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Wednesday, October 30, 2013
The Harlem Swing Dance Society private benefit Sunday, Nov 3rd (NYC)
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Keith Josef Adkins' THE LAST SAINT ON SUGAR HILL opens FRIDAY at The National Black Theatre (Harlem)
Keith Josef Adkins' THE LAST SAINT ON SUGAR HILL opens FRIDAY (with previews starting tonight) at The National Black Theatre in Harlem. To purchase tickets and to learn more about The National Black Theatre and the celebration of its 45th season, please click here.
Bill T Jones & Gregory Vuyani Maqoma TONIGHT at NBT (NYC)
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Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Broadway Producer Ken Davenport interview
Ken Davenport |
Emmitt Thrower |
Recently hailed as the “P.T. Barnum of Off-Broadway” by the New York Times for his unique 21st century marketing strategies, Ken Davenport is becoming widely recognized as one of the most innovative theatre producers today. Ken’s visionary tech-savvy was also recently featured on a national commercial for Apple’s iPhone and he was named one of Crain's “Forty Under 40” in 2008 as a result of his fresh ideas and unprecedented success. Ken’s impressive Broadway and Off-Broadway production slate includes Speed the Plow, You’re Welcome America, Blithe Spirit, Altar Boyz, The Awesome 80s Prom, My First Time, Kinky Boots, and more. Hosted by Emmitt Thrower. Please click here to listen to the interview.
Monday, October 21, 2013
Ekundayo Bandele's IF SCROOGE WAS A BROTHER opens 11/1 at eta (Chicago)
“IF SCROOGE WAS A BROTHER,”
A CLASSIC CHRISTMAS GHOST TALE,
OPENS NOVEMBER 1 – DECEMBER 29
AT ETA
Reduced Price Previews Thursday, October 31
Get ready for a holiday show that’s like no other. It’s all about Scrooge in this hilarious and heartwarming reconstruction of the classic Christmas ghost tale. Spirited jokes and holiday music chronicle a journey from self-hatred to love as Scrooge faces his past, present and future and learns the wealth of family in “If Scrooge Was a Brother.” Written by Ekundayo Bandele
and directed by Kemati J. Porter, the show opens Friday, November 1 through December 29, 2013. Reduced price previews are Thursday, October 31.
Show times are 8 pm Fri & Sat; 3 & 7 p.m. Sundays at eta Square, 7558 S. South
Chicago Ave. General admission is $30, with student, senior and group
discounts. Subscriptions to the 2013-14 season are also still available for only
$75 through December 31, 2013. For tickets and information, call 773-752-
3955 or visit eta here.
Sunday, October 20, 2013
Magnolia's BBQ: The Musical
Emmitt Thrower |
Emmitt Thrower and Old Lions Still Roar Productions is offering investment opportunities for another project. This time around, it's a musical set in a juke joint in the South. Watch the video for more information.
Robert F Benjamin's WRINKLES up next at The Spiral, Friday 10/25 (NYC)
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The Spiral Theatre Studio is very excited to be opening our second show Friday, October 25th.
WRINKLES is an evening of seven short plays about aging with grace, humor and courage by New Mexico playwright Robert Benjamin, originally produced under the title Salt & Pepper.
The Spiral Theatre Studio has spent our first year spotlighting playwrights, actors and directors over 60. The role of artists in this demographic in the American theatre is seriously changing as lifespans increase. Maybe it takes 30 or 40 years to figure this thing called "theatre" out, both artistically and politically.
In that case, 60 is the new 20.
AND if YOU are over 60 and still kicking butt theatrically, please contact me and share your story.
Jaz Dorsey
Managing Director
Dramaturg
The Spiral Theatre Studio
242 W. 36th Street
3rd Floor
In Paul Michael's The Network
AAPEX Interview: Nathan Ross Freeman
Nathan Ross Freeman |
My mother exposed my brother and me to ... everything. My first rock and roll show, My first symphony concert. Recitals, Trips to the mission. My father harped on education, education, education. They both made a big deal about every crayola disfiguration and term paper. I made my brother tell me a story every night before I went to sleep. I was fortunate to be an African American male who was not raised as a victim. So all I knew is what I could do! Never had a tow that road background and we were lower middle class family. I was reared on constant creativity and choice.
