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DENVER—Denver Center Theatre Company has announced the four
works DCTC will present during the 2010 Colorado New Play Summit in February.
The works are: The House of the Spirits, by Caridad Svich based on the novel by
Isabel Allende; Map of Heaven, by Michele Lowe; The Catch, by Ken Weitzman; and
Civilization (All You Can Eat) by Jason Grote. The plays will be presented
February 11-13 to a full house of critics, since the American Theatre Critics
Association’s winter meeting will be held during the Summit as well. More on
the plays after the jump.
The House of the Spirits
by Caridad Svich based on the novel by Isabel Allende
From the confines of her prison cell in an unnamed Latin American country, Alba
thinks back over the past 50 years of her family’s history. Her
grandfather made his fortune working in the mines, but her father became a
field hand and revolutionary. While the tensions between the haves and
the have-nots escalate, the Communist party takes power. Caridad Svich’s
haunting and lyrical adaptation of Isabel Allende’s critically-acclaimed
bestseller, The House of the Spirits,
looks at four generations of political and social upheavals through the
powerful lens of memory.
Caridad Svich
Caridad Svich is a US Latina playwright, translator, lyricist and editor whose
works have been presented across the US and abroad at diverse venues including
Repertorio Espanol, The Women's Project, INTAR, 59East59, Cincinnati Playhouse,
McCarren Park Pool, 7 Stages, Salvage Vanguard Theatre, ARTheater-Cologne, and
Edinburgh Fringe Festival/UK. The summer 2009 issue of American
Theatre magazine featured a significant
profile about her work, and she is the recipient of the 2009 Lee Reynolds Award
from the League of Professional Theatre Women. Among her key plays are 12
Ophelias, Any Place But Here, Alchemy of Desire/Dead-Man's Blues,
Fugitive Pieces, Iphigenia...a rave fable, Instructions for Breathing, and The Booth Variations. She has translated nearly all of Federico
Garcia Lorca's plays as well as works by Lope de Vega, Calderon de la Barca,
Julio Cortazar and new plays from Spain, Cuba and Mexico and has freely adapted
works by Wedekind, Sophocles, Euripides and Shakespeare. She's a former
Harvard/Radcliffe Institute Bunting Fellow and has received grants from the
NEA, TCG, Pew Charitable Trusts and California Arts Council. She has
edited several books on theatre and performance including Trans-Global
Readings: Crossing Theatrical Boundaries (Manchester
University Press) and Divine Fire
(BackStage Books). Her work is published by TCG, Smith & Kraus,
Playscripts and more. She is alumna playwright of New Dramatists, founder of
NoPassport theatre alliance & press, associate editor of Routledge's Contemporary
Theatre Review and contributing editor of TheatreForum. She is member of PEN American Center, The
Dramatists Guild and is featured in the Oxford Encyclopedia of Latino History.
She holds an MFA from UCSD. Website: www.caridadsvich.com
Map of Heaven
by Michele Lowe
Lena’s painting career is on the rise; her beautiful abstracted maps of places
real and imaginary are poised to take downtown New York by storm. But her husband Ian, a radiologist,
makes a fatal error that upends Lena's relationship with her agent and
threatens to take down her first show. A contemporary drama with tragic
undertones, Map of Heaven explores the
devastating consequences of a single lapse in judgment.
Michele Lowe
Michele Lowe is the author of Inana,
which premiered at the Denver Center Theatre Company and was a finalist for the
2009 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize.
Her play Victoria Musica
recently premiered at Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park. New York productions include The
Smell of the Kill (Broadway debut) and String
of Pearls (Outer Critics Circle nomination
for Outstanding Off-Broadway Play). She is the librettist and lyricist
for the musical A Thousand Words Come to Mind (Joe’s Pub), which she wrote with composer Scott
Richards. She also is the author of Mezzulah, 1946 (City Theatre) and Backsliding in the
Promised Land (Syracuse Stage). Lowe
has been commissioned by the Denver Center Theatre Company, Cincinnati
Playhouse in the Park, Arden Theatre and Geva Theatre. Her plays have
been produced by companies around the world including Primary Stages, Vineyard
Theater, Intiman Theater, Florida Stage, Reykjavik City Theatre, Berkshire
Theatre Festival, Asolo Rep, and Cleveland Play House. Her work has been
developed at the Eugene O’Neill National Music Theatre Conference, Colorado New
Play Summit, New Harmony Project, PlayLabs, New York Stage and Film, Hartford
Stage’s BRAND: NEW Festival, the ACT & Hedgebrook Women Playwrights
Festival and the Lark Play Development Center. Her work appears in New
Playwrights/The Best Plays of 2005 (Smith
& Knaus, 2006), The Best Women’s Stage Monologues 2005 (Smith & Knaus, 2006) and Monologues
for Women by Women (Heinemann, 2004). Screenplays include The
Emergence of Emily Stark and Quitting
Texas. She recently completed her
first novel, It Goes Without Saying.
