read until something about their path excited me, sparked me, and then focused my research on that aspect, fleshing out “information” where I needed it. The biggest challenges are 1) knowing that truth is more important than life, and so you have to write what makes the play work, not worry about what actually “happened”; 2) knowing that whatever you write about them, there is so much more, and the more ground you try to cover the less depth the piece will have.

The clicks were mostly found in the writing itself, the discoveries that come up when you create characters in your mind and set up the scene and discover where it goes. Some of the greatest clicks were: when I discovered why Stella became a teacher, something that she never discussed publicly and I’ve never heard anyone say about her, but I’m sure is true; when I discovered why she set up her classroom the way she did, not just to aggrandize herself.

Q: Are there any playwrights that inspired you while you were working on this piece, or who inspire you in general?

A: Lanford Wilson. Secrets. Discoveries. August Wilson. Athol Fugard. And Shakespeare. Keeping things active.

Q: What has been your favorite aspect of working with 365 Women a Year?

A: I have only once before written a biographical piece, and working on this piece has really helped me with that one (still in the middle of re-writes). I have also only written a few short plays. Most of my work has been full-length. It has been very exciting to just pick women I want to write about and then read all about them, become absorbed in their lives, and discover what it is I want to say, the angle I want to come from, how I want to say it.

Q: Do you have any advice for the playwrights joining 365 Women a Year in 2015?

A: Don’t think you have to decide what you want to write about the person first. Go deep into them and find where they touch you deepest.

And don’t try to cover too much ground. The illumination of one moment or a sequence of a few moments is actually much more interesting than a bio-pic (as it were) of their lives. It’s not a history lesson. It’s a play.

Shellen Lubin is a playwright, songwriter, and director, most recently writing music & lyrics for Susan Merson’s BETWEEN PRETTY PLACES and THE QUALITY OF RESPECT, her take on Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice. Other produced plays include: IMPERFECT FLOWERS, WAITING, COFFEE ONCE A YEAR, ELEVATOR INVENTIONS. Musicals include: MOLLY’S DAUGHTERS, MY BRAVE FACE, and DEAR ALEX, DEAR HARRIET. She is currently working on the musical WHAT ZEESIE SAW ON DELANCEY STREET (with Elsa Rael and Matthew Gandolfo) and THE SARAH PROJECT. Co-President – Women in the Arts & Media Coalition; Co-Secretary – League of Professional Theatre Women; DG, BMI, SDC, AEA @shlubin @MonMornQuote.

LADIES FIRST #3 JANUARY 2016

This is a list of new productions, workshops, readings, and publications by female playwrights. Our goal is to create greater gender parity in theatre by highlighting the works of female writers and the organizations that promote and produce their works.

PRODUCTIONS:

365 Women a Year, The Bennington Plays

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Featuring After the Thin Man by Shellen Lubin, Feelin’ Lonely by Catherine Weingarten, Pina by Emma Plotkin, and Making Frankenstein by Natalie Osborne.

Produced by Hubbard Hall as part of their Winter Carnival of new plays, January 29th-January 30th.

Femme Noir by Allie Costa

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In the vein of classic noir such as Double Indemnity, the play follows a female private investigator hired by a notorious playboy to solve a murder in 1944. Directed by Toni Braun, the cast includes Debra Carozza-Lynch, Geoffrey Waumans, Judy Wilson, Elizabeth Marsh, and Brittany Bur.

Produced by Old Library Theatre, New Jersey,  January 22nd through January 24th, 2016.

How Soon is Now? by Allie Costa

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Performed by Kitty Torres, this is one of nine pieces selected for The Morrissey Plays, directed by Stuart Bousel.

Produced by San Francisco Theater Pub at PianoFight, San Francisco, January 18th through January 26th, 2016.

The Intervention Will Be Televised by Allie Costa

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Directed by Bryan Rasmussen, this will be the world premiere of the play, which previously had readings at Play Club West and Drama West. Whitefire Theatre

Produced as part of Winter Shorts, a festival of short funny plays,  at Whitefire Theatre in Los Angeles, January 19th through February 23rd, 2016.