Tell us about your own evolution as an artist.
I graduated from St. Joseph's University, Philly PA. Got my first job as a para-professional teaching reading at Tioga Community Youth Center, an alternative education school. I decided to use theatre as a vehicle for remedial reading and behavioral modification. Couldn't find a play to fit the constituency of my class, so I wrote one, Where Is Momma. The center got behind it and we performed it at my al ma mater high school, St. Joe's Prep. It was so well received, though the staging was absolutely atrocious, that the center exec. Director awarded my cast of students a week of downtown theatre and a put up at a 5 star hotel. We went to Academy Of Music, Shubert and Walnut Theater show. It was glorious. The publicity of this outing together with this pioneering vehicle of theater (then) to develop underserved youth. Temple invited us to perform the play for 3 days and the renown Walk Auditorium ... and ... paid the youth $45 per performance. I remember the closing performance, everybody gone, stage struck, sitting mid row, alone, staring at the stage with the ghost light the only illumination. Declared I was in love and the rest is history.
What inspired the film Mr. Bones?
Debra Terry, a renowned BET comedian and dear friend, came to me about an idea of a reunion of 3 close friends after going their separate adult ways. With some controversy I amended her story of coming home to do a Christmas Play for their hometown congregation, to their becoming friends as a result of surviving a church bus crash. While playing in the park they find the skull of a missing child. Instead of reporting it they make it a totem, a shrine and bring artifacts of their childhood to share with their deceased parents who died in the crash. Their reunion is the result of someone finding the skull and all the treasures during their adult years. They come home to face the music and, thus, confront and purge their demons of grief.
What are your current projects?
I have 2 feature films in development: The Quad and Topaz D. I have one script in development The Den. And I have one short feature I wrote to shoot myself and 2 superlative actors I grew up with, in professional theatre in Philly: Donald Newton (Mr. Bones Co-Star) and Wendy Pearson (played all my leading lady roles with Bushfire Theatre). The film is The Other Way Around; a true art house film I am so proud to have written and will be a sleeper at every festival that screens it. Principle Photography in April.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Harvest Moon Ball Saturday, October 19th (Harlem)
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The Harlem Swing Dance Society is puttin' on the Ritz this Saturday with its Harvest Moon Ball celebrating Harlem's impact and influence on culture and dance. Free dance lessons by the Last of the Best Savoy Ballroom Harvest Moon Ball Winners: Sugar Sullivan and Barbara Billups (see below).
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7-11:30 PM
Saturday, October 19th
Joseph P. Kennedy Center
34 W 134th Street
$20.00
For those not familiar with the Harvest Moon Balls, please watch the video below.
For those interested in the award-winning dancical Jitterbug!, please click here.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Job Post: Assistant Prof in African-American Theatre, Wayne State Univ (Detroit)
The Assistant Professor in African-American Theatre shall assume responsibilities as Director of the Black Theatre Program, direct 1-2 plays per year, teach undergraduate and graduate level courses in African-American Theatre, Black and World Dramatic Literature, additional performance courses suited to his/her strengths and other classes as...
For more information, please click here.
Have an impact on theatre. Support IMPACT (Atlanta)
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Monday, October 14, 2013
Stagefright: The Edgar Allen Poe Cabaret 10/27 (TN)
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Please plan to join us for the new and updated look at my personal theory about why Edgar Allan Poe, the son of two actors, did not write for the theatre.
Tony Domenico and David Kinnard reprise their critically acclaimed performances as Edgar Allan Poe and Vincent Price.
With a new, original monologue for Vincent Price by St. Louis playwright Dennis Corcoran.
This time around they will be joined by Aaron Crites, Lanie Shannon, Tony Shannon, Natalyn McCants, Micah Hanson, Irish balladeer Caleb Harper and the magic violin strings of Laurie Canaan.
2:00 PM
Sunday, October 27
The Main Branch of The Williamson County Public Library
1314 Columbia Avenue
Franklin, Tennessee
(Click here for more information
and to make reservations.)