Lowe is a graduate of Northwestern University’s Medill School of
Journalism. She is a member of the Dramatists Guild, Playwrights’ Center
and ASCAP.
The Catch
by Ken Weitzman
America’s national pastime meets America’s financial meltdown. A failed
dot-commer plots to regain his fortune by catching a star slugger’s
record-breaking home run ball—through a mix of willpower, determination and
sheer optimism. Playwright Ken Weitzman’s baseball drama The
Catch knocks the cover off our national
obsession with sports, stardom, money—and positive thinking.
Ken Weitzman
Ken's previous plays include The As If Body Loop (Humana Festival ’07), Arrangements (Atlantic Theatre Company, Pavement Group), Spin
Moves (Summer Play Festival), Hominid (Theatre Emory), Fire in the Garden (Castillo Theatre), Stadium 360 (Out of Hand Theater), Memorabilia (Alliance Theatre). Ken’s plays also have been developed and presented at, among
others, New York Stage and Film, Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Playwrights
Horizons, Arena Stage, the Geva Theatre, the Mark Taper Forum, Williamstown
Theatre Festival, Dad’s Garage, Florida Stage, Page 73 Productions, Hartford
Stage, and the New Harmony Project. His awards include The L. Arnold
Weissberger Award for Arrangements, the McDonald Playwriting Award for The
As If Body Loop (best new play in San
Diego), The Mario Fratti/Fred Newman Political Playwriting Contest for Fire
in the Garden, and the Elizabeth George
Commission for an Outstanding Emerging Playwright (chosen and awarded by South
Coast Repertory Theatre). He has been commissioned by Arena Stage, South
Coast Repertory, the Alliance Theatre, Theatre Emory, and Actors Theatre of
Louisville. Currently, Ken is the Playwright-in-Residence for Out of Hand
Theater Company. Ken received his MFA from the University of California,
San Diego, and has taught Playwriting at Emory University, University of
California San Diego, and, currently, at Indiana University.
Civilization (All You Can Eat)
by Jason Grote
The filming of a post-racial TV commercial kicks off Jason Grote’s fierce
burlesque of America’s love/hate obsession with food. A giant pig on the
rampage, mass choreography, Washington and Jefferson selling snacks to the
inner city, the search for love and meaning—all are braided together to
devastating effect through the inspired vision of the author of 1001 – DCTC’s acclaimed 2007 premiere. Commissioned
by Clubbed Thumb.
Jason Grote
Jason Grote's 1001 was developed in The
Denver Center's first Colorado New Play Summit in 2006 and received its world
premiere here the following year. That production received an Ovation
Award from The Denver Post, was
named best new non-local play by Westword, and was listed in the year-end top
ten lists of The Boulder Daily Camera and The Rocky Mountain News.
It has since been published by Samuel French and gone on to ten more
productions throughout the United States, one of which (Page 73) was listed in Time
Out New York's Top Ten of 2007, and another
of which (Theater @ Boston Court) was nominated for Best Performance of 2008 by
L.A. Weekly. The
Washington, D.C. premiere (Rorschach Theater) was the subject of a feature by Voice
of America, broadcast in Farsi into
Iran. He is currently developing a musical version of the play with
composer Marisa Michelson as part of Montclair State University's 2010 New
Works Initiative. His other plays include Maria/Stuart,
Hamilton Township, Darwin's Challenge, Box Americana, and This Storm Is What We Call Progress. Other recent projects include HABIT, an installation piece with conceptual artist David
Levine, (The Water Mill Center, The Luminato Festival, Mass MoCA); the
screenplay to What We Got: DJ Spooky's Quest For The Commons; a radio play program, The Acousmatic
Theater Hour on WFMU; and commissions from
The Denver Center and ACT/Seattle. Civilization (All You Can
Eat) was a commission from Clubbed Thumb,
supported with a grant from The New York State Council on The Arts.
The 2010 Colorado New Play Summit also will include a panel
of theatre professionals and ATCA critics discussing “New Works and the
Critics.” Denver Center trustee and national theatre philanthropist Jim
Steinberg of the Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust will moderate the
discussion. Panelists include Christine Dolen from The Miami Herald, Jeffrey Eric Jenkins editor of Best Plays and Christopher Rawson from the Pittsburgh
Post - Gazette.
With additional funding from the Harold and Mimi Steinberg
Charitable Trust, Associate Artistic Director and Director of New Play
Development Bruce K. Sevy and Dramaturg and Literary Manager Douglas Langworthy
are insuring the future of the Colorado New Play Summit by developing one of
America’s most ambitious new play commissioning programs, building a collection
of new works, now numbering more than 20, to be featured at Summits and
eventually at the Denver Center and other national stages in full productions.
For more information and Summit registration visit
www.denvercenter.org/summit
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