THE ROOM

         There is a moment when the connection to the spirit that fuels creation is supreme. Some call it inspiration, My old man called it the room. It’s where the soul connects to the universe behind the mind’s eye and is transported to a place, where the greatest paintings are revealed, where the greatest stories are recited. And you could go inside the room and listen and see, observe and bring its gifts out to share with the world. The room is where you met the creator.” 

This is a monologue from JAZZLAND, a new play by Keith Glover. It received its world premiere in July 2006 at The Contemporary American Theater Festival. I begin my blog today with this quote because I have been thinking about “the room.” The room is very important to theater artists. Plays, theater, art, come alive in a room. The room is a spiritual, inspirational place. The room is where we tell our stories.

On June 8th we will begin the rehearsal process for the 2009 Theater Festival. Playwrights, actors, directors, designers, and theater artists will arrive in Shepherdstown to give birth to five new American plays.

Each of the directors have been meeting with their playwrights and designers, reading and re-reading their scripts, making notes, doing research, asking questions of the text, searching out details and making personal connections to the work. During this time each director begins to create  a mental movie of how they see the action unfolding. They are exploring the script and are making discoveries. The key elements usually arrive early in the process.

I find this pre-production period invigorating and creatively stimulating. I have learned to trust my intuition at every step in the process. During this pre-production period I immerse myself into the “world of the play”…seeking out the heart of the playwright.

THE ROOM:

A play in the theater is a peculiar convention. It is more than peculiar. It’s absurd, it’s ungainly, it’s awkward, it’s unbelievable. In our society as busy and playful as it is, three hundred people walk into a crowded theater lobby for the privilege of going into a dark room and sitting there for two hours while a group of people at the other end of the dark room impersonate human behavior. At the conclusion of this process, the three hundred people who have been sitting silently and motionlessly in the dark clap their hands, signifying satisfaction, and return to their regular lives. It is a peculiar activity, especially when you consider that human beings do not usually sit together in the dark for two hours motionlessly and silently giving their undivided attention to something outside themselves. To sit in silence and give their attention to something outside themselves is a very rare experience.

The experience of drama is one of those moments in which a human being sits in awe, wonder, and admiration of something outside of self.

When one is in this state, one is not aware of the experiencing self. One looks back on it in this way: “I don’t remember anything specifically. I don’t remember being worried or happy. I don’t remember anything except the general feeling of having been absorbed. I didn’t know who I was, I lost track of time, I didn’t have a care in the world, I was completely in it, I was on the edge of my seat, I was captivated, I was compelled, I was enthralled, I was spellbound.”

Theater people will endure considerable hardship and sacrifice in hopes of attaining even a few moments of this theatrical unity.

 

          Todd London writes in his book: THE ART OF THEATER:

          We are in a room together. We are in a room with black walls, or maybe in a warehouse with sides of corrugated steel. It might be a beautiful, gilded hall from an earlier century, plush draperies and portraits, the light from chandeliers crystalling off plaster friezes running along the base of a vaulted ceiling. How about an actual living room, where the hostess rings a little bell for the performance to begin? Perhaps we are seated around a fire or on stone benches embedded in the side of a hill, a sacred place rife with our shared history; this isn’t what you think of as a room, but the open world has rooms, too, and our presence here circumscribes one. Maybe we’re arranged on folding chairs in a raw barn or even in front of a painting of a barn on canvas hung at the back of an old Masonic Lodge; a young man from town, dressed as a cowboy, steps out from the side of the painted barn and begins to sing, ‘Oh, what a beautiful Mornin’…What is the first place you imagine when you read the word ‘theater’? Whatever you imagine, wherever we are, the important thing is this: we are in a room together.”  

Everything about the theater depends on its live-ness and presence. At least one person must perform and at least one person must watch. Everything depends on a real moment in time…a real shared space.

Ed Herendeen

It’s A WHIRLWIND

We are in the final weeks of pre-production preparations. There is a whirlwind of creative activity throughout the building. In just a few weeks our 2009 Company will arrive to “re-create” the Theater Festival experience.