The Actors' Reading Room
Jaz Dorsey
Dramaturg
615-915-0891
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Two Film Festivals
The Southern Appalachian International Film Festival (SOAPIFF), which began in 2006 as Executive Director/Founder Mark Compton's graduate thesis in tourism at ETSU, will celebrate our 7th anniversary this fall in Kingsport, Tennessee, with a retrospective past award winning films and film makers.
As the director of education for SOAPIFF, I feel that our award winning films and film makers are our greatest treasure and that we should treasure them in return.
Also ARTLightenment is coming up here in Nashville November 14, 15, & 16th.
Details are on the websites - www.soapiff.com and www.artlightenment.com
Discover acting at:
The Actors Reading Room
270 Tampa Drive
Studio G9
Nashville.Tennessee
Jaz Dorsey,
Dramaturg
Call for plays from NJ playwrights
The CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS for 2014 StageFest was just posted. Click on this link to fill out application (No fee/No pay). DEADLINE 12/01, 2013 - Note 15 mins dance and music, 45 mins for plays. Last year's first-ever StageFest at the Loew's Jersey was a great success, and included 18 individual artists or performing companies, 50 performances, over 20 hours of programming – all enjoyed by around 600 patrons!
Call for shorts
John Chatterton, executive producer, is accepting scripts for the October Short Play Lab. New participants are welcome and plays will be considered for subsequent Labs in the 2013-14 season. Plays should be 1-10 pages (the shorter the better; shorter plays get priority) submitted in standard play-script format in MS-Word: 12 point Times Roman; character names in the middle on their own line; line spaces between speeches, and between speeches and stage directions; indented stage directions. Include a title page, as the first page of the script, with your contact info (preferred means of contact is by email).
Winning playwrights will produce their plays themselves, whether or not they live in New York. Each play gets 2 performances (off book, no readings), 1 on Sat. and 1 on Sun. as part of 1 of 2 programs: Program A or Program B, but not both. Program A takes place at 7 pm Sat. and 4 pm Sun. Program B takes place at 9 pm Sat. and 2 pm Sun. Productions must be non-union: no showcases, no Equity waivers. Keep production values to a minimum: costumes and hand props are okay. The SPL provides the theatre (at the Roy Arias Studios, 300 West 43rd Street, NYC), rehearsal cubes, chairs, and a table. SPL also will provide a board op, box office, venue management, and a tech rehearsal. No fees. No pay. Each playwright and director gets to watch his/her show for free, but there are no other comps. The SPL keeps the door. The most popular production in each program receives a cash prize of $75. Winners are determined by polling patrons at the box office. Submit your script as an attachment, in Word format, to john.chatterton@gmail.com. Notification will be immediately.
Call for plays
The Downtown Urban Theater Festival (DUTF) is currently accepting submissions for its 12th annual season to be held at HERE (www.here.org) in SoHo, New York City, March 31-April 19, 2014. DUTF, produced by Creative Ammo Inc., was founded in 2001 with the purpose to build a repertoire of new American theatre that echoes the true spirit of urban
life and speaks to a whole new generation whose lives defy categorizing along conventional lines.
For 2014, DUTF will accept 15 theatrical works comprised of full-length productions (60-90 minutes) and shorts (under 45 minutes). Each work is performed only once during the festival. Three of the outstanding works produced during the festival will receive $1,000 awards in the categories of Best Play, Best Short and Audience. There is no submission or participation fee and each playwright will receive a monetary production stipend at the start of the festival to defray some of the production costs.
To submit for DUTF 2014, please forward the following to dutfnyc@gmail.com:
(1) Playwright’s bio with contact info - name, address, phone # and email
(2) Photo of playwright
(3) Synopsis of theatrical work
(4) Complete script of theatrical work
(5) Estimated running time of work
(6) Actor/director/crew bios, if available
(7) Description of stage set (if any) and production needs (i.e. sound and lighting)
Submission deadline is 10/25, 2013.
Call for plays from NY or NJ African-American playwrights only
Submit a work of 40 to 50 minutes to The Griot Festival.
Winner for Best Play will receive a prize of $2,500.
Winner of Best Actor and Best Actress will each receive $500.
