THEATRE PREVIEW
PLAYWRIGHTS
PROJECT
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine November
1993
"Your
imagination is your own world," playwright Josefina Lopez once said. "You can do whatever you want with
it. There are no rules." That's the kind of liberating advice
creative young minds need. At age 17,
Lopez took that advice and penned her first play. “Simply Maria, or The American Dream” won the statewide Plays by
Young Writers contest in 1988. It was
subsequently produced on public television and won multiple awards. Lopez' “Real Women Have Curves” will be
staged this year at the San Diego Repertory Theatre. Last summer, she became a writer for Fox's "My Girls,"
starring Queen Latifah.
Lopez is the
highest-profile success story of the eight year-old Playwrights Project, based
in
Other young
playwrights have been repeat winners, and many have returned to the Project to
teach. With its in-school and outreach
programs, the Project has taught 20,000
students and 3600 educators throughout the state. Detailed script evaluations have been sent to 1100 young writers
(every contest contender). Most of the
32 winners have stayed with writing or theatre. It's enough to make Executive Director Deborah Salzer beam.
"A lot of
the writers see this as a creative home,” Salzer says proudly. She keeps expanding her dream. This will be her second year producing the
winning plays in association with the Old Globe. Last year, she established the "Dream Lab," a writing
group for underprivileged
This year, 148
young Californians came up with their own material. Two of the four contest winners are from
Emily Gross,
age 17, comes from what she calls a "Cleaver family." Her sister is her best friend, and she
carries pictures of her two younger brothers.
Emily began writing poetry in second grade. In a playwriting class at
Her winning
play, "The Divorce Papers,” is a dark look at a disturbed mother-son
relationship. "But everyone in my
play is good, deep down," says the shy, soft-spoken Emily.
Daniel Pierce,
age 18, also comes from a Catholic family.
He has five sisters and three brothers.
After a painful divorce, two sibs moved to
Daniel found
playwriting empowering. "It's
almost like being a god. You can make
people say what you want. Someone
else's voice, but my words and feelings." The reticent, somewhat cynical freshman at Loyola Marymount in
Dan's winning
play is a comedy called "Rules of Romance," in which Heather, a ditsy
teen, explains the vagaries of love.
"I don't have good luck with the opposite gender," the
playwright confesses. "But it was
easier to parody the whole thing from a female point of view." I want the audience to be entertained,"
Dan continues. "But there is an
underlying theme, about teenagers and the way they think, and their
relationships with their parents.... I have a bad outlook on parents in general
-- and people in general."
The daunting
task of staging these two disparate visions falls to 26 year-old, L.A-based
director Karen Lordi, MFA/Dramaturgy graduate of the Yale School of Drama and
former Joseph Hardy directing intern at the Old Globe. "They're like two halves of a
theatrical whole," says Lordi.
"Dan's play is a fun, theatrical way to present a serious
issue. It's very visual. Emily's piece is dark and
character-driven. One will be a romp; I
have to keep it moving. In the other, I
explore this relationship. Both
(playwrights) are writing from what they know, but not directly. Both have deeper things to say, and they
express themselves differently. It's a
great challenge."
Lordi is
assisted by acclaimed local playwright Naomi Iizuka, who serves as
dramaturge. "Both plays,"
Iizuka says, "have a very strong voice, which is unusual in any age
group." (In association with the
Playwrights Project, Iizuka teaches playwriting to students and seniors). "Dan has a tremendous sense of humor
and Emily's work has incredible honesty.
My job is to listen to the playwright and make sure that what the writer
intends is what goes onstage. That
level of writer support comes from Debbie (Salzer) and permeates the whole
Playwrights Project."
“Plays by Young
Writers '93” will be presented by the Playwrights Project in association with
the Old Globe Theatre, November 10-21 at the Cassius Carter Centre Stage in
©1993
Patté Productions Inc.