Meet Roger Gonzalez & Zombie Land Long Island

481989_10151563110755336_1509489675_nName: Roger Gonzalez

What is your current project?

As an actor I am now working with BroadwayWorld best director, James Bonney and Best actor, Sean King on a really funny and well written web series called “Zombie Land Long Island.” It’s not about the kind of zombies you think, but rather about people who act and walk around your life like zombies… dead-like, lost, eating everything in its path. I have a recurring role and also help out with cinematography and marketing. Otherwise, my website LocalTheatreNY.com is absorbed now in theatre festival season. So that’s a lot right there.

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

Zombie Land New York is being produced in Smithtown and the setting is Long Island. We are in rehearsals right now. To me its a perfect fit because I have never worked with a director like Bonney. What we do in terms of real character creation is incredible to experience. He really pushes us and just being able to create my character, Martinez, is a joy. We are always laughing and the comedy seems so real and not pushed or feigned. Or acted. Martinez was originally written as this character Mangano, so I am quite thrilled that they allowed me to make him more mine.

What’s next for you?

I’ve been working on a one man play about my dreams and have been developing it with the help of Artistic New Directions. Now I have the summer to finish a draft and present it. Dreams (the actual night time REM variety) are a big part of my life and my family’s life…so its been fun.

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?
On one level, and I know this might some corny to some, Deepak Chopra. I’ve re-engaged with his work and realized how much of my life centers around his work. It’s serendipity that at this stage in my life I make this realization. BUT my always inspiration in life has always been my four kids. I want to leave them as much as I can in life and I always think of them to motivate and inspire.

WANT MORE?

Website: www.LocalTheatreNY.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/localtheatreNY
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rogerlocaltheatre/?hl=en

I am an ethnically ambiguous actor (couldn’t resist!), artist, marketing teacher who has been in media for over 20 years and I currently run LocalTheatreNY.com. A NY native, I have been involved in theatre and the arts since I first appeared onstage in school at the age of 5.


Zombie Land Long Island premieres in September 2016. Right now you can find images and updates on our new Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/Zombie-Land-Long-Island-1079367548819526/

13641057_1080563015366646_2580894768491256527_o

Meet Michael Bradley Block & The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer

Michael Block Headshot 4Name: Michael Bradley Block

What is your current project? The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer

Where are you performing it and why is it the right fit for your piece?

The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer will be presented as part of the 20th Annual New York International Fringe Festival! I’ve been dreaming to be a part of the festival for quite some time so getting this opportunity now is extraordinary. FringeNYC is a place where works that may not be able to see the light of day get the opportunity to experience life in front of an audience. My play is inspired by Ibsen’s Peer Gynt told through the lens of modern sexuality. The pitch is filled with buzzwords but to a regular audience, it may not be their cup of tea. Because of the structure of FringeNYC, not only are we getting friends and family to attend, we’re getting patrons of the festival which then brings word of mouth! This play at this time is important. And I’m thankful that FringeNYC will be a part of the adventure!

What’s next for you?

I am keeping up with my site Theater in the Now (theaterinthenow.com) as well as pushing for my musical, The Girls in White, to see life on its feet. So if anyone wants to produce a musical that is virtually “Orange is the New Black” meets “Chicago” with a country twang, I got the show for you!

Who is your biggest inspiration right at this moment and why?

I’ve said this a lot recently, but I truly mean it. Right now, my biggest inspiration right now is Chris Goodrich, the director of The Illusory Adventures of a Dreamer. Not only is he an amazing friend but he’s pushed me in ways that have made me a stronger person and a stronger artist. I’m not going to lie, producing a play for FringeNYC is not easy. Chris has been such a wonderful support and is the reason why this play is happening. If it weren’t for him, I’d probably have pulled all my hair out! Everyone should be so lucky to have a friend like him.

WANT MORE?

