New Works Debut at O'Neill Conference
New
Works Debut at O'Neill Conference
Wed Jul 24, 1:26 PM ET
By MICHAEL KUCHWARA, AP Drama Writer
WATERFORD,
Conn. (AP) - In the velvety darkness of an old wood-beamed barn, actors
Chris Noth and Mark Blum sit on a small, dimly lighted stage and rehearse
their lines.
"Try to keep
this next section clean don't slur too much," cautions director
Harris Yulin as veteran playwright Romulus Linney stretches out on a
nearby bench and listens. The play is called "Klonsky and Schwartz,"
Linney's take on the argumentative relationship between poets Milton
Klonsky and Delmore Schwartz.
Outside, underneath
a mammoth copper beech tree, a similar exploration is taking place.
The play is called "The Bebop Heard in Okinawa," the author
a 23-year-old newcomer from Naperville, Ill., named Mat Smart. A half-dozen
actors huddle around Smart and director Steven Williford as they rehearse
the young writer's turbulent tale of a racially mixed family in present-day
Okinawa.
Nearly five decades
and a lot of theater experience separate the 71-year-old
Linney and Smart, but they are here at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center
for the same reason. Both have written new plays.
And each is taking
part in the Center's annual Playwrights Conference, one of six major
theater-related programs run on the grounds of the old Hammond Mansion,
a rambling yellow-frame structure that overlooks Long Island Sound.
"We are where
things begin," says executive director Howard Sherman, who is in
charge of the entire operation. "We are not the end. The O'Neill
is a starting place."
A starting place,
over the years, for a lot of plays that went on to have lasting lives
on stage: works by August Wilson, including "Ma Rainey's Black
Bottom," "Fences" and "The Piano Lesson"; John
Guare's "The House of Blue Leaves"; "Uncommon Women and
Others," by Wendy Wasserstein; "A Walk in the Woods,"
by Lee Blessing; and the musical "Nine."
For much of its
nearly 40-year existence, the Center, which began in 1964, was the domain
of two men: founder George C. White and Lloyd Richards, the first artistic
director of the Playwrights Conference. After a long, successful run,
Richards left in 1999 and was succeeded by James Houghton. White retired
the following year, and Sherman arrived in October 2000. Now, the new
team is hard at work, slowly putting their own marks on the Center and
what it represents.
The Playwrights
Conference is the Center's best-known program, but the estate is also
home to a music-theater conference, a critics institute for aspiring
theater reviewers, a puppetry program, a residency for trustees of nonprofit
theaters and the National Theater Institute. It is an accredited, college-level
training program for actors; the institute's tuition helps cover much
of the Center's $2.4 million annual budget.
The Center was named
for O'Neill whose family vacationed in nearby New London, and whose
summer home there, the Monte Cristo Cottage, was the setting for his
"Long Day's Journey Into Night." The Center now owns the house
and is in the process of restoring the structure.
Sherman, who has
worked at such regional theaters as Geva in Rochester, N.Y., and Connecticut's
Goodspeed Opera House, oversees them all. Yet artistic control of the
Playwrights Conference is in the hands of Houghton, who also heads the
Signature Theatre in New York and is an artistic adviser at the Guthrie
in Minneapolis.
It was the 43-year-old
Houghton, a soft-spoken, unassuming man, who ultimately decided which
writers filled the 15 slots out of 700 or so submissions_ in
this summer's monthlong Playwrights Conference, which ends July 28.
And then the music-theater conference takes over, running Aug. 3-18.
There is a three-tiered
selection process, beginning with a letter of intent from applicants,
a biography and a character breakdown for their plays. Scripts are read
and evaluated by more than 50 theater professionals before Houghton
and a small advisory board make the final decisions.
This summer's 15
plays are a diverse lot and so are their authors. Besides works by Smart
and Linney, they include "Hindustan," which deals with the
love affair between Nehru, the first prime minister of India, and Edwina
Mountbatten. It was written by William di Canzio, a college professor
from Pennsylvania.
And then there's
"Millicent Scowlworthy" a look at how a group of teen-agers
deals with the aftereffects of violence, not unlike Columbine, by Rob
Handel, a development director for the Mark Morris Dance Group in New
York.