The Griot Festival was created with the intention of offering a unique opportunity for playwrights / theatrical artists of African American descent who reside in NY and NJ. The festival’s purpose is to inspire and support both emerging and established playwrights/ theatrical artists of African American descent who would like to step beyond the page and get involved in the production of their work. In short, they will have creative input from the first sentence they write to the last curtain call. It is also a great opportunity to become familiar with all the elements of a theatrical production in the making and to become familiar with the process that translates writing into a living work onstage in a safe and supportive theatrical environment. Only plays from writers of African American descent in New York and New Jersey will be accepted. Submissions must be between 40 and 50 minutes long. This is a non-union company. All plays must be first runs, never produced before. The Festival will take place at the Cabrini Repertory Theater, a wonderful proscenium theater in Uptown Manhattan that also hosts two other festivals throughout the year: Thespis and Venus/Adonis. At Cabrini Repertory Theater, we consider ourselves a family and anyone who sets foot in our theater to stage a play is part of that family. Our team wants to make sure staging your show is a pleasure. First-time writers are more than welcome! Accepted plays will be considered on a first-come first-served basis. (The earlier you submit the better your chances are to be accepted into the Festival.) Submissions may close before October 15 if the maximum number of plays is reached. Click here for more information.
Call for musicals
The Next Link Project is New York Musical Theatre Festival's (NYMF’s) primary writer service program. It empowers emerging musical theater writing teams by providing entrepreneurial training, career networking opportunities, dramaturgical support, and other services, culminating in a subsidized production in the Festival.
The Next Link Project is open to any writer – produced or unproduced, with or without agency representation. The program receives hundreds of submissions from all over the world each fall, and every script and demo recording are reviewed by several members of NYMF’s Reading Committee. Shows are submitted “blind”, meaning the writers names are not on any of the materials the readers review. This ensures the work is judged on what is written, not who wrote it, giving all submissions an even playing field. The finalists are then reviewed by a Grand Jury comprised of leading musical theatre artists. Ten shows are accepted in to the Next Link Project each year and awarded production spots in the Festival!
The Final Deadline is extended to midnight, Monday 11/11, 2013.
Click HERE for all of the details on how to apply... and start planning to bring your show to life next summer!
Saturday, October 12, 2013
Only 6 performances left of Ted Swindley's STORIES MY GRANDMOTHER TOLD ME at the Spiral Theatre Studio (NYC)
To buy tickets, please click here. |
Friday, October 11, 2013
Broadway Producers and Investors MEETUP: 10/22 (NYC)
Broadway Producers and Investors
NEW MEETUP
Tuesday Oct. 22, 2013
5:30 sharp -7pm
Snapple Theatre
NYC
For serious commercial producers this is an important seminar and networking opportunity.
Join attorneys Daniel Wasser and Gary Emanuel and group moderator Bruce Lazarus to explore "The Practical Application of New SEC Rules on Publicizing Theatrical Offerings".
New law passed September 23, 2013. It is imperative that you understand how these new rules have radically transformed how you can raise money for your commercial theatre productions. Do not miss this.
*Read this article: http://tinyurl.com/qzf4ou3
Snapple Theater, Broadway and 50th Street (SW corner) 4th Floor. NYC.
Free admission. Limited seating.
Tuesday October 22, 2013 Seminar from 5:30 sharp to 6:15 followed by Q&A and group networking.
Update (12/12): Here's a great example of a multiracial company (Emmitt Thrower, Obediah Wright, A. Michael Storm, and Tom Horner ) taking advantage of the new SEC rules advertising theatrical offerings to accredited investors: Old Lions Still Roar.
Update (12/12): Here's a great example of a multiracial company (Emmitt Thrower, Obediah Wright, A. Michael Storm, and Tom Horner ) taking advantage of the new SEC rules advertising theatrical offerings to accredited investors: Old Lions Still Roar.
Obediah Wright |
Emmitt Thrower |
A. Michael Storm |
Tom Horner |
PEARL receives 5 AUDELCO Nominations
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receives 5 AUDELCO NOMINATIONS:
Best Musical
Best Director
Best Actress
Best Musical Director
Best Choreography!
Charles Bernard Murray |
Congratulations and a tip of our backward-wearing Kangols© to Charles Bernard Murray, producer/author/composer at Pearl for bringing this to our attention. To learn more about the production and AUDELCO, please click the titles above.