Website: dreamerplay.com, theaterinthenow.com
Twitter: @dreamerplay2016 @theaterinthenow
Facebook: facebook.com/dreamerplay2016, facebook.com/michaelbblock

Michael Bradley (Playwright): originally from Mahwah, New Jersey, Michael is a theater artist based in New York City. Most recently, his musical The Girls in White, written with Artie Sievers, received a concert at Feinstein’s/54 Below featuring two-time Tony winner Michael Cerveris. As a playwright, his work as been seen and heard throughout New York including TinyRhino, Less Than Rent, Dream Up Festival at Theater for the New City, PTP/NYC, and Rhapsody Collective, to name a few. He is the founder and artistic director of Rhapsody Collective. He is also the founder and lead critic of Theater in the Now (theaterinthenow.com), a leading source of theatrical criticism in the Indie and Off Broadway theater community. As a stage manager, Michael has worked on and off Broadway including Stick Fly, produced by Alicia Keys, Signature’s revival of Angels in America, and the original productions of Clybourne Park by Bruce Norris and Circle Mirror Transformation by Annie Baker. Michael is a graduate of Boston University and a proud member of AEA.


Show Information

WHERE: Venue #1- Teatro Sea at The Clemente (107 Suffolk St.)

WHEN: SATURDAY, AUGUST 13 @ 9:30; TUESDAY, AUGUST 16 @ 5+; MONDAY, AUGUST 22 @ 4:45; WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24 @ 7; SATURDAY, AUGUST 27 @ 1:30

TICKETS: fringenyc.org

Dreamer Postcard Front

Harvey: An Oldie but A Goodie – Opens 7/14

575055885f2fa.image
Photo Courtesy of Mark Lord,  Queens Chronicle

I rarely act these days. I tend to be behind the scenes – producing, publicizing, directing – enjoying the magic created by artists. I believe it takes courage to get on a stage and bare your soul.

“Art is prayer is love is creation is expression.” I came up with that gem some years ago. My personal prayer to the theatre gods who keep my passion burning for this art form. So when the opportunity presented itself, I thought to myself that it might be time to audition for a show. The opportunity presented itself through my dear friend and one of my actresses, Mary Lynch. Mary has one of my actresses for 13 years. She played M’Lynn in Steel Magnolias, my first professional gig. I was a young director finishing grad school; newly married; new to Queens theatre. She and I just connected and I directed her in at least 5 plays including Torch Song Trilogy and Plaza Suite.

Now she is the director and I follow her vision. Harvey is a wonderful play. Yes, it is dated in some spots but there’s this innocence under the comedy that I find delicious. I am playing Nurse Kelly with an amazing cast. All we do in rehearsal is laugh and work. And eat. We enjoy eating very much.

I would like you to meet these extraordinary folks. I am putting them in the limelight as we get ready to open 🙂

See you at the show!


HARVEY by Mary Chase
Director: Mary Lynch

Producers: Paul Morisi and Stef Morisi

Tickets: $10 General Seating (all tickets sold at the door)

July 14 at 7pm
July 15 at 7pm
July 16 at 7pm
July 17 at 2pm

Location:
Our Lady of Mercy Parish Hall
70-01 Kessel Street Forest Hills, NY 11375
PLEASE USE THE ENTRANCE OF JUNO STREET. Elevator is available on the side of the church.

Cast:
Nicole O’Connor
Cecilia Vaicels
Victoria Lardieri
Jim Haines
Malini Singh McDonald
Nick Radu
Jeremy Lardieri
Michelle Ruggieri
Rich Feldman
Kevin Abernethy
Chris Martens

For more info email FirstStringPlayers@gmail.com

Photo Courtesy of Stef Morisi

13516255_10207064983207343_8362842805872196235_n

Guest Blogger Manny Rodriguez Reviews “Power!” Stokely Carmichael

 

On a humid summer night, Stokely Carmichael gathers us together and prepares us for what’s to come. He stands on a bench and rolls up a sign into a makeshift bullhorn and tells us we better get ready. The gravity of the situation can be heard in his voice. This is real and we have to take it seriously. White supremacy kills and we must understand that. Carmichael then jumps off the bench, puts the sign down, looks at the audience directly and asks with a wry smile, “You ok?”

Going into Meshaun Labrone’s one man show, “Power! Stokely Carmichael,” we’re automatically ready for the sober, hefty civil rights lesson that’s coming. But Meshaun Labrone’s brilliance is his awareness of the subject’s weight and ability to teach it with a level hand.

Like all great leaders, Carmichael was able to relate to his people by visualizing the struggle for us and bringing you to a place where you could deal with it mentally. But if Martin Luther King and Malcolm X were the prinicipals of the school, Carmichael was your favorite, down to earth teacher you loved. That teacher who told you entertaining stories of his mentors, the aforementioned King and X, and made you understand the importance of what they did and the greatness they possessed in them. His gift, so beautifully captured here by Mr. Labrone, was to make you see that those gifts were in you too.