To submit to the February issue of LADIES FIRST, email natalie.noplays@gmail.com before the end of the month. Send us your name, the name of your play, the name of the theatre producing your work, a sentence or two about the play, the where and when, and an image. Thank you to everyone who participated in this month’s LADIES FIRST newsletter.

 

A Year in NOplays

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2015 was a huge year for NOplays!

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365 Women a Year at Bennington College, our first production, happened this March. We had an excellent turnout both locally with audience members who attended the event live, and an international audience who tuned into the live-stream. We introduced four new works by female playwrights Shellen Lubin, Maia Villa, Catherine Weingarten, and Natalie Osborne. Their plays celebrate the achievements of extraordinary women such as Mary Shelley, Elizabeth Bishop, Stella Adler, Slyvia Gassel, and Gloria Anzaldua.

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LADIES FIRST, a newsletter for new productions, workshops, readings, and publications by female playwrights, launched it’s first two issues this November and December. The goals of LADIES FIRST are to create greater gender parity in theatre by highlighting the works of female writers and the organizations that promote and produce their works.

None of this would be possible without support from our communities, from the many theatre-makers who have given their time and talents to our projects, and from our followers. Thank you for an amazing year, and we hope 2016 will be an even bigger one!

So What’s Next for 2016?

365 Woman a Year is Back!

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NOplays, in collaboration with Hubbard Hall, will be presenting another production of the 365 Women a Year, Bennington plays. The production will be part of Hubbard Hall’s Winter Carnival this January.

Featuring three returning plays; Making Frankenstein by Natalie Osborne, Feelin’ Lonely by Catherine Weingarten, and After the Thin Man by Shellen Lubin.

The production will also feature one world premiere, Pina by Emma Plotkin.

En El Medio, by Maia Villa, one of the four original 365 Women a Year plays, is currently being workshopped by Chicanas Cholas y Chisme in Los Angeles, and will have a production in March 2016.

The 365 Women a Year performances will take place the evenings of Friday, January 29th and Saturday, January 30th.

Hope to see you there, and have a safe and happy New Year!

 

LADIES FIRST #2 DECEMBER 2015

This is a list of new productions, workshops, readings, and publications by female playwrights. Our goal is to create greater gender parity in theatre by highlighting the works of female writers and the organizations that promote and produce their works.

PRODUCTIONS:

WOMEN w/o WALLS by Robin Rice Lichtig.

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The journey of three women on an express train to an unknown destination. This gritty drama was inspired by Jean Genet’s NO EXIT.

Produced by Broads’ Word Theatre at The Lounge Theatres, 6201 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, CA, November 7-December 12. Tickets are $22.00, available at:www.plays411.com./womenwowalls or https://goo.gl/juDQp8. There will be talk-backs with Director Frances Loy, the cast and Artistic Director, Danielle Ozymandias on Sunday November 15th and on Sunday, December 6th with Playwright, Robin Rice, Frances Loy and the cast. More information at www.BroadsWordTheatre.org.

A Midnight Clear: The Christmas Truce of 1914 by Donna Latham.

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Are people capable of peace? In this historical World War I drama, war scatters a group of dear friends. Action swings between the trenches and London’s home front. Percy, promised he would be home for Christmas, battles in No Man’s Land. He grapples with his religious beliefs and moral compass in the face of war’s new rules. With her loved ones entrenched in a war of attrition, Eugenie is entrenched in the home front. She defies Grandmama to take a nursing position in the hospital, determined to do her bit to help the war effort, hone her skills in medicine, and maintain hope. In the most horrific of places, the historic Christmas Truce of 1914 sweeps across the Western Front. With an agreement forged from the trenches, weary soldiers take a leap of faith to halt brutal battles. Enemies wage a fleeting peace. British and German soldiers unite to celebrate Christmas. They bury their dead, share goodies from home, swap trinkets, and join voices in song.