Breaking into Hollywood Q&A with ENDYIA KINNEY-STERNS, VP of Programming And Development at the Oprah Winfrey Network (Atlanta)
Breaking into Hollywood
presents
Open Q&A
with
NETWORK EXECUTIVE
ENDYIA KINNEY-STERNS
VICE PRESIDENT OF PROGRAMMING AND DEVELOPMENT
THE OPRAH WINFREY NETWORK
A Networking Event for Writers, Actors, Producers and Directors
SPECIAL EVENT IN ATLANTA, GA!
* Have a TV show idea, script, or completed pilot/sizzle that you'd like to sell to a network? *
* Want to learn more about how reality and scripted TV shows are developed and produced? *
* Or are you interested in producing a feature film and want insight on attaching celebrity actors? *
* Want inside information on what types of shows OWN is looking for? *
* Or how development works at a major network? *
* Want to learn about the casting process: audition tips, and how to get cast in film, TV and commercials? *
Whatever your situation - this is an intimate event that you do not want to miss!
Now is your chance to get the inside scoop on how the industry works from a top network executive.
All participants will have an opportunity to ask candid questions directly to the speakers!
Please note there will be NO PITCHING of projects to Endyia at this event
(networking and information only!)
A not-to-be-missed one-time event for producers, writers, actors, agents, managers, etc., and ANYONE who wants to know the inside scoop on how things work behind the scenes at a major network!
DON'T MISS THIS ONE-TIME ONLY EVENT!
Saturday, NOVEMBER 23rd, 2013
1pm - 4pm
at
Crowne Plaza Hotel
4355 Ashford Dunwoody Road
ATLANTA, GA 30346
SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR INFOLIST.com!!
Use the special link below, and get 15% OFF! That's just $85 (normally $100!) - for an afternoon with a top network executive!
SPACE IS LIMITED, SO REGISTER NOW!
TO REGISTER:
Advance RSVP only, as space is very limited. Use the special link below to get your discount:
www.breakingintohollywood.org/112313-DISCOUNT
ABOUT THE SPEAKER:
Endyia Kinney-Sterns is the Vice President of Programming and Development for OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network, overseeing day-to-day development of new original programming for the network. She joined the company in May 2011 as Executive Director of Programming and Development.
Kinney-Sterns has been instrumental in identifying and developing various new programming including the popular docu-series "Raising Whitley" and "Life With La Toya." She was an integral part in developing the upcoming series "Millionaire Mama's Boy" with Sony Studios and "Houston Beauty" with Park Slope Productions, in addition to many presentations and pilots.
An accomplished television producer and executive, Kinney-Sterns has over 13 years of entertainment television experience producing shows for high-profile networks including VH1, CBS, NBC, HGTV, and production companies such as Buena Vista Television, Arnold Shapiro Productions, and LMNO. She also established her own production company, Seraphim Entertainment, where she optioned two of her original shows, a drama series and an animated project. Kinney-Sterns held the title of Senior Director of Programming and Development for TV ONE, where she was responsible for the day-to-day supervision of production and programming for popular series including "Baisden After Dark," "Who's Got Jokes" and "Black and Men Revealed." Her most notable accomplishment was co-developing and creating the brand defining, multiple NAACP Award winning hit show "Unsung."
Kinney-Sterns spent over four years working in programming and development at BET where she was responsible for overseeing production and post production for the network's top-rated series "College Hill" and the highest rated show in BET history at the time, "Keyshia Cole: The Way It Is." She was also responsible for helping to develop, launch and oversee the day-to-day production of "The Mo'Nique Show", the #1 late night talk show among African Americans as well as the hit music competition show "Sunday Best." She was responsible for overseeing other ratings hits like "Lil Kim: Countdown to Lockdown", "DMX: Soul of a Man" and helped to develop and oversee successful original programs such as "Exalted" and "Hell Date". Prior to her positions at BET and TV ONE, Kinney-Sterns produced reality, talk/variety, and lifestyle shows including the Emmy Award-winning syndicated series "The Wayne Brady Show," "Big Brother 4" and "The Other Half", among others.
