Kathleen Warnock
  • Home
  • Playwright
  • Too Many Hats (a blog)
  • Best Lesbian Erotica

Where it Comes From/Where it Goes

3/28/2014

1 Comment

 
Picture
I’m going to Dublin with a play again, as I have four times before, this time with a play I’ve been living with for a long time.

Back toward the end of the last century, I began a one-act play about a woman who needed to move. Since I am a rather literal writer, she needed to move out of her apartment. It was too full of things, and she couldn’t get out of there without someone’s help. I’d finally admitted to myself, and to someone else, that I wanted to love women. That someone was not at all gracious about it, and I was heartbroken. (And yes, a version of that is in another play).

I started the play as a way to get myself out of myself, and created a character who was going to be the catalyst for tremendous change in the woman who needed to move. I saw it as a sad and bloody play, perhaps with someone crying on the floor by the final curtain.

But about the time I conjured the mover, the real mover appeared. She and I began a relationship that continues to this day. I remember that spring as the one where my feet did not touch the ground. The new relationship was by far the most complicated one I’d ever been a part of.

I put it all into the writing, and surprised myself with a passion I didn’t know I had. This was the first play I’d written using all my senses. The previous ones had been muffled, compromised by my inability to see and hear and feel. This one would not be. Late one night I wrote “CURTAIN” and called it “The Space Between Heartbeats.”

PictureThe first show we took to Dublin, "Some Are People."
This one has always had a strange energy. We chose a scene from it for the class reading, and one actor panicked and balked at the emotion. The director tried to reason with her, but I seem to remember she called in sick on the night. Whenever something awkward or painful happens to one of my plays, I can’t remember it. I should call this one “the amnesia play.”

I decided to produce it myself; I’d produced one 10-minute play at that point (still, we won Audience Favorite). So I called a friend with a theater and asked if I could put their company name on my application to the Samuel French Festival. I asked an acting class comrade (who’d directed my other piece) if he would take this one on as well. We got into the festival. We asked the artistic director of the theater whose name we were using to play the lead and she said yes. We asked a classmate of mine from playwriting class (who had an MFA in acting) to take the other part, and though she hadn’t set foot onstage in awhile, something made her say yes.

We rehearsed in unused rooms at my office at night, and I carried around bags of hand props and we tried to figure out how we were going to create the effect of a cluttered apartment onstage. This was the old Sam French Festival: The one at the American Theater of Actors where you might put your foot through the stage, and there were about a million plays in it, and about a hundred per evening, and you got 17-and-a-half minutes for tech. And one performance. You’d move on if the judges decided to take you to the next round.

The rehearsal process also taught me that you can only go as far as the actor wants to onstage. I had a picture in my mind of the very last moment of the play, which was meant to be intimate and nurturing, but neither of the cast members wanted to go there, and ultimately, the director worked up something they were comfortable with, and that’s what we did.



PictureThis is the second show we took to Dublin, "The Adventures of..."
I did not see the performance because I was standing on the stage, holding up a flat. It sounded good. My new love came to see it, and later said: that was like seeing myself naked up there! We set some ground rules about what I can and can’t write about. That’s all right. I have a good imagination.

We did not move on in the festival, but I was determined to see the play done, and well, actually SEE it. I sent it in to a women’s festival, and it was chosen and a director was assigned. 

You could call this production a “learning experience.” As in, that’s about the best you could say about it. I did learn a lot: that when you’re not happy with what’s going on in rehearsal, you should make it clear early and often. And that if you THINK you should pull the play, you probably should, even if the postcards are printed. And if it becomes apparent the director is uncomfortable with the material, and wants to cut most of it, RUN AWAY! RUN AWAY!

That experience led me to think there was something deeply wrong with the play, and I needed to rework it, or add more material so people would “get” what I was saying. I had to prove to…someone…that I was right. That I could do it. Eventually, I put the whole thing away, and worked on the next one.

I didn’t look at it again until I saw a call for submissions from a women’s theater company in London was looking for short plays for its scene showcase. The artistic director said she liked the piece, but could I cut it to fit their evening? I said I’d take a shot at it, and realized how much extraneous stuff there was (nothing like taking a couple years off from a play to see what you need to throw out).

The artistic director liked the new version, and I scraped up the miles to fly over to see it. I managed to stump the London cab driver I asked to take me to the theater, which is nearly impossible. But eventually we found it, and I was touched by the care they’d put into the production. Their accents were shaky, but their hearts were in the right place. 

I brought the new version home, worked on it a bit more, and rechristened it “What to Throw Out.” And sent it out and sent it out and sent it out…I read it at playwrights’ circle; I considered producing it myself…but at that point, I’d had enough of the festivals and one-night stands, and hoping for an audience to vote you along to the next round. 



PictureThe third show we took to Dublin, "Outlook."
After a certain point (and one hopes, level of competence) you can’t ask people to devote their professional skills & energy into a one-off for which they probably aren’t going to get anything more than carfare. It’s not that I no longer want to produce my own work, but rather that I marshal my time, energy and goodwill more carefully as the years go by. 

