Showing posts with label The Pool Plays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Pool Plays. Show all posts

Thursday, December 14, 2017

Spotlight On...Lynn Rosen

Name: Lynn Rosen

Hometown: Gary, Indiana (near Chicago)

Education: Brandeis University – BA in Theatre Arts

Favorite Credits: Proud of them all but the world premier of my EST/Sloan play The Firebirds Take The Field at Rivendell Theatre Ensemble in Chicago, directed by Jessica Fisch, this spring was a recent delight. Also proud of my work as co-creator/co-writer on my award-winning web series DARWIN, about a life coach whose life is falling apart, directed by Carrie Preston and Greg Ivan Smith, created with Karl Kenzler and Chris Gerson.

Why theater?: I’ve loved it since I was 6ish and I met Dracula at a kids’ show at The Goodman. He was terrifying and wonderful with his blood-red mouth and fangs. I fell in love with the mystery and the magic of it. Anything larger than life I am a fan of. Don’t we all want our lives to feel lifted and larger than they are? Even fleetingly? Theatre does that for me.

Tell us about Washed Up On The Potomac: Washed Up is a dark comedy set in D.C. about three proofreaders who find out that a coworker who vanished last year may – or may not have – just washed up on the Potomac. This makes them question their own existences and leads them to try to change their lives – no easy feat. Some change their lives more drastically than others. It’s also about the small but vital ways we try to connect with the people around us. And it’s an ode to art itself, and how life and art are entwined.

What inspired you to write Washed Up On The Potomac?: I worked in proofreading for many years. It’s a singular work environment mainly populated by artists wishing they were somewhere else. I was always struck by the personas and myths we’d create for ourselves in order to get through the day without feeling like failures. During that time I did, sadly, know of someone from my past who washed up on the Potomac. Besides being sad and scary, this made me think about the ways we all vanish from our lives. Additionally, I was haunted by the way people would simply not show up to work and never return. Sometimes we knew what happened to them, but more often it remained a mystery and all that was left of them was a sweater or a hat. It was spooky and sad. I guess I felt the need to work it out in my writing.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?: I like theatre that is bold, and theatrical, and tells a good story, of course. Anything that involves a transformation gets me. I think that’s what lifts us out of the mundane and gets us thinking, feeling and maybe even connecting. And please be funny. Even just a little. How do people survive in this world without humor? As for inspiration, seeing the Bway tour of Noises Off as a kid made me want to be a playwright. Also Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead which I read when I was a teen. I’m still haunted by a scene in Mnemonic by Complicité about Otzi the iceman, where a folding chair transforms into a man who is taking his last mortal steps in a snow storm. So simple yet so profoundly moving. I think about it a lot.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?: This is the starry-eyed version but Francis McDormand or Julia Louis-Dreyfus. I also just did a Playing On Air recording of my one-act I Love You with Bill Irwin – would love to work with him more, I think he’s a genius.

What show have you recommended to your friends?: Recently, The Band’s Visit. And Susan’s and Peter’s plays with The Pool!

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?: Hmm maybe Diane Keaton back in the day and it would be called “That Sounded Better In My Head.” Or “Well, That Was Awkward.”

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?: Being at the show where Abraham Lincoln was shot might be compelling. I’d certainly write about it.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?: A certain reality TV show with wives who live in houses in NYC that are supposedly real.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?: Solvent? Well TV but that’s a boring answer. Actually, right now all my non-theatre work fantasies center around working in journalism and bringing down the Trump administration.

What’s up next?: Washed Up On The Potomac at San Francisco Playhouse this summer, also directed by Jose Zayas, thank god. Developing my musical about Helen Gurley Brown with rock band The Kilbanes at TheatreWorks Silicon Valley this April. Season 2 of my comedic web series Darwin. And working on a TV pilot with Carrie Preston. Also, I’m developing a farce set in a tea shop in Brooklyn called The Imperialists which is about, yeah, imperialism.