"One of the
great things about this place is that there is all this support
not only from the staff members but from other people," says Linney.
"Jim sets a tone here so that there is no competition. All the
playwrights support each other."
Linney was among
several established playwrights asked by Houghton to participate in
this year's conference. They didn't go through the selection process.
And several other playwrights, including August Wilson, were also present
as writers-in-residence, able to work on their latest efforts, without
the pressure of public performances.
Those staged readings
are put together quickly. The actors in each show are at the Center
for a week. There's four days of rehearsal, an afternoon of technical
rehearsal and then two performances, scripts in hand, in one of four
theater spaces.
"I am working
here with people I really trust I know these guys," says
Linney of his director, his two actors and Houghton, who presented a
season of Linney plays at the Signature a decade ago.
It was Noth who
suggested to Linney, a friend since they worked together at off-Broadway's
Ensemble Studio Theatre, that he write something about Schwartz. Some
two years later, "Klonsky and Schwartz" found its way here.
"We are able
to do things that would drive other people crazy," Linney says,
discussing the intense preparation for his two staged readings. "People
sitting here watching these rehearsals think the whole thing is chaos,
and we are all nuts. I have changed a million things. There is a lot
of give and take. Chris and Mark are ace actors and if you have any
sense as a playwright, you pay a lot of attention to what they are saying."
"It's all about
discovery," adds Noth, best known for his television roles on "Law
& Order" and as Big on "Sex and the City ( news - Y! TV)."
"We are here
to articulate for Rom to help him find out what's not working.
Illuminating the different rooms of this play and there are a
lot of them. It's good, hard work but it's scary."
For Houghton, that
cooperation is part of the process. He and Sherman have instituted operational
changes that are not readily apparent to visitors or people attending
the conference.
"What I tried
to do when I came here was to start fresh, to ask some of the same questions
that were asked initially when this place began," Houghton says.
"How can we serve our writing community now? What are the challenges
a writer faces in the field as it stands now? And apply those answers
and ask those questions every single year.
"One of the
things we can do is bring as many new people here as possible every
year so that we are constantly refueling and seeing this event fresh,
seeing it through a first-time experience. ... There are no givens except
to be flexible and open to change."
The playwrights
now live on the O'Neill campus and can bring their families. Originally,
the conference employed five or six directors, who would divide up the
plays, and hire what essentially became a rep company of actors, who
would be around for the duration of the conference.
"Now, there
is a director per project, and each show is cast individually,"
says Sherman. "This made enormous artistic sense in terms of giving
each playwright the best resources for their specific plays."
Ask Smart, an O'Neill
success story, who worked at the Center for two summers as a writer's
assistant before submitting a play to the Playwrights Conference.
"The wonderful
thing about having `Bebop' at the O'Neill is that I can have the appropriate
actors in the roles," says Smart, who just finished his first year
in the master of fine arts playwriting program at the University of
California-San Diego. "Bebop" grew out of a summer visit to
Japan and later a trip to Okinawa.
"In a school
production, I wouldn't have a 50-year-old and a 70-year-old Japanese
woman. I would probably have a 25-year-old white girl. It's wonderful
to have the people that I need to do the play. It is empowering to have
all these people working with you and just trying to help you tell the
story you want to tell."
As Sherman explains
it, "Everybody does workshops these days. You can't turn around
without someone telling you about their play development series. What
we offer is the idea that there are all of these artists at varying
levels of their careers here together in the same boat and, ultimately,
if they each choose, acting as resources for each other. That's a very
different dynamic.
"Some of the
greatest experiences at the O'Neill come out of who you sit next to
at lunch there are no barriers," he adds. "We all walk
around wearing name tags. It creates a leveling effect. Jim and I wear
them because it sets the tone. It says, `If we can do it, you can do
it.'"
In the end, everyone
works to help the writers. It's no surprise that at the end of each
reading, the playwright takes a bow with the actors.
On a recent cool,
mosquito-flecked evening, Smart stood with his actors under the same
copper beech tree where they rehearsed for four days. He smiled broadly
as the crowd, sitting on bleachers, cheered.
A new play
and a real playwright were meeting their audience.