Q&A; -- The play’s the thing
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Every summer for the past four years, South Coast Repertory has
presented readings, workshops and productions of new plays as part of the
Pacific Playwrights Festival. New works by Richard Greenberg, Donald
Margulies, Amy Freed and more have appeared on SCR stages, several going
on to full productions in Costa Mesa and elsewhere.
This year everything will be a little different, as the theater
company prepares to renovate its existing stages and open a new theater
by the fall. The festival has been separated from the Hispanic
Playwrights Project, and the dates have been moved to April 26-28
(although previews of the two main productions -- “The Dazzle” and
“Getting Frankie Married -- and Afterwards” -- will open in late March).
Jerry Patch, dramaturge and director of the festival, sat down with
Features Editor Jennifer K Mahal to talk about the changes and what makes
the Pacific Playwrights Festival so special.
How was the decision made to split the festival this year, so that
the Hispanic Playwright’s Project will be held in the summer, while the
main festival is in April?
It was necessitated by the construction that we’re doing. The
construction for the new theater and the refurbishment of the existing
facility is going to force us to close from around the first of May to
the first of October because the whole front of the building is coming
off and they’re going to redo the lobby and other things.
We really just didn’t have the space or the time [for both]. We were
barely able to sandwich the Pacific Playwrights Festival in at the end of
April. We also wanted to bring “California Scenarios” back, a show that
we inaugurated last year and we are going to reprise it. It’s outdoors in
Noguchi Garden, the sculpture garden we call California Scenario, and the
end of April is just not when you want to be sitting outdoors. So, first
of August is fine and that’s when we’ll do it, late July and August.
When is the festival generally held?
For the first four years we did it, we ran it in June.... We put it as
late as we could, it’s literally a week before we close the building that
it’s taking place this year. Next year, it’s going to happen in May, and
it will probably stay there a while. This has to do with our new
production calendar.
How has the playwrights festival grown in the last four years?
We really started out with the aspiration to simply hold a regional
play development festival. I had worked for almost 10 years at the
Sundance Institute in Utah, and when that affiliation ended, we thought
well, play development was sort of drying up in the festival sense. The
Bay Area Playwrights Conference had stopped. The Los Angeles Theater
Center, which had a lot of new play development, was gone. So we thought
this would be an interesting thing to do just regionally. And it turned
out by the second one that this was a national event and it very quickly
has become that. It’s gone from sort of a regional idea to a national
one.
It’s also evolved into something that become a source of new plays for
other theaters. We’re very eager for that to happen. You know, many of
the plays we’ve produced, but we’re always delighted to see other
theaters produce the plays that come through the festival.
Our sort of poster child is Amy Freed’s play “The Beard of Avon,”
which was here last year and which got six other productions in its first
year and at some of the leading theaters in the country. And that play
has not yet been to New York.
Normally the circuit is a play goes to New York, it gets recognized
and then people do it across the country. That’s even been true of plays
that we’ve done here like “Wit” or “Collected Stories,” “Sight Unseen,”
“Three Days of Rain” -- they will go to New York, they’re anointed in New
York and then they get done all over the country. We really like this
idea that they can be done all over the country first. It’s a good thing
for the writer because it makes playwriting a viable way to make a living
for them instead of having to write television or movies just to make a
living, or whatnot.
What play in the festival’s history has gone on to be the most
successful, in your opinion?
Well, I think “The Beard of Avon” is probably the short answer. There
are a number of them. “Everett Beekin,” Richard Greenberg’s play, went
from here to New York. There’s two by Greenberg that have gone on and
been done in New York and around the country. “Beginning of August, Tom
Donaghy’s play, got done here and in New York. “Mystery of Attraction”
has been around.
But I think if we’re going to say which is the most successful, it’s
probably “The Beard of Avon.” There’s a play by David Lindsay-Abaire,
“Kimberly Akimbo,” that won a major literary prize last year....
How are the plays that are in the festival chosen?
Plays come to us from agents. They come from writers. They come from
other theaters who submit them for inclusion in the festival. And I and
my colleague, Jennifer Kiger and I read them, and Linda Sullivan Baity,
who this is her first year on staff. So the three of us read them and
essentially the plays that we think are at the top of the heap, we pass
on to David Emmes and Martin Benson. And then the five of us talk about
them, and that’s how the plays get picked.
Do you have any specific criteria for the plays or do you sort of
rely on knowing what you like when you see it?
Very much that. Writers very often ask us, “What are you looking for?”