Labrone first shows us the pain of living as a black man as he moves from Carmichael and takes the guise of a 74 year old man who has worked all his life for an abusive white man. Illuminating the torture of everyday life is then balanced by an examination of some of the joys in life, most notably the music of James Brown. Labrone wins us over with his charisma (and dancing skills—that split was awesome!) and never lets go. He expresses the love he has for Black women by pulling a lovely sister from the audience and bringing her onstage. This could have been awkward in another actor’s hands, but with Labrone it is sweet, funny and enlightening. All of this is made that much easier and entertaining by Jennifer Knight’s fluid direction. Each lighting change and transition is seamless and our attention is never lost.

But Labrone’s major achievement is drawing the parallel between 1960’s Black America and our 2016 version. Our hatred of Black skin, our fear of white supremacy, and our willingness to lose our selves for the fruitless prizes of American society still hold us back. And Labrone doesn’t hammer this point home. He respects our intelligence by allowing us to come to it naturally. The same way all the great teachers do.

Venue:

Lounge Theatre

6201 Santa Monica Boulevard

Perfomances:

Sunday, June 5th

Friday, June 10th

Saturday, June 11th

For more info, visit https://www.facebook.com/POWERSTOKELYCARMICHAEL/?fref=ts and www.powerstokelycarmichael.com

UPCOMING DATES TO BE ANNOUNCED FOR CAPITAL FRINGE AND NY INTERNATIONAL FRINGE FESTIVAL

Power!

TBB: Things Been A-Happening

Happy Spring TBBers! It’s been a while since my last update. My usual platform is through social media but I figured, “hey, a personal note is often nice.”

Over the last 5 months, TBB has been transformed into a beautiful organization. Our community has grown through our Facebook Group Page; we have been teaching empowerment through theatre at a few schools; we have a few shows that will be produced this year into next; and of course, t’is the season of FRINGE! Actually, we are heading to Cali first for the Hollywood Fringe which I am very excited about because it really is beyond Broadway.

In addition to working on Power!, I also am the associate producer for the Broadway Artists Connection. We are always looking for aspiring artists to be on our lineup along side our Broadway artists.

And I’ve included some other fun stuff. Keep me posted on all your projects!

Below is all the info for everything and as always…

see you at the show!


unnamed

 The Broadway Artists Connection brings together Broadway & Aspiring Artists to create, connect and give back to our communities.
Next SHOW: 5/23 at 7pm.
Tickets are available.


VISIT WWW.THEATREBEYONDBROADWAY.COM for upcoming events.

I am Woman but I am not Roaring…

o-gender-equality-sign-facebookI had the privilege to moderate a panel on gender parity  at Salon Creative Lounge (presented by International Women Artists’ Salon). Nine women from different disciplines shared the statistics of women who work in their field; how women continue to experience discrimination in the workplace; and how some of our male counterparts are unaware of this. This isn’t a new struggle but it is a conversation that needs to continue.

I believe in a sisterhood. I believe we should always raise each other up as others are so willing to tear us down. I believe in change.

Thank you Amber Sloan (dance), Vanessa Morrison (film), Felicia Lin (publishing), Lea Anderson (music),  Liza Boulus (theater), Naomi McDougall Jones (film), Regine L. Sawyer (comic book), Shellen Lubin (theater; contributor to below article), Vera Tse (design). And kudos to Jenny Green (theatre) and Heidi Russell (visual artist/founder of IWAS) for creating the space for this conversation.

As I was preparing for the panel (and my discipline), I am across this great article by Martha Richards for American Theatre Magazine.  Here’s how we can be a part of the solution.


(reposted from American Theatre Magazine, June 9, 2015)

7 Steps for Achieving Gender Parity in the Theatre 

BY

 

At an April conference in Toronto, we came up with a plan for change that can take root and grow into a more equitable future for female theatre artists.

 

Over the past six years there have been eight substantial studies on the status of women in theatre in the U.S. and elsewhere.1 The methodologies have varied, but whether the studies were done in Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Princeton, Boston, Washington, D.C., or Toronto, they revealed alarming consistencies. They have found that women are underrepresented in most job categories; that women are clustered in the lower-paying jobs; and that employment growth for women in theatre has been stagnant over time in most cities. The most recent Canadian study found that there has been minimal improvement in the status of women in Canadian theatre over the past 30 years, and that similar patterns of discrimination have been documented in Great Britain, Australia and the U.S.