Kinney-Sterns is passionately involved in a number of children's organizations. She works with the Children's Hunger Fund in helping to move their vision forward to see that no child goes without meal, is active with Zoe Ministries to help stop child trafficking overseas and regularly speaks to inner-city girls about pursuing their dreams.
She currently resides in Porter Ranch, California with her husband, Brigg Sterns, and her two sons, Judah and Cairo.
ABOUT THE MODERATOR:
Angela Marie Hutchinson is a casting director, producer, former talent agent and author of three published books: her memoir "BReaKiNG iNTo HoLLyWooD" and two children's picture books, "Charm Kids" and "Sepia Girl." She received $20,000 for her first paid writing assignment. Recently, Hutchinson produced the feature film, "Hollywood Chaos," which she also wrote and cast, starring Vanessa Simmons with an ensemble cast. Currently, Hutchinson is producing two television projects that are in the post-production phase; another project she is casting, co-producing and directing this fall.
Represented by the Filmtrix Agency as a Casting Director, Hutchinson has cast veteran actors such as Billy Dee Williams, Vanessa Williams, Lynn Whitfield, Tangi Miller, and other newcomer stars like Tyler Lepley (Tyler Perry's "The Haves & the Have Nots") in feature films, TV pilots, short films and web series. Hutchinson is a Chicago native with over 10 years of industry experience. She has worked for MGM, Warner Bros. Television and the GRAMMYs. In 2005, Hutchinson founded BReaKiNG iNTo HoLLyWooD (BiH), a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that helps industry professionals pursue their entertainment careers with integrity, creativity and enthusiasm. Under the BiH umbrella, Hutchinson serves as the Editor-in-Chief of Hollywood & Vine magazine, Executive Director of the Hollywood & Vine Film Festival, and Executive Producer of "The BReaKiNG iNTo HoLLyWooD Show," which aired daily on Transit TV with over 1.15 million viewers. An alumnus of the University of Michigan, Hutchinson earned her B.S.E. in Industrial & Operations Engineering. She also has a Cross-Media Journalism certificate from USC.
In Hutchinson's leisure time, she enjoys rollerblading, reading inspirational books and spending time with her husband and two young children. She is passionate about her community and has served on several boards. Recently, Hutchinson was featured in Rolling Out and has been interviewed on TV as well as print and online media outlets.
REGISTER NOW:
Advance RSVP only, as space is very limited. Use the special link below to get your discount:
www.breakingintohollywood.org/112313-DISCOUNT
For questions or more information:
Please call us at (310) 712-3459
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Clinnesha D. Sibley's UPROOTED at Blackboard 10/14 (NYC)
What happens when long-separated siblings reunite after the death of a parent? When successful film actress Venus Kettle returns to Glee, Mississippi, to her mother's "home going," she is greeted by her sisters with a wide range of emotions. After airing incidents of sexual abuse in her childhood home a few months prior to their mother’s death, Venus can’t escape the rippling effects of her confession or in this case, the “leaking” of family business. In the meantime, Uprooted explores abortion in a small Mississippi town during the 1980’s by way of the play’s deceased matriarch, who is known as a pillar in the community and nursing profession. This uneasy sibling reunion and the possibility of Venus's brother, who is incarcerated in a facility in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, coming home for the funeral forces the Kettle family to recall the incest issues stemming from their household. Uprooted is moving tribute to the redemptive power of family.
Wine served. Reading followed by a 20-minute talk-back.
Please buy tickets here.
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
AAPEX Atlanta Awards
AAPEX SALUTES ATLANTA
There really is no more exciting theatre city than Atlanta - and that's because of the many amazing and talented theatre artists who choose to live and work there.
The African American Playwrights' Exchange is pleased to salute Atlanta as our Theatre City of the Year 2013 and to recognize four extraordinary Atlantan's with the following awards.
Betty Chaney |
Playwright Betty Chaney with Best Family Drama 2013 award for her touching and thought provoking script THE ROOTING PLACE.