Produced by The Batavia Arts Council at historic Shannon Hall, East Side Community Center in Batavia, IL, at 14 North Van Buren, corner of Wilson Street, Friday, December 18, 7:30 p.m., Saturday, December 19, 7:30 p.m., Sunday, December 20, 6:00 p.m.

Walking After Midnight by Allie Costa.

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Walking After Midnight is an original, fantasy-free retelling of Cinderella in which a young woman searches for her way home – and her ever after.

Produced by Queensbury Theatre in Houston, Texas, December 9th through December 19th.  http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2420568.

A New Year by Allie Costa.

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Should old acquaintance be forgot? Home for the holidays, Asha runs into her old best friend and she’s not too thrilled about it.

Produced by Charles Stewart Howard Playhouse in Los Angeles this December as part of Hard Candy Christmas. http://hcc4.brownpapertickets.com/

Don’t Shoot the Messenger Pigeon by Allie Costa.

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Produced by Gypsy Stage Rep, and December 1st in St. Petersburg: https://www.facebook.com/events/1481826015457594/.

A Good Old Fashioned Redneck Country Christmas: The Musical by Kris Bauske. 

Produced by The Barn Dinner Theatre at 120 Stage Coach Trail in Greensboro, NC, December 17 – 23, 2015. Contact the box office at 800-668-1764 FREE or check out their website.

Produced by Showcase Productions in Amherst, Nova Scotia B4H 4B9 at the Anglican Church Hall December 2-4, 2015. Proceeds fund scholarships for deserving students in the county who wish to pursue an education in the arts. Contact Showcase Productions for more info, and Theatre Off the Square at 114 N. Denton Street in Weatherford, TX, December 4 – 20, 2015. Tickets are available now. Call the box office at 817-341-8687 or check out their website at http://www.weatherfordtots.org.

Produced by Mount Washington United Methodist Church, December 4-7, 2015. Please contact the church for more information.
253 Flatlick Road, PO BOX 6, Mt. Washington KY 40047, 502.538.6756, Email: kathy@mwumchurch.org.

Produced by Navasota Theatre Alliance at 104 W. Washington Avenue in Navasota, TX (near Houston), December 3 – 13, 2015. Contact the theatre for info at 936-825-3195. Tickets are $12 for Adults, $10 for Seniors & Students, and $5 for Children 10 and under. Email them at NavasotaTheatre@gmail.com.

READINGS:

Cut and Run by Allie Costa. 

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A hairstylist and a customer who learn that, in this hair salon, it’s live and let dye.

Produced by Arts Tri-State in West Virginia, December 5th. http://www.artstristate.org/

The Nearly Final Almost Posthumous Play of the Not-Quite-Dead Sutton McAllister by Kris Bauske.

Multiple readings in February 2016 by the Tennessee Stage Theatre in Knoxville, TN.

To submit to the January issue of LADIES FIRST, email natalie.noplays@gmail.com before the end of the month. Send us your name, the name of your play, the name of the theatre producing your work, a sentence or two about the play, the where and when, and an image. Thank you to everyone who participated in this month’s LADIES FIRST newsletter.

LADIES FIRST ISSUE #1: NOVEMBER 2015 UPDATE

This is a list of new productions, workshops, readings, and publications by female playwrights. Our goal is to create greater gender parity in theatre by highlighting the works of female writers and the organizations that promote and produce their works.

PRODUCTIONS:

A Box of Yellow Stars by Natalie Parker-Lawrence.

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Based on true events from World War II, a Christian man travels to Europe 15 times during the Holocaust, marries fifteen women destined for the concentration camps and divorces them in America, thereby saving them and their families. The play opens at his funeral in the 1990’s where a few of the ex-wives show up. Tragic, poignant, and sometimes funny.

Produced by the Women’s Theatre Festival of Memphis at Theatreworks in Memphis, TN, November 13-22. 