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?

To address these questions, WomenArts joined forces with New York’s Women in the Arts & Media Coalition and Equity in Theatre (a coalition of nine Canadian organizations) to convene our first international summit on gender parity in theatre. We gathered 21 gender parity activists2 in Toronto on April 28, 2015 to review the current research, share strategies and discuss ways to transform the existing efforts into a paradigm-shifting international movement.

Our meeting included the authors of gender parity studies from San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boston and Canada, as well as representatives from other organizations that have been leading advocates for women in theatre for decades, such as the League of Professional Theatre Women, theInternational Centre for Women Playwrights and Teatro Luna. Though many of us had been following each other’s work online for years, most of us had never met face-to-face before, and it was exhilarating to be in a room together.

As we shared information about the most effective projects we had seen, we compiled the following list of strategies that seem especially promising. Throughout the day, we asked ourselves: If we had $5 million to advance gender parity, what would we spend it on? As you look at our list, we encourage you to ask yourself this question, too—even if you don’t have that kind of money. If we can articulate the kinds of staff and projects that we need, we can start looking for ways to fund them.

      1. Build alliances with other social justice groups. The biggest challenge we face is that sexism in theatre is closely linked to sexism, racism, classism and other forms of discrimination that underpin our current socioeconomic system. The arts help us think about our social and political lives in new ways, but corporate America would rather have us focused on shopping. It is no accident that the top-selling film for 2015 is Furious 7 (ticket sales of $1.4 billion worldwide in its first 12 days), a big-budget action film with so much product placement that it often feels like a two-and-a-half-hour commercial.

        This undercurrent of consumerism pulls at us constantly. If you stand in line at the TKTS booth in Times Square, you might be able to buy tickets to Broadway shows written or directed by women—but you will be surrounded by giant billboards displaying women’s bodies to sell products. For every new play with fresh perspectives on women, there are hundreds of advertisements and product placements that reinforce discriminatory attitudes about gender, race and class.

        As gender parity advocates, we need to find ways to counteract this consumerism, and we need to join forces with women’s organizations, anti-racism groups and others who are addressing discrimination in other contexts. This is especially important, since so many women experience multiple forms of discrimination.

        2. Work with women in other art forms. Women in other art forms are experiencing similar gender discrimination issues and are organizing their own studies and initiatives. We can show our solidarity and increase our visibility by participating in cross-disciplinary initiatives likeSupport Women Artists Now Day, an annual international celebration of women’s creativity in all art forms.

        We can also adapt innovative strategies being used in other art forms, such as these three recent film initiatives: Gamechanger Films is the first equity fund that focuses exclusively on financing narrative feature films directed by women; the ACLU has just demanded that federal and state agencies investigate discrimination against women film directors in Hollywood; and the Geena Davis Institute on Media partnered with UN Women and the Rockefeller Foundation to do the first-ever global study of gender stereotyping in the international film industry.

        3. Teach plays by women. More students need to be exposed to female playwrights in school. We feel this is one of the most important areas to address, since so many attitudes about women and girls are shaped in schools. If future artistic directors and other theatrical decision-makers have never been exposed to female playwrights in school, they are much less likely to select them for productions.

        To ensure that women are included in the curriculum from elementary school through graduate school, we want to mobilize committees of educators at every grade level to develop course materials that include female playwrights and persuade their male and female colleagues that it is important to teach more plays by women.

        One sample program that has been designed to increase the teaching of historical women playwrights is History Matters/Back to the Future, in which high school teachers and college professors across the country are being invited to include the work of an historic female playwright in one class per semester. Teachers are given a 50-minute lesson plan and other teaching materials, and their students are eligible to compete for the annual $2,500Judith Barlow Prize for the best one-act play written in the style of an historic female playwright. The teacher of the winning student receives a prize of $500. About 50 professors have joined the program so far.

        Also, the National Theatre Conference, an alliance of leaders in commercial, non-commercial, and educational theatre, has created the Women Playwrights Initiative, which asks member theatres and educational theatre programs to dedicate one full production slot (not just a reading or a workshop) each year for three years to a contemporary female American playwright. Members are encouraged to select plays that have not been produced on Broadway recently, and to invite the playwright for a residency during the production of her play.