Jacquay Waller |
Playwright/Actor/Director/Producer Jacquay Waller as our Artist of the Year 2013.
www.catchingdreamz.com and www.jacquaywaller.com
Dr. Shirlene Holmes |
Actress/Director Brenda Porter and playwright Dr. Shirlene Holmes with our Educators Award 2013 for their collaboration on Ms. Porter's one woman historical show, PATHWAYS. www.pathwaysproductions.com
Please come and meet our award winners this Sunday, 2:30 pm at the Rialto Theatre, 80 Forsyth St. and enjoy a reading of Betty Chaney's The Rooting Place, directed by Brenda Porter
and follow us at www.africanamericanplaywrightsexchange.blogspot.com
Seating is limited. Reservations are mandatory and may be made at 404-758-6871
For further information, contact Jaz Dorsey, Dramaturg, The Actors' Reading Room. 615-915-0891
Call for plays
The Lark Play Development Center is gearing up for their 2014 Playwrights Week, and free submissions are coming to a close on October 15th. Accepted writers will be provided access to the Lark's resources and a public staged reading of their work as well as a chance to meet and greet with some of the hottest new voices in the artistic community. To submit, please click here.
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
AAPEX Artist of the Year: Jacquay Waller
Jacquay Waller |
AAPEX Artist of the Year 2013
Atlanta based Playwright/Actor/Producer/Director Jacquay Waller is the AAPEX Artist of the Year for his work which is raising the bar on all fronts.
Here is what Jacquay has to say about his work:
I am the CEO/Artistic Director for DreamCatcher Productions. DreamCatcher is a theatre and film company based here in Atlanta. We produce the "Black Man-O-logues" series which explores love from a black male's perspective.
Another of our popular pieces is "TRAFFIK: Games GrownUps Play" which explores human trafficking. We just completed a run in Washington, D.C. and New York City. Both of the aforementioned pieces were selected for the DC Black Theatre Festival.
"Black Man-O-logues" was selected for the Midtown International Theatre Festival in NYC where I was also nominated for Best Actor in the entire festival.
I am an Actor, Playwright, Director, Producer, Screenwriter, Novelist, etc. You can find out more about me at www.catchingdreamz.com or www.jacquaywaller.com.
I am the founder of SLAMHOUSE which is a competitive artistic experience where artists of all types in their respective crafts compete to be "Best of Atlanta". Our first pilot is October 19th. The full launch will occur at the top of 2014. DreamCatcher is currently one of the sponsors of Top Actor's Monologue Slam which will debut in November at the Bronze Lens Festival.
Michael Bradford's OLIVES AND BLOOD at Liminal Space 10/23 (London)
Michael Bradford's exciting new play is just 3 weeks away and we're all systems go!.. The cast and creatives met up today to get fitted up for costumes, see the set, meet our fabulous puppets and to hear the beautiful original score. Then we all settled down for a read through before getting this great new piece of work up on its feet!
Michael Bradford |
The play delves into the mystery surrounding the assassination of one of Spain's greatest playwrights Federico Garcia Lorca. (Blood Wedding, the House of Bernarda Alba)
It's 1936 and the start of the Spanish Civil War and in the dead of night Lorca was taken up into the Spanish hills. No body was ever found.
But somebody must know something.
The play runs from the 23rd of October to the 10th of November at a wonderful new theatre space Brixton East which Liminal Space found last year and fell in love with. It's a beautiful converted factory just up the road from Brixton Tube station and is the perfect setting for this play.
As supporters of Liminal Space's previous work I hope you'll be able to come along and see the show. Tickets are currently on sale and we're offering a special deal on all tickets for the Wednesday shows - All tickets are just £5! BOOK NOW
Prav MJ |
I'll be there at rehearsals taking lots of photographs so make sure you check our website www.olivesandblood.com or come and follow us on Facebook to see the team in action and to be kept updated with all that's going on. The full cast and creative team is now live on the site so you can go and see exactly who's involved.
Looking forward to seeing you all there,
Kathryn Gardner
Katalyst PR
katalystPR@mail.com
@ katalystPR
Monday, October 7, 2013
Starting a theatre can be like running a red light. Don't put on the brakes - step on the gas!
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Just a little over a year ago, my associate, Dave Copeland, sent me some information on a theatre project in NYC - The Spiral Theatre Studio.