So it became the play I sent when someone asked for a one-act two-hander, and there’s a monologue from it in an audition collection (it’s a good monologue).

Fast forward a few years (a refrain I often use in these postings. As my shrink says to me: Remember, Kathleen, living well really IS the best revenge!)

I have a wide and varied circle of theater friends and colleagues in various regions. Outside of New York City, the two places where my work gets produced most are Provincetown and Dublin. It’s kind of a self-perpetuating cycle, because who wouldn’t want to go back to a couple of wonderful towns where they like you?

Last spring, I caught up with a director I’d met at a women’s theater festival in Ptown. At that festival, there was a solo piece I really liked, and I tried to get someone in New York to do it. It took a couple of years, but it finally happened, and the Provincetown director, Margaret Van Sant, directed the piece in EAT’s New Works Series. “A Shining Attribute” is an excellent solo work, and I got a chance to meet and talk with the playwright, Candyce Rusk, who’d come in from Austin. This was on St. Patrick’s Day last year, and after the show was over, we repaired to perhaps the only bar in New York that wasn’t loaded with revelers. 

Margaret told me to send up something for the next women’s festival and for the Playwrights Festival. We brought “Sharing the Pie” from NYC to Ptown in October, and “What to Throw Out” was accepted to the Playwrights Festival in November…with Margaret to direct.



PictureThe fourth show we took to Dublin, "That's Her Way."
Seeing the play on its feet for the first time in over 10 years brought in a flood of emotion and time travel and: “ouch, I’m a better writer than that now.” There were still things to solve, and Margaret and I sat down and hammered some of them out. Here’s is a piece of advice for all you playwrights out there: don’t write three discrete scenes in a one-act play unless you want to confuse the audience. They’re going to applaud after the first scene…and then realize there’s a second scene…and then not applaud after the second scene in case there’s a third scene…and when there is, they STILL won’t be sure if the end of the third scene is the end of the play until the actors take a bow.

But we found enough to make us excited that we began to talk about what we could do NEXT…and instigator that I am, I suggested we take this one and “A Shining Attribute” to Dublin as “Two from Provincetown.” It’s a compact ensemble: The director of “A Shining Attribute” and the actor double as the cast of “What to Throw Out.” I went home and did a solid rewrite, based on Margaret’s notes and my own observations. There are some damn transitions written in there now, I can tell you that.

We applied for and got into Dublin, and now we’re doing my usual spring fire drill of raising the money and buying plane tickets and renting an apartment and going into rehearsal again. A new piece I wrote got into the Provincetown Spring Playwrights Festival, so I’m going up in April to see it, and to check out where we are in rehearsal with “What to Throw Out.” 

I leave from New York on May 9, and the Massachusetts crew leaves from Boston. Candyce leaves from Texas, and we will all end up in in Dublin on May 10. We have a day to get acclimated assemble any props and set pieces we need and get over the jet lag…fast. Tech is on Sunday, we open on Monday. And by the following Sunday, it’ll all be over, with the gala and the goodbyes; another festival, another production, extant only in the memory banks. 



PictureComing to Dublin, May 2014, "What to Throw Out."
This one has been a long time coming. And it’s taken people on 2 continents and in 3 states to make it happen. A decade and a half is a long time to search for the right production, but I suspect it will be worth the wait.

There is, of course, an Indiegogo campaign, that runs for another 10 days. If you are so moved, feel free to toss a few bucks our way. It will be put to good use, and you will get a postcard, written by hand, and delivered from over the ocean.

I hope to see you soon in Dublin, or New York, or Provincetown. Or anywhere else the words take me.

1 Comment

    Kathleen W.

    Writer, editor, curator, Ambassador of Love.

    Archives

    May 2014
    March 2014
    September 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    January 2013
    June 2012
    May 2012
    March 2012
    August 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011
    April 2011
    March 2011
    January 2011
    November 2010
    July 2010

    Categories

    All
    Adpatations
    Andrea Alton
    Awards
    Best Lesbian Erotica
    Burlesque
    Cheryl B.
    Composing
    Courtesy
    Craft Of Writing
    Dance
    Doric Wilson
    Drunken Careening Writers
    East Village
    Egopo
    Emerging Artists Theatre
    Farting
    Grounded Aerial
    Ireland
    Kgb
    Marketing
    Marketing For Writers
    Metropolitan Playhouse
    Mona Lisa
    Musicals
    My Awesome Friends
    New Plays
    Ny Fringe
    Peek-A-Boo Revue
    Performing Artists
    Philadelphia
    Pifa
    Plays
    Plays And Playwrights
    Playwrights
    Poetry
    Poets
    Readings
    Residencies
    Statements Of Purpose
    Storytelling
    Theater
    Tosos
    Women Playwrights
    Writing

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.