For more on The Pool Plays, visit https://www.thepoolplays.org/

Spotlight On...Susan Bernfield

Name: Susan Bernfield

Hometown: Palo Alto, CA

Education: University of Pennsylvania, Circle in the Square Professional Workshop

Favorite Credits: Stretch (a fantasia) at Ice Factory, New Georges and People’s Light & Theatre

Why theater?:  When I was 9, I started doing theater and found my people.  And now I get to meet new people who are my people just about every day.  I’m very lucky.

Tell us about Tania In The Getaway Van It’s a play about second wave feminism, the women’s movement of the 1970s, as it was experienced not in magazines or by fancy people but by middle-class suburban women who found themselves facing new choices for the first times in their lives, trying to re-form themselves as people with agency.  Or really the first part takes places in the 1970s, then the mother/daughter story at the play’s center moves forward to 2012 to talk a little bit about expectations met and failed in a fast/slow moving world.

What inspired you to write Tania In The Getaway Van?:  It’s a riff on my own childhood, my own mom and me, then it expands outward… the story was always very much there waiting to find a way out (or for me to find a way in), though I always wondered if it would actually interest anyone, I hesitated to write it. For better or worse, now seems to be the right time for it.

What kind of theater speaks to you? What or who inspires you as an artist?:  I want to be surprised, I want to see something I’ve never seen before.  I gravitate toward big theatricality and big ideas, I’m inspired by work I never could have thought up or made myself, that pushes my conception of what can happen in a theater in one way or another, through heightened language or theatricality or a new kind of theatrical context.  I think I’m more likely to be moved by a sudden image or juxtaposition or aggregation of elements that breaks through and brings an experience together than by a big conventionally-building emotional scene – I like to be snuck up on.

If you could work with anyone you’ve yet to work with, who would it be?:  Guys!  Ha!  Running New Georges, I don’t get to work with a lot of guy playwrights and directors, but sometimes there are guys I meet and I think, well, that’s too bad… that’d be different.  It’s a funny little world I’ve made for myself.

What show have you recommended to your friends?:   Last year I did a lot of recommending of Geoff Sobelle’s The Object Lesson at New York Theatre Workshop, and it’s back on my mind because I saw his Home at BAM today, directed by my friend Lee Sunday Evans, and again, wow.  The way he approaches environment, objects, community, the audience, he creates a relentlessly human and endlessly surprising experience… it draws you in – often literally, cause you’re in it – and eventually you figure out where it’s going and it’s so so moving.  Just when you least expect it, and because of how he’s devised and placed each moment, a perfect example of what I describe above.

Who would play you in a movie about yourself and what would it be called?:  Wow, huh!  Uh… Julia Louis-Dreyfus in “Fast Talking Woman”?

If you could go back in time and see any play or musical you missed, what would it be?:  Geez, I feel like I’m so old now I almost don’t know how to answer this! If I pretend I’m still a kid I’d say Philip Barry’s The Philadelphia Story on Broadway, written for and starring Katharine Hepburn, 1939.

What’s your biggest guilty pleasure?:  Donna Summer.  Live and More.  Holding or pretending to hold those long long screams of notes along with her got me through high school and it’s still delightfully there when I need it. Ditto Patti LuPone on the Evita soundtrack.  Both on my original vinyl.  Packhorse.

If you weren’t working in theater, you would be _____?:   Lately for some reason I’ve been having flower arranging dreams…

What’s up next?:  New Georges presents two sound-centered new plays in rep as part of our year as Anchor Partners at The Flea – Stephanie Fleischmann’s Sound House, directed by Debbie Saivetz, and Lily Whitsitt and Door 10’s This Is The Color Described By The Time.  And I’d like to get back in the game of performing my solo piece My Last Car in people’s living rooms, that was a delightful thing to do.

For more on Susan, visit www.susanbernfield.com. For more on The Pool Plays, visit www.thepoolplays.org