I took one look at the fascinating Spiral stage and contacted the founder/artistic director, Paula J. Riley. I threw a few ideas at her of steps that might expedite her mission and, after a few emails, she asked me to join the team as Managing Director. Wanting to keep my dramaturgy hat on, I signed on to do both.
Three weeks ago we moved into our home at 242 W. 36th Street. Last Friday night, we kicked off our company with STORIES MY GRANDMOTHER TOLD ME by Nashville playwright Ted Swindley, who is best known for his internationally acclaimed play ALWAYS....PATSY CLINE.
I can't begin to express how exciting it is to open with a new work by a playwright of Mr. Swindley's stature - and a play which also gives me a chance to honor the memory of my own Southern grandmother, Lena Hand Callaway, who made sure that I got not just a good education, but an extraordinary one.
In addition to the expected challenges of starting a theatre, we had to build the Spiral stage, which can be seen on our website www.thespiralthearestudio.com.
The stage was built in Nashville by David Allds, Steve Alberts and David's sons. But then we had to transport the stage to NYC, which proved incredibly frustrating on many levels, but was finally achieved with the support of actors in the cast of STORIES, who were anxious to get to rehearse on the stage.
Thanks to Carolyn German and the Metro Nashville Parks Theatre Department's new play reading series, we have been able to do developmental work on our first two shows, STORIES MY GRANDMOTHER TOLD ME by Mr. Swindley, and the SALT and PEPPER plays of New Mexico playwright Robert Benjamin, which opens with its new title, WRINKLES, on October 20th.
The stage itself is the legacy of Paula J. Riley's mentor and acting teacher, Russian born Iza Itkin, whose father, David, was a founder of The Goodman Theater in Chicago and whose sister, Bella, was also a renowned 20th century acting coach.
Both the modular units and the stage floor are carpeted, and again we were blessed by the support of Mohawk Carpets, who donated the $10,000.00 in carpet needed to do this and, in so doing, became our first corporate sponsor.
And of course, we wanted a home in Midtown Manhattan, which we have, thanks to Paul Michael's The Network at 242 W. 36th Street.
We have spent the first half of 2013 producing a new play reading series that has focused on playwrights, actors and directors over 60 and can already boast a handsome gallery of Spiral posters thanks to our graphic designer, Steve Hill.
And a really special thanks to our actors! You know who you are!
As dramaturge, I am excited to have somewhere to go with the incredible network of playwrights and new plays that I have developed since pionneering the graduate dramaturgy program at VCU in 1978 - especially the amazing library of new African American plays that have come my way since founding The African American Playwrights Exchange in 2007.
Being on the team of a New York City theatre company with a home in Manhattan has got to be the dream.
Pinch me!
Come to the Spiral and Go to the Theatre! (It's in our DNA).
Jaz Dorsey
Managing Director/Dramaturge
The Spiral Theatre Studio
242 W. 36th Street
Friday, October 4, 2013
AAPEX Reading: Betty Chaney's THE ROOTING PLACE 10/13 (Atlanta)
The African American Playwrights Exchange of
The Actors' Reading Room invites you to our first Atlanta event!
Betty Chaney |
Contact
The African American Playwrights Exchange (AAPEX)
Jaz Dorsey, Dramaturge
The African American Playwrights Exchange will present a free reading of
THE ROOTING PLACE
by Atlanta playwright Betty Chaney
at 2:30 pm on Sunday, October 13.
The reading will take place at Georgia State University's
80 Forsyth Street.
Parking for all Rialto events is available for $4.00 per vehicle at the Equitable parking deck on the corner of Williams and Fairlee.
Street parking is free on Sundays, and the Rialto is easy to get to on Marta - go to Peachtree Center and exit at the South end of the station.
Veteran Atlanta theatre artist Brenda Porter directs
Tony Vaughn, Marguerite Hannah, Nora Gavin, Naima Carter Russell,
Veronica Byrd and Micah Penn.
With the exception of Ms Byrd,
this same cast gave THE ROOTING PLACE it's first reading in
August 2012 at the SW Arts Center and are returning to reprise their roles,
once again under Ms. Porter's direction.
THE ROOTING PLACE is the winner of the AAPEX 2013 Best Family Drama Award.
Seating is limited. You must RSVP to 404-758-6871