Hope Throws Her Heart Away by Susan Goodell.

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Hope has spent her life pleasing everyone else, attempting to be all things to all people … except herself. But in this show — which is equal parts absurd, quirky comedy and dramatic, poetic realism — Hope’s life is about to change. Directed by Elayne LeTraunik and featuring Katie Binger, Lily Sauvage and Tricia Rogers.

Produced by Genesis Theatrical Productions at The Alley Stage, The Alley Stage, 4127 N. Broadway, Chicago, IL, November 27-December 20. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30pm and Sundays at 3pm.
For tickets go to: http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/1900048.
A limited number of discount tickets are available on Gold Star.

SAFE by Donna Hoke.

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In 2011, a young gay teen hangs himself after being bullied–but the events leading to the suicide began decades before. In 1986, Nancy is a sheltered high school girl who swallows her guilt over her best friend’s torment. Twenty-five years later, married to the controlling Kirk, Nancy is confronted by another bully–her son.

Produced by Saginaw Valley State University Theatre Department, 7400 Bay Rd, University Center, MI 48710, November 18-22.

Wednesday, November 18, 2015 @ 7:30pm
Thursday, November 19, 2015 @ 7:30pm
Friday, November 20, 2015 @ 7:30pm
Saturday, November 21, 2015 @ 7:30pm
Sunday, November 22, 2015 @ 3:00pm
Performance location: Malcolm Field Theatre for Performing Arts.

Ticket Information:
$13.00 – General Admission
$10.00 – Senior Citizens (60+)
$10.00 – Students
For more information or to order tickets, please contact the Box Office at (989) 964-4261.

What Will Happen to Daisy? by Patti Cassidy.

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Directed by Megan Smith and starring Valentine Aprile. Zelda Fitzgerald finally reveals the Great Gatsby’s true story- but is it too late?

Produced by Midtown International Theatre Festival, Short Play Lab, Jewel Box Theater, 312 W. 36th Street, November 7 – 7PM
Nov 8- 4PM.

Don’t Shoot the Messenger Pigeon by Allie Costa.

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This dark comedy was originally developed at PlayGround-LA and had a staged reading at the Zephyr Theatre in Hollywood last year.

Traveling through Florida this November and December as part of Gypsy Stage Rep’s short play series.

http://www.gypsystage.com/
http://www.alliecosta.com/

Plays by Hillary DePiano. 

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The Love of Three Oranges.

A modern adaptation of Carlo Gozzi’s commedia classic! A comedic slapstick fairy tale for all ages!

Produced by Dickinson High School Drama Department, Dickinson ND, November 19-21; Whatcom Community College, Bellingham, WA, November 19-21; Charles County Public Schools, Waldorf, MD, November 19-21; Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Tory, NY, November 13-21; EAV Guerrilla Theatre, Atlanta GA, November 13-21; Wichita High School East, Wichita, KS, November 12-14; Juanita High School, Woodinville, WA, November 12-21; La Salle High School, Pasadena, CA, November 7-21; Anselmian Abbey Players, Manchester, NH, November 5-7; Baines Middle School, Missouri City, TX, November 5-15; Scribner- Snyder Community School, Scribner, NE, November 18-December 5.

The Green Bird.

New this fall, this modern adaptation of Carlo Gozzi’s commedia classic gets a new twist in this slapstick comedy about families and fairy tales.

Produced by Ridgefield High School, Ridgefield CT, November 12-21; Norton Community School, Norton Kansas, November 14-15; Phoenixville Area High School, Phoenixville, PA, November 13-22.

Daddy Issues and Three Padded Walls.

Amelia’s been looking for love in all the wrong faces. But when she meets a strangely familiar man in the subway, she’ll finally have to confront the ghost of her past; They’re ready to lock Jenny away for good. But how can she be crazy when she’s the only one who knows what’s really going on?

Produced by EF Academy, Thornwood, NY, November 20.

READINGS:

La Cancion de Los Pajaritos by Mercy Vasquez.

