Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interview. Show all posts

Friday, March 20, 2015

"All is not what it seems" with playwright, JC NIALA (Kenya)

How were you contacted to participate?
I was contacted to contribute through The Theatre Company in Nairobi, Kenya.

Who is your greatest writing influence?
My greatest writing influences are the magical realists who thankfully remind us all is not what it seems. 

What makes a great play in your country?
In Kenya, the populist plays make people laugh and the profound plays make people think. Both types of plays are considered great if they speak to the essence of how Kenyans see themselves.

How do you wake up?
I wake up at 4am full of excitement and anticipation to get to my writing desk and the to watch the sunrise. 



JC Niala (Kenya) is an award-winning playwright whose plays have been performed and aired on radio in Kenya and the UK. Her play The Strong Room was shortlisted by Wole Soyinka in BBA Africa Performance 2010. She is also a producer and founder of KikoPro. KikoPro specializes in publishing diverse Children's Books and Adult Non Fiction Books. 

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Nina Mitrović (Croatia), "Theatre is Freedom."

What was your first experience of theater that converted you to wanting to pursue it as a career?


When I was ten a bunch of kids bullied my younger brother on a playground. The top bully got physical. Others were happy, they cheered. I took one of the swings and swung it right into the bully’s head. The gang just stood there, no one did a thing. Then the bully walked away. And that hasn’t changed til this day – I fight for what I believe in. The only difference is, now I don’t need a swing. Words do the job perfectly.


If you could have a drink with any dramatist (living or dead) who would it be and why?


Edward Albee. I know he’d challenge my mind, wouldn’t refrain from saying fuck and would make me laugh.


Why is theater important to you?


Theatre is freedom. Freedom to show another face of the world, one we prefer to keep hidden. In doing so we uncover emotion and truth. And to achieve that, you can’t compromise. You can’t settle for less. I know I won’t. If I did, I’d stop caring for it.


What advice do you have for new playwrights?


The same one I’d give to myself – trust your guts and go for it. That’s if you have talent. If not, this question is irrelevant.



Nina Mitrović (Croatia) was awarded a BA in Dramaturgy from the Academy of Drama Arts in Zagreb and an MA in Screenwriting from London Film School. Her award-winning plays and monologues have been produced professionally in Croatia, Austria, Germany, Finland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Macedonia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. They include: Encounter (2012), Javier (part of Zagreb pentagram project, 2009), This bed is too short or just fragments (2004.), When We Dead Slay Each Other (2004), An Instant-Powder Family (2003), Neighbourhood Upside Down (2002). Her plays have been presented at international festivals in Berlin (Berliner Festspiele - Theatertreffen Festival), London (LabFest at Theatre 503), Sibiu (International Theatre Festival), Paris, Buenos Aires, Brno (Divaldofeste Yougo Festival) and New York (Playwright's Week Festival). Her work has been translated into ten languages and published in Croatian and international magazines and anthologies. She is also the author of radio plays and radio documentaries awarded and presented at international festivals in Berlin, Milan and Zagreb.

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

"the siren called to me and I heedlessly followed" an interview with Lisa Kron

What was your first experience of theater that converted you to wanting to pursue it as a career?

I think of theater more as a calling than a career.  The siren called to me and I heedlessly followed, assuming I was irresponsibly abdicating from making a career choice of any kind.  Though it's been a serial seduction, my "God Play" experience, as Paula Vogel calls it, was Peggy Shaw, Lois Weaver and Deb Margolin's show "Split Britches" which exploded my brain when I saw it in East Village in the mid-80's.  


If you could have a drink with any dramatist (living or dead) who would it be and why?

Thornton Wilder, Thornton Wilder, Thornton Wilder because Our Town is the hugest and most perfect play I know and because no one wrote more brilliantly about plays, how they work, and what they are for then he.


Why is theater important to you?

Who knows why we are drawn to our passions, really.  I'm working on a Sloan commission and trying to understand what makes some people want to be scientists.  It seems to me that science gives those who are drawn to it a framework through which they feel connection to the inchoate natural world.  Similarly, theater craft is, for me, a framework through which we can feel connection to the inchoate human world.  


If you could have one of your plays produced in any country in the world, which play and which country would you choose, and why?

Wow.  Hm.  I don't know.  In general, I do yearn for more diverse audiences, since, as the aforementioned Mr. Wilder says, theater is created in "the group mind".  Performances are palpably more alive when that group mind is made up of people of different ages, classes, backgrounds, experiences, etc, who watch a play through many different lenses and reveal the play to each other.  It's the best when that happens, the whole point, really.  However... that doesn't answer this question at all, does it?  I don't know.  Anywhere!  Everywhere!  



Lisa Kron (NYC, USA) is a playwright and performer. Her plays include the musical Fun Home, a musical written with composer Jeanine Tesori and based on the graphic novel by Alison Bechdel; The Ver**zon Play, which premiered 2012 Humana Festival; In The Wake (Lortel and GLAAD Media Award nominations, Susan Smith Blackburn Prize finalist), Well (Tony nominations), 2.5 Minute Ride (OBIE, L.A. Drama-Logue, New York Press, and GLAAD Media Awards); and 101 Humiliating Stories (Drama Desk nomination). Lisa is a founding member of the legendary OBIE and Bessie Award-winning collaborative theater company The Five Lesbian Brothers. Lisa has received playwriting fellowships from the Lortel and Guggenheim Foundations, Sundance Theater Lab, the Lark Play Development Center, and the MacDowell Colony, the Cal Arts/Alpert Award, a Helen Merrill Award, and grants from the Creative Capital Foundation and New York Foundation for the Arts. She was a resident playwright at the American Voices New Play Initiative at Arena Stage. As an actor, she has performed in her own plays and the plays of the Five Lesbian Brothers, The Foundry’s Good Person of Szechwan, The Normal Heart at the Public Theater, Spain at M.C.C., and The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told at NYTW. Lisa is on the playwriting faculty of the Yale School of Drama, she is a member of Actors Equity, and serves on the Council of the Dramatists Guild of America. lisakron.org