        4. Encourage production of plays by female playwrights. Some artistic directors claim that they would produce more plays by women but they just can’t find enough good ones. The Kilroys is a group of female artists in Los Angeles who consulted with artistic directors, literary managers, dramaturgs and others to compile a list of excellent contemporary plays by women that has been widely publicized and distributed. As a direct result of our meeting in Toronto, women in Canada are now working on a “Kilroys list” of Canadian female playwrights.

        Another initiative that could be replicated is the Women’s Voices Theater Festival, which will take place in Washington, D.C., in fall 2015. More than 50 professional theatres in and around Washington, D.C., will present world-premiere productions of a work by one or more female playwrights. This festival will be the largest collaboration of theatre companies working simultaneously to produce original works by female writers in history.

        The International Centre for Women Playwrights encourages productions of plays by women through their 50/50 Applause Awards, which recognize theatre companies that produce seasons where 50 percent or more of the productions and performances are of plays by women. The program started in 2012, and they have given out more than 100 awards so far. The honored companies receive an award logo to use in their publicity, and they are invited to participate in a celebratory video.

        Since female playwrights tend to create more female characters, and women are often selected to direct their plays, producing plays by women often results in increased employment for other women in the field.

        5. Meet individually with artistic directors. In the San Francisco Bay Area, Shotgun Players’ 2015 season features six mainstage plays and six staged readings by female playwrights, and they have made a commitment to strive for gender parity in future seasons. Magic Theatre in San Francisco has also just announced that their 2015–16 season will include six productions by female playwrights.

        It seems that one-on-one discussions with the artistic directors and peer pressure can have a powerful impact on a theatre’s commitment to gender parity. In the case of Shotgun Players, the male artistic director revealed in a recent panel discussion that he had not been thinking about the depth of the gender disparity problem in theatre until female company members spoke up and asked for gender to be a consideration in season planning.

        6. Work with the unions. Since unions have the power to defend their members from unfair labor practices, we need to find more ways to work with our unions to advance gender parity in theatre. We need to work with them to develop equal opportunity standards for theatres that would ensure fair hiring practices for women as well as equal pay for equal work. We also need to have deeper discussions with unions about the best ways to represent their members in a field that is so severely under-funded. We want theatre managers to treat women fairly, but we also recognize that arts funding has been steadily decreasing over the past 30 years, and that few people are making a living from their work onstage.The 2013-14 Actors Equity Theatrical Season Report indicated that only 41.3 percent of their members worked at all in 2013–14, and that the median income per working member was $7,483 for 16.7 weeks of work.  Only 9 percent of those working members (i.e., fewer than 1,600 people nationwide) made $50,000 or more from their Actors Equity employment.

        If we achieved gender parity on those totals, it would mean that only 800 women nationwide would make $50,000 or more from their Equity work. That’s just not enough! Our fair labor strategy needs to include advocacy for much more funding for the arts, and the unions could be powerful allies in this work.

        7. Legislative approaches. In the upcoming elections, we need to make sure we educate all the candidates about the need to increase arts funding at the federal and state levels. We also need to investigate whether women artists are getting their fair share of federal and state arts funding and file petitions as needed.

We offer the list above as a starting point for discussion. We plan to organize follow-up meetings over the coming year to get more people involved, and we want to form committees to work on various strategies. WomenArts has also compiled a list of ways that different kinds of theatre artists can advance gender parity on our Choices You Can Make page.

If you have comments or suggestions, or if you would like to volunteer to organize a gender parity discussion in your community or serve on a committee, please write to WomenArts. We look forward to working with you to build a world where every woman will be able to express the full range of her creativity.

SPECIAL THANKS:  Special thanks to Shellen Lubin, co-president of Women in the Arts and Media Coalition, Rebecca Burton and Laine Zisman Newman, co-chairs of the Equity in Theatre Initiative and Christine Young, WomenArts board member, for their help in organizing the Toronto gender parity summit.