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The Song of the Little Birds – A story about mothers, daughters, sisters and secrets. Sometimes the choices we make to protect, can also destroy.

Produced by Company of Angels Theater (Downtown LA), 206 W 6th Street, Los Angeles, Ca 90013, Sunday, November 22nd, 7pm.

Weak Days by Hillary DePiano

Weak Days zooms out and looks at our daily routines from a new perspective as all five weekdays play out at simultaneously across the stage in a comic ballet where timing is everything because it’s all we have. Follow a three week journey to shake up the daily routine and figure out what it means to live a little.

Produced by The Chameleon Theatre Circle, Burnsville, MO, November 7.

PUBLICATIONS:

We Are Theatre by the Guerrilla Girls on Tour! 

27 short plays by women on gender parity.  Originally a speak out at the Cherry Lane Theatre produced by Guerrilla Girls on Tour! in 2012. Available for $10 at http://guerrillagirlsontour.com/we-are-theatre/.

To submit to the December issue of LADIES FIRST, email natalie.noplays@gmail.com before the end of the month. Send us your name, the name of your play, the name of the theatre producing your work, a sentence or two about the play, the where and when, and an image. Thank you to everyone who participated in the first LADIES FIRST newsletter.

LADIES FIRST Deadline Approaches

The deadline for the first LADIES FIRST newsletter is this Sunday!

If you’re a theatre or female playwright who has a reading, production, or workshop coming up this November, remember to submit your event to the LADIES FIRST newsletter.

LADIES FIRST is a monthly newsletter of world premiere productions and readings of plays by female authors.

The goals of LADIES FIRST are to:

A.) Promote woman writers and the theaters that produce their works.

B.) Create a wider network of female playwrights.

C.) Provide a platform for producers, artistic directors, and other theatre-makers to find new works by female authors.

The first LADIES FIRST newsletter will be published this November on the NOplays blog.

What we want from YOU:

Your name, the name of your play, 1-2 sentences about your play, the name of the theatre putting your play up, the where and when, and an image of some sort.

Email the info before November 1st to natalie.noplays@gmail.com to be considered for the November newsletter. Only productions and readings happening in November will be a part of the November newsletter.

And a huge shout-out to the Dramatist for this months amazing issue on The Count! We’ve got a lot a work ahead of us in order to create gender parity in theatre, so let’s get to it!

The Cross Roads of Gender Parity

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That’s the amount of female playwrights who are produced each year according to American Theatre Magazine. Broken down, the numbers are 14% for white American women, 3.4% for American women of color, 2.4% for white foreign women, and .4% for foreign women of color. The numbers are going up, but there’s still work to be done.

In this historic time for women in theatre, NOplays is proud to announce LADIES FIRST!

LADIES FIRST is a monthly newsletter of world premiere productions and readings of plays by female authors.

The goals of LADIES FIRST are to:

Promote woman writers and the theaters that produce their works.

Create a wider network of female playwrights.

Provide a platform for producers, artistic directors, and other theatre-makers to find new works by female authors.

The first LADIES FIRST newsletter will be published this November on the NOplays blog.

What we want from YOU:

Your name, the name of your play, 1-2 sentences about your play, the name of the theatre putting your play up, the where and when, and an image of some sort.

Email the info before November 1st to natalie.noplays@gmail.com to be considered for the November newsletter. Only productions and readings happening in November will be a part of the November newsletter.

We’re at 24/76, but we won’t stop until we reach 50/50!

7 Steps for Achieving Gender Parity in Theatre

Check out this awesome article by WomenArts executive director Martha Richards in American Theatre Magazine!

“We have proven that gender discrimination is a persistent problem in theatre; now we need to figure out how to fix it. As we look at the field, we can see that women all over the world are trying to address this issue with various strategies. What would happen if we could find a way to coordinate these efforts and maximize their impact? Could we reach a tipping point where the barriers for women theatre artists would finally come crashing down?”

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