Tag Archive for: INANA

PRELIMINARY SKETCHES FOR INANA

I want to share with you Robert Klingelhoefer’s preliminary sketches for the Set Design for INANA by Michele Lowe.

Ed Herendeen

WORKING WITH PLAYWRIGHTS

One of the things that I love about my job is the opportunity to collaborate with the living playwright. My passion for directing new plays began in Graduate School. Directing a new play is risky because new plays are produced without a safety net of tradition…there is no production history to fall back on. Everything involved in doing a new play is done from scratch. The success of a new play is invariably founded on the successful collaboration of the artists involved. This is what we do at the Contemporary American Theater Festival…we develop and produce new work with the playwright. And this experience really turns me on.

Last week I had the opportunity to meet with Michele Lowe (INANA) and Max Baker(EELWAX JESUS) while I was in New York. We looked at preliminary set designs and discussed production concepts etc. Hearing their ideas and feedback was incredibly important. It is exciting to collaborate with these writers during this important pre-production period.

I have been in constant communication with J.T.Rogers RE: WHITE PEOPLE and Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig (LIDLESS) and I have been trading emails RE: my directors concept for her play. Frances is in China doing research and J.T. is in Afghanistan working on his latest play BLOOD AND GIFTS. Our conversations have been stimulating and productive.

All five of our 2010 playwrights will be in residence in Shepherdstown at various time throughout the rehearsal and performance process. They are an important  part of the creative process. They play a vital role in developing their plays at our Theater Festival. We are a playwright inspired theater and we listen to our playwrights. We encourage and welcome their ideas and suggestions. We involve them in every step of the creative process. For example: Yesterday… Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig and I were  discussing the Sound Design for LIDLESS. I emailed her my idea to create a percussion soundscape of “cell doors/cage doors/locking doors opening and closing.” I also suggested using “birds” in the soundscape. Here is her response:

“I really love this bird idea, and it makes me think about nature soundscapes as a whole–and using sound as an element that provides different information from what you see visually. For example, since the grays, the chain-link fence, is already suggesting the entrapment, the getting stuck/being in a cage is already expressed visually, I wonder if the soundscape would be effective focused around things like birds, ocean, wind, static, etc. It is interesting to me that the ocean is something that can always be heard at Gitmo, and that white noise is used to disorient, and that white noise often sounds very much like the ocean, played at a different pace…And then of course Bashir talks about how he always found ways to change terrible things(i.e. moans and screams) into wind whistling through trees, etc…So that could suggest something too that any noise that sounds ominous has a transition point to a nature sound, etc…So maybe since visually we are getting the chain link fences, the harshness, the metal, that an organic soundscape could open things.”

I asked Frances if she heard any specific music in her play. She offered this intuitive suggestion for me to consider in the Sound Design:

If there is any kind of music/tonality, I imagine that perhaps it is used during Bashir’s hallucinations, and when he talks to his daughter…perhaps the acapella voice of a woman singing a Pakistani ballad/lullaby. Without instrumental accompaniment. We never feel the presence of Bashir’s ethnic heritage in language, etc…so maybe there is a subtle way to integrate it into the soundscape. This could also be used to add a haunting element, as Bashir is haunted by the past he left and  that is gone forever to him…(his dead wife, his young daughter.)”

As you can imagine…this is terrific feedback from the writer. Her intuitive ideas are something that I can really run with. I can integrate her suggestions into my concept for the production. It gives me a starting point as I begin my collaboration with the Sound Designer.

This is one example of the kinds of conversations that I have with our writers. I am interested in hearing your reaction to this playwright/director conversation. Please share your comments on this blog.

Ed Herendeen

BUZZ PARTIES NYC AND WASHINGTON DC

Last Thursday we were in New York City attending a very successful CATF BUZZ PARTY hosted by our friends Doug Moss and Roy Hardin at their fabulous downtown loft. It was a very cool event and we met many new potential CATF patrons. CATF playwrights Sheri Wilner, (HUNGER and FATHER JOY); Michele Lowe (INANA CATF 2010); Max Baker (EELWAX JESUS 3-D POP MUSIC SHOW CATF 2010); Lucy Thurber (CATF commission 2011) joined us at this promotion event. Max and Michele talked about their upcoming plays at the 2010 Festival. Lucy spoke about her 2011 CATF Commission: The JOHN BROWN PROJECT and Sheri spoke about her experience working at the Festival. Sheri also read a quote from Todd London’s new book OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE NEW AMERICAN PLAY published 2009 Theatre Development Fund. This is the quote from page 256:

“Some theatres are lauded as much for the bonds they forge with audiences, as for their support of artists. The Contemporary American Theater Festival in Shepherdstown, WV., is one such organization. In separate discussions, a writer and an artistic director applaud the work of artistic director Ed Herendeen, for cultivating among his theatergoers a genuine interest in exploring dramatic form, especially in challenging work. The playwright marvels at the degree of investment this small theater inspires from its semirural community. “He’s a P. T. Barnum out in West Virginia. (Herendeen) has completely educated his audience. They’re so excited that he is bringing in brand-new plays, and that they can now identify themselves as this breeding ground for new plays. He’s also educated his board that he’s going to pick something he loves. Don’t question it. He would take a bullet for any of those four plays that he chooses. He believes in them so strongly and it’s contagious. They may hate his choices, but they love arguing them with him at the bakery…”

This quote is from Chapter Six: Positive Practices and Novel Ideas. I recommend Todd’s book for those of you who are interested in new plays. OUTRAGIOUS FORTUNE: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE NEW AMERICAN PLAY looks at the lives and livelihoods of American playwrights today and at the realities of new-play production from the perspective of both playwrights and not-for-profit theaters.

Tonight we will be attending our Washington DC BUZZ PARTY at the MANDARIN ORIENTAL HOTEL hosted by CATF Trustee, Erich Hosbach. The event begins at 6PM-8:30PM at 1330 Maryland Ave, SW. If you are in the DC area please join us. I will be giving a preview of our 2010 Repertory.

CATF BUZZ PARTIES create excitement and Buzz. They are an opportunity for “Social Marketing” and “spreading the CATF Story.” We hope to inspire and motivate our loyal CATF audience base to invite their “social network” to attend the 2010 Festival. Our goal is to motivate our loyal base…our early adopters to become CATF Evangelists. We have an important story to tell. BUZZ PARTIES help us to tell our story. They create AWARENESS of the Theater Festival. They help us to create a stronger presence RE: our Brand and Identity. Our goal is to interact with our audience base and inspire them to participate in the CATF marketing process by becomming CATF Evangelists. Evangelists create AWARENESS…that leads to …CONSIDERATION…which leads to…PURCHASE.

Please make a comment below. I am interested in hearing your thoughts on “Social Marketing.” 

Ed Herendeen 

 

 

 

BACK IN SHEPHERDSTOWN

I had a very productive trip to Philadelphia and New York. On Saturday I met our CATF architects Malcolm Holzman, Doug Moss and Debbi Waters at the Walnut Street Theatre. We saw my production of THE ECLECTIC SOCIETY. Afterwards we had a delicious dinner at The Oyster House in Philadelphia. I enjoyed seeing how the production has grown since Opening night. After dinner we took the train to New York.

Lucy Thurber and I met on Sunday morning for a breakfast meeting near Bryant Park. We discussed her ideas for her play inspired by John Brown. We have commissioned Lucy to write a new play for our 2011 Festival. THE JOHN BROWN PROJECT will examine the following questions: What is terrorism? What is fanaticism? What is revolution? Lucy is interested in the difference between terrorism, fanaticism and revolution…”America was or was not built on the back of terrorism/revolution.” Lucy’s plays SCARCITY and KILLERS AND OTHER FAMILY both deal with Race and Class in America. Her critically acclaimed plays provoke a conversation that many of us are too terrified to have RE: Race and Class. THE JOHN BROWN PROJECT will explore her interest in the culture of poverty in America. Lucy proposes that poor rural Whites and African Americans actually have more in common, in terms of pressure, options and self esteem than people of any color in this country that are raised with privilege. In our meeting Lucy said “America is built on dreams, equality, hope, faith, slavery, oppression and genocide. As a country we refuse to acknowledge all the building blocks. I want to acknowledge and discuss them all.”

 We had a great conversation and I am looking forward to introducing you to Lucy Thurber this summer when she will be in residence at the Theater Festival doing research for this provocative new work. Her plays SCARCITY and KILLERS AND OTHER FAMILY have been published and are available. I recommend both plays. Lucy is truly an original playwright with a fresh ideas and a powerful voice.

While I was in New York I had the pleasure to meet with CATF 2010 playwright, Michele Lowe. We discussed our upcoming production of INANA. It was a terrific meeting. I learned so much about INANAafter meeting with Michele. INANA is both a mystery/story and a love story. “Save the world through love.”...she says. “I am a student of history.” Michele helped me to understand the the main ideas in INANA.This is what I love about CATF…I get to talk with the living playwright in person. I enjoy this one on one collaboration withthe writer. Michele gave me very specific ideas RE: the world of her play and set design opportunities. I will share these ideas with Bob Klingelhoefer our set designer and Peg McKowen our costume designer. I left our breakfast meeting very jazzed about directing INANA.

On Tuesday I met with our New York Casting Director, Pat McCorkle and her staff to discuss and plan our upcoming Auditions for the 2010 Repertory Acting Company. We are preparing the casting breakdowns and audition sides to send to the New York talent agents. Pat will select the actors for me to audition in April. Our New York casting call begins April 6th through April 9th.

I am back in Shepherdstown preparing the 2010 Repertory. Our Festival Guide is at the printers…look for it in the mail. Please let me know your thoughts RE: our 2010 Repertory.

Ed Herendeen