FOOTNOTES
1- Links to the Recent Gender Parity Studies:
  Los Angeles Female Playwrights Initiative looked at 4,800 plays from 2002 to 2010 in Los Angeles; Chicago Storefront Summit looked a 1113 plays produced in Chicago in 2009; Emily Glass Sands, a Princeton student examined the status of women playwrights nationwide in 2009; the League of Professional Theatre Women studied 355 Off-Broadway productions between 2010 and 2014; The Counting Actors Project & WomenArtsexamined 500 productions in the San Francisco Bay Area from 2011 to 2014; Gwydion Suilebhanhas published three annual reports on playwright and director demographics in Washington, D.C., with assistance from David Mitchell Robinson and Patricia Connelly; Equity in Theatre has just released a study of women in Canadian theatre; and the StageSource Gender Parity Task Force is about to release an analysis of productions in the Greater Boston area.

2 – List of People Who Attended the Summit

Boston: Julie Hennrikus, executive director, StageSource
Chicago:  Alexandra Meda, executive director, and Abigail Vega, managing director, of Teatro Luna
New York: Shellen Lubin, co-president Women in the Arts & Media Coalition and co-secretary,League of Professional Theatre Women; Maria Nieto, Women in the Arts & Media Coalition board member representing Writers Guild of America; Lesleh Donaldson, actor; Sophia Romma, co-chair of International Committee of the League of Professional Theatre Women and vice president ofInternational Centre for Women Playwrights; Patrick J. O’Neill, founder, O’Neill Foundation; Peggy Chane, producer and member of International Committee of the League of Professional Theatre Women; Yvette Heyliger, actor and playwright, Dramatists Guild Women’s Initiative &Obama for America organizing fellow.
Los Angeles: Jennie Webb, playwright and cofounder, Los Angeles Female Playwrights Initiative; Alice Tuan, playwright and teacher
San Francisco: Martha Richards, executive director, WomenArts; Christine Young, theatre professor, University of San Francisco, founder, Works by Women San Francisco and board member of WomenArts; Valerie Weak, actor, teacher and founder, Counting Actors Project, and cofounder, Works by Women San Francisco Meet-up Group.  Richards, Young, and Weak are all members of the Gender Parity Committee of Theatre Bay Area.
Toronto: Rebecca Burton, co-chair, Equity in Theatre and membership and contracts manager,  Playwrights Guild of Canada; Laine Zisman Newman, co-chair, Equity in Theatre and dramaturgical associate, Pat the Dog Theatre Creation;  Jennie Egerdie, Metcalf intern, Equity in Theatre;  Michelle MacArthur, PhD, instructor, University of Toronto, and author of Achieving Equity in Canadian Theatre; Cole Alvis, executive director of the Indigenous Performing Arts Alliance and artistic producer of lemonTree creations; Sheila Sky, executive director, Associated Designers of Canada.

Martha Richards is the executive director of WomenArts

Downtown Urban Arts Festival Features Chip Bolcik & Ferry Limbo

Playwright’s Name: Chip Bolcik

Tell us about your latest project: 

Ferry Limbo is a play I wrote to honor my friend John, who died 21 years ago from a rare bone cancer. The play does not focus on the actual events of his life, but rather on the kind of person he was. This play is a departure from my normal style of writing. I tend to write comedies, and romantic comedies. Ferry Limbo, though it has some humor in it, is a much more serious, though septet play.

What excites you about being a part of the Downtown Urban Arts Festival?

The Downtown Urban Arts Festival is a big step up for me and my creative team. They are extremely well organized, and incredibly respectful of writers. I have never felt so important before! I respect the way they work, and how they treat the people they invite to participate.

What’s your upcoming project after the Festival?

After the festival, I’m headed home to Los Angeles, where I will continue writing the full-length play I’m writing about marriage.. Then I’m off to Alaska where my play, ‘Til Death Do Us Part” is going to be part of the Last Frontier Theatre Festival. It is my fourth year in a row being part of that festival.

Facebook Page: 

https://www.facebook.com/Chip.Bolcik.Photography/?fref=ts

SHOW INFO:

Saturday, April 2 at 7pm

HERE (145 Sixth Avenue – enter on Dominick Street)
Tickets are $18 at http://www.here.org or by calling 212-352-3101

Downtown Urban Arts Festival Features Anghus Houvouras & Dine & Dash

CapturePlaywright’s Name: Anghus Houvouras

Tell us about your latest project:  

Dine and Dash is a dark comedy about a blind date that takes some sinister twists and turns. She wants to get into his head. He wants to get up her skirt. By the end of the night, only one of them will survive.

What excites you about being a part of the Downtown Urban Arts Festival?