We have provided an artistic haven where artists live and work together. It is an overwhelming experience to witness. Each summer you can feel the creative energy that buzzes in our rehearsal spaces, in our shops, in the hallways of the CCA, around the artists’ housing, and throughout the historic village of Shepherdstown. Late-night conversations, jam sessions under the WV stars, early morning walks along the Potomac are fueled with a constant creativity that makes the Contemporary American Theater Festival experience a unique artistic endeavor. I often describe it as a creative explosion. I have seen it happen in the rehearsal hall, on-stage…in performance…but more often this creative explosion happens at odd hours in a Shepherdstown pub or restaurant, walking down German Street, or even sitting on my front porch with a small gathering of actors and playwrights. The collaborative process is constant and inspiring. I cannot imagine a better place to live and produce new work.

I just love being in the center of this “whirlwind” of creative activity. It is not an accident that brings people together in art. We come together because we have to share our experiences with others. We find it impossible to stand still; we want to move forward. We want new ways to express ourselves in “creative action.”

We are preparing to welcome a new company of CATF Artists who will help us “re-invent” the CATF experience. Because creating art is a journey of self discovery, and that is the task of the artist, to know oneself through good work.

I am looking forward to inviting you to step into the center of this CATF whirlwind…join us in July…bring your friends!

Ed Herendeen

Return From NY

I returned from NY from a full week of Casting for the 2009 Repertory. It was a very intense and productive week. We had three days of actor submissions. On Friday we had call backs. McCorkle provided me with two terrific Readers who read with each of the actors. Offers are going out and I hope to announce the cast for our 2009 Repertory later this week.

While I was in the city our friends and CATF supporters Doug Moss and Roy Hardin held a “Friend Raising” event at their downtown loft. It was a wonderful evening. Over 75 guests attended the Buzz party… including Lee Blessing and Rick Dresser. I gave a short preview of our 2009 Festival and invited everyone to come to Shepherdstown in July.

Our next “Friend Raising” event is on May 6TH at the Mandarin Oriental in Washington DC. This event is hosted by five CATF Trustees: Erich Hosbach, Noah Mehrkam, Stanley Marinoff, Ann Harkins, and Catherine Irwin. FARRAGUT NORTH playwright, Beau Willimonwill also be joining us. I am looking forward to meeting some of our loyal DC patrons and their friends. Our goal is to create even more CATF evangelists who will spread the “good news” about the CATF experience. Word of mouth marketing is our most effective PR.

Let me know if you would like to invite some DC area friends to attend this event.

Ed Herendeen

SPRING BENEFIT

Our SPRING BENEFIT is tomorrow evening. It is a very cool event. I have invited the actor, Anne Marie Nest to come to Shepherdstown to read scenes from our 2009 Repertory with local community leaders in a SNEAK PREVIEW. It is a great opportunity to promote our up-coming Festival and raise money at the same time.

On Sunday I will take the train to New York for a week of auditions and meetings with designers etc. While I am in NY I will also see some theater. I am looking forward to seeing Neil LaBute’s new play REASONS TO BE PRETTY on Sunday. On Tuesday I will see ANGELA”S MIXTAPEby 2009 CATF playwright, Eisa Davis. Eisa is an accomplished actor and she is performing in her own play. Liesl Tommy, CATF director, is directing ANGELA’S MIXTAPE. She and Eisa have collaborated on other projects in the past. Liesl is returning to CATF this summer to direct the World Premiere of Eisa’s new play THE HISTORY OF LIGHT.

On Wednesday I am looking forward to seeing LA DIDONE at St Ann’s Warehouse. This is a work that crosses a little-known 17th-century opera (about Dido and Aeneas) with a little-known 1965 movie (about extraterrestrial body snatchers).

On Thursday evening my friends Doug Moss and Roy Hardin are hosting a CATF NY  BUZZ PARTY in their Manhattan loft. They are inviting their friends to this event to introduce them to our Festival. I will give a little preview of our 2009 Season.

So in addition to a week of casting…I will see theater and meet with our design team and get together with some friends and Festival supporters.

I return to Shepherdstown on Friday evening.