And what I mean by that is, I've gone pro. That's correct--I can no longer compete in the playwright games. I've been commissioned by
Black Box Studios to write two plays for two classes of special needs adults at a Jewish day center in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn.
A little more backstory, for y'all. Mandy (my aunt/roommate/drama guru) teaches theater classes throughout the bi-state area. Matt Okin (her boss/collaborator/friend) runs said classes through Black Box. And during a trip down south to MD together with them, Matt asked me if I would be interested in writing a play or two for some of the classes they taught. Apparently, there's a lot of crap out there--and he and Mandy were fed up with wading knee-deep through it in search of a script to produce. It just made more sense for me to write something good and new for them. And thus, I had a project.
A few weeks ago, Mandy could not attend her class in
Sheepshead Bay, so I went in her place as a theater teacher. I’ll admit, I was a bit nervous since I hadn’t much contact with special needs adults or experience teaching theater. But it turned out to be quite an enlightening experience. With Giselle (whom you may have seen star in last summer’s hipster romantic-comedy,
The Concert, written by a brilliant young (and single) playwright based in New Jersey) leading us through impov exercises, parts of the stage, and script reading we all came through and learned a lot. And so it then fell to me to take my observations and the brainstorm of suggestions from my new friends, and write a couple plays.
Pressed against the deadline last week, I came up with a concept encompassing an ensemble cast and a wacky plot: the town of
Saltlick,
Nevada and various issues they encounter. I took in two pages of two scenes, and ran them with each class. The response from students and teachers was positive, so I moved ahead to finish them. And now I present for your reading pleasure:
Saltlick and the Twister
(The second play,
Saltlick and the Robot, will follow shortly.)
you rock. i agree that "youth is wasted on the young" :)
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