The chance to come to New York and for one night be a part of the theater scene. To be part of that electric current that runs through the city every night is something I always wanted to do. I’m a huge fan of the theater and comedy scene of NYC. It’s where the best work is being done. Razor sharp writing and seasoned performers entertaining audiences seven nights a week. Every time I visit NYC I walk the streets and think about the history there. The vaudeville shows of the 20s and 30s. The dynamic Broadway shows of the golden age. Cutting edge stuff like National Lampoon’s Lemmings in the 1970s. The comedy club stand ups of the 1980s. Being able to stage a show as part of this year’s DUAF has put a big grin on my ridiculous mug.

What’s your upcoming project after the Festival?

I’m working on a new play called A Civilized World which tells the story of a dystopian future where the unproductive of society are sentenced to death. The play chronicles one of the victims as they are processed through a final interview before their execution. There’s some twists and turns as we learn about what happens to the condemned as well as the faltering beliefs of the bureaucrat tasked with conducting the final interview.

Website: 

http://mycareersuicidenote.tumblr.com

Facebook Page:

http://www.facebook.com/anghus

Twitter: @anghusFM

SHOW INFO

Thursday, March 31 at 7pm

HERE (145 Sixth Avenue – enter on Dominick Street)

Tickets are $18 at www.here.org or by calling 212-352-3101

Downtown Urban Arts Festival Features Tommy Jamerson & Rags to Bitches

575500_366575300061087_1668848070_n12809550_10101393081540544_4873688745399835533_n[1] (1)Playwright’s Name: Tommy Jamerson

Tell us about your latest project:

RAGS TO BITCHES: A Battle of Wits & Wigs tells the tawdry and bawdy story of two long-time drag rivals duking it out backstage at the US Open’s Legs Drag Pageant. But tucked under the sequins and just beyond the duct tape, there’s also a tale about insecurity, friendship, and learning to admit when you’re wrong. It’s basically an educational show for children, but with female illusionists’ and cursing.

What excites you about being a part of the Downtown Urban Arts Festival?

DUTF has a rich and wonderful history of helping out playwrights both green and seasoned. Being able to work with such an inviting and encouraging group has not only been a dream come true, but has also helped me reshape and see my play in a way I never thought possible. It’s not often a writer is given a chance like this, and DUTF has provided me with an invaluable (and artistically rewarding) opportunity.

What’s your upcoming project after the Festival?

I am primarily a children’s playwright, so I have a family show opening in Indiana (FROM HAIR TO ETERNITY: THE UNBEWEAVEABLE ADVENTURES OF RAPUNZEL) in May, as well an adaptation of Pinocchio (entitled ONCE UPON A PINE) premiering in New Orleans in the summer. I also have an adult, campy comedy (ETERNAL FLAME: THE BALLAD OF JESSIE BLADE) that’s currently playing here in New York at the Corner Office Theatre.

Website: http://tommyjamersonplays.com/

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/people/Matthew-Widman/100009158036703

SHOW INFO:12809550_10101393081540544_4873688745399835533_n[1] (1) 575500_366575300061087_1668848070_n

Friday, April 1 at 7pm

HERE (145 Sixth Avenue – enter on Dominick Street)
Tickets are $18 at www.here.org or by calling 212-352-3101

Downtown Urban Arts Festival Features Irene Hernandez & One Size Fits All

CapturePlaywright’s Name:  Irene Hernandez

Tell us about your latest project: 

One Size Fits All – a one act play about women of different sizes and shapes trying on clothes in a department store fitting room. Out of frustration, the women break the fourth wall and confide in the audience about their experiences with insecurity, body shaming , objectification and finding the right outfit.

What excites you about being a part of the Downtown Urban Arts Festival?

I’m happy to be a part of the festival with my work for the third year in a row. DeVante and Marc are great and the crew working are supportive and excellent.

What’s your upcoming project after the Festival?

I will continue acting, writing, producing and directing a comedic web series I created, called Brand New Me. I also just finished writing my first musical.

Website: http://www.dancingfrogtheatercompany.weebly.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/irene.hernandez.75491

Twitter:  @dancingfrogthco

SHOW INFO:

Friday, April 1 at 7pm

HERE (145 Sixth Avenue – enter on Dominick Street)
Tickets are $18 at www.here.org or by calling 212-352-3101