And the answer is exactly that, we know it when we see it. But we don’t
think we’re as smart as the writers and we almost never ask a writer to
write to a particular vision or idea. We do that for some of our
educational touring shows, in order to fit with curriculum. But, normally
the most we’ll ever do is a writer will say, “Well, I’ve got two or three
plays in my head. I’ve got this idea and this idea and this idea.” And we
will say “Well, you know, this one,” -- we’re talking about a play,
them writing a commission for us -- “this one is probably more within the
parameter of being produced here.”
That’s as close as we ever get to being prescriptive.
How many of the plays in the festival are commissioned versus
submitted?
I’d say in any given year it’s a third to a half. And the reason that
it’s so high is we commission a lot of plays. I would guess that our
outstanding commissions right now might total the next two or three
theaters combined.
How do you determine which plays get a full staging versus the ones
that are readings?
In previous years, we have had workshop productions of plays, and we
don’t this year because Richard Greenberg’s “The Dazzle” is on stage
getting a full production. One of the conceits we have is that we like to
bring plays back from the preceding festival in full production. So this
year “Getting Frankie Married,” Horton Foote’s play, is, was in last
year’s festival. So now people who came last year to the reading can now
see it done in full. We think that’s fun. I hope they think it’s fun too.
We may well go back, when we are finished with this construction, to
including a workshop production in the festival. Generally those slots
have tended to go to younger writers who really would benefit more from
having a more fully realized production and a longer rehearsal period.
How do you achieve the balance between the up-and-coming
playwrights and the ones who are more established, such as Richard
Greenberg and Beth Henley?
This is a notion that I came up with at Sundance that -- I don’t claim
it’s original with me, but I didn’t learn it from anybody -- that one
year when I had Tom Murphy at Sundance and Donald Margulies and Howard
Korder, who are two front ranked American playwrights who were there, and
then we had some younger writers.
And sort of the stratification of the playwriting community there was
really interesting, because everyone there knew that Tom Murphy was the
great writer that was on the mountain. I mean he was an international
writer of significance. And they also knew that Donald and Howard had
good careers, you know Donald had recently won the Pulitzer and it wasn’t
like they were chopped liver. And then there were these kids who were
kind of starting out and they had all of that enthusiasm and that sort of
inspired Murphy and Howard and Donald and took them back to when they
were starting.
So, there was this kind of symbiosis or synergy that came out of
artists being at different stages in their careers that they sort of
bounced off of one another, and that really impressed me. I though this
is a good way to do this. And you can’t do it all the time, but for sure
this year the -- Richard and, certainly, Horton Foote, who is an American
master, Beth Henley, who is a Pulitzer Prize winner, those are the
established writers. And then Julia Cho, Julia Jordan, Steven Drukman
and, really Lynn Nottage is somewhere in between Beth Henley and the
three I just mentioned.... So you just try to slot it that way so there
are reference points.
Quite honestly, it also makes writers more comfortable with one
another and reduces the possibility that anything like this becomes
competitive, because all writers want their plays produced. That’s what
they want. And if there are seven other writers in the room, there are
seven other people who want their play produced, and there are only so
many slots.
What is your favorite part of putting this together?
You’re talking to me, but this whole theater supports this operation,
and I thrill every year to how good they are at it, from the people who
plan the lunches to the tech department that arranges rehearsal spaces. I
mean, I just don’t have to worry about that stuff, it’s all taken care of
and it’s beautiful the way that happens....
I like picking the plays, I like finding plays to do. I think we have
a good time doing that. And then it’s fun to see this community come
together and to see actors -- it’s interesting the level of actor you can
get for a four day play reading as opposed to a ten week run, commitment
to rehearse a play for four weeks and play it for six. People who are in
television series or who have substantial film careers will not do the
play, they can’t find the time. But for four days, they like to come out
and scratch their theater itch. You tend to wind up with some kind of
powerhouse cast. And sometimes the plays are well served by that and
sometimes it just doesn’t matter, but it gives a frisson to the whole
thing.
And, again, if you are a young writer, to have the star of a
television series, you know, to have a Jane Kazmareck or Brad Whitford
reading your play is “Wow, I guess I’m worth it.” And I can’t tell you
how much that means six months later when you don’t know what to do with
your play and you get up and it’s time to go to work and you have to
believe that what you’re doing is worthwhile.
BIO
Name: Jerry Patch
Age: Late 50s
Residence: Irvine
Occupation: Dramaturge and director of the 5th annual Pacific
Playwrights Festival at South Coast Repertory. Patch has been with SCR
for 35 years.
Education: Bachelor’s in speech and drama from UC Santa Barbara,
master’s in rhetoric from Cal State Fullerton.
Family: Two children, Darcy and Brendan
Community Involvement: Professor of theater and film at Long Beach
City College
Hobbies: Tennis
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