Thursday, March 31, 2011
Courage for Playwrights and Other Stage Imaginers
Don't despair of the limitations of our medium. Get some cane hoops.
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Garner's 'The Galilean' available online
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| Pastor and playwright: Chapin Garner |
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Walking further...
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| Director Elaine Vaan Hogue |
As the actors and I entered the rehearsal process, we were all struck by the transparent humanity of the characters Jon so lovingly and painstakingly created. This vulnerability struck a deep chord in all of us—our hearts were opened and touched. I remember Jon saying that as we journey with the characters in Walking the Volcano, it becomes clear that it is very difficult to be tender in a world that is antagonistic toward tenderness. The couples in these plays engage in risk, combat, the chase, challenge—passions erupt, confrontations are inevitable, pacts are made, betrayal ensues, hearts are broken. In the end, a generosity of spirit triumphs, and the couple in Last Rites reconcile and truly, deeply forgive one another.
We invite you to join in the “dance” of each of these couples and “walk the volcano” with us. Thank you, Jon, for sharing your humanity—your fragility and your fierceness-- with us.
Elaine Vaan Hogue
Director, Walking the Volcano
Monday, March 28, 2011
Savick's 'Car Talk' to open this week
The new musical – inspired by the hit National Public Radio show of the same name and written and directed by Suffolk University Professor (and BPT alum and frequent director) Wesley Savick – will be the first production created for the new Modern Theatre.
Ray Magliozzi and Tom Magliozzi, co-hosts of NPR’s “Car Talk,” generously granted permission for Suffolk University to soup up their show with a musical engine. The brothers, AKA Click and Clack, first appeared on the Boston airwaves in 1977. Their radio call-in show, which offers automotive know-how with an air of hilarity, was picked up by NPR for a nationwide audience in 1987.
The play sends up classic Broadway songs about love and relationships, turning the romantic to the automotive and showing how the psychological and the mechanical intertwine, much in the way that the Car Boys do week after week on their NPR radio show.
Friday, March 25, 2011
...an entrance somewhere else
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Plays and Playwrights of BTM XIII
Announcing the Plays and Playwrights of Boston Theater Marathon XIIIDoll Hospital by Jeanne Beckwith
Pentagon Mashed Potatoes by Cliff Blake
Rox-N, Miss Thang by Barbara Blumenthal-Ehrlich
Mad-Hatter’s Tea Party by Robert Brustein
Mirror Touch by Michael Burgan
Late, Lamented by Lynne Cullen
The Curator by Jennifer Diamond
Boy-Man by Diane Di Ianni
The Fudgicle Thief by Bill Doncaster
Procession by William Donnelly
Wasted Kisses by Thomas G. Dunn
Oops by James C. Ferguson
Escape to Wonderland by Patrick Gabridge
Our Part to Change Things by Susan Goodell
Stuck by Christopher Lockheardt
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Celebrate World Theatre Day 2011
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
How to Walk the Volcano
Monday, March 21, 2011
Jon Lipsky 1944-2011
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| Jon Lipsky, April 12, 1944-March 19, 2011 |
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Fight the funk *with* the funk
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| All the right elements: Earth, Wind & Fire |
More than words/Give up the funk
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| George Clinton, in his BPT hat |
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Derek Walcott on St. Lucia, Poetry, Rap, Race, September 11th, Caliban and more.
Carve out an hour to hear Boston Playwrights' Theatre's founder in conversation at U of T. It's worth it, writers!
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Auditions

Boston Playwrights' Theatre plays host to a number of auditions every year--the annual StageSource auditions being the largest. Every June actors from around the country pack into the hallways of BPT to showcase their talents in front of Boston producers.
But the the feeling is palpable as you enter the hallway in the smallest of auditions as well. Even two actors running their sides leaves a tension in the air you can't miss on your way to the printer.
While the energy of the offices at the theatre are definitely on edge during auditions, we understand ... and sometimes we work from home. It crosses my mind that I'm seeing these people at one of the most nerve-racking moments of their lives. A moment they may have spent hundreds of hours preparing. I can appreciate that. Sure, hair product, cologne and perfume fill the hall with smells not unlike a Turkish bazaar, and the bathroom -- if you can stand in line long enough -- looks like the whale tank at SeaWorld, but this is the process, this is how we do what we do.
Plus, the kind individuals at StageSource usually bring us bagels...hint, hint.
Friday, March 11, 2011
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Last week for 'Ti-Jean' -- don't miss it!
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| Answer the call: Get yourself to Ti-Jean! |
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Molly Smith Metzler's 'Elemeno Pea' premieres at Humana tonight
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| Molly Smith Metzler |
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Kuntz's 'Nepenthe' extended
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| John Kuntz, Georgia Lyman, Daniel Berger-Jones, and Marianna Bassham |
Friday, March 11 7:30 p.m. curtain
Saturday, March 12 8:00 p.m. curtain
Sunday, March 13 7:00 p.m. curtain
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Play by Girard to be featured in SWAN Day Mini-Marathon
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| Deirdre Girard |
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
The Other BPT Employees
Just thought I'd give a quick shout out to all the people that make Boston Playwrights' Theatre run so smoothly. I'm not talking about Kate or Jake or Marc, I'm talking about the work-study students, interns, graduate students and alumni that help us run everything from paying actors to folding programs to writing parts of THIS VERY BLOG! As you may or may not know Boston Playwrights' Theatre is part of Boston University and as such reaps the benefit of having student employees. Without the work-study program the box office would not run, no one would get paid and I think Jake would probably spiral into a paperwork-induced manic state.
The interns are another bunch altogether. They don't even get paid! They are the individuals responsible for the yearly donor party, fundraising letters and copying about a thousand scripts a semester. I once made an intern deliver posters to every Indian restaurant in Cambridge—I have no shame.
Finally, our alumni and graduate students. Not only are these individuals some of the most talented playwrights I've ever met, but they take classes, work the box office, props, stage running, and like I mentioned before a few of our more outstanding graduates even help write this blog. They are multitasking mega-people.
So, here's to you people. Boston Playwrights' Theatre would not be able to run without you. Our thanks and continued gratitude.













