playwright

Post Script

Thoughts on theater from page to stage.

Looking Behind The Secret Mask

The “sandwich generation” is a term that’s been applied to Baby Boomers in particular; in mid-life they are working to usher their children out of the nest, off to college, or first jobs, and simultaneously many of them are becoming caregivers for their aging parents. It’s a juggling act that requires not only a lot of love and patience, but a strange transition to new roles — parenting their parents and slowly transitioning to new relationships with their adult children. Inevitably it also involves making a lot of mistakes, even with the best of intentions. And like all complicated relationships, communication is key.

Read More
Gwen Rice
American Players Theatre’s 2018 Season — The Annotated Version

When Artistic Director Brenda DeVita chooses the season of plays that American Players Theatre will mount the following year, it is not a solitary exercise. And surprisingly, it’s not done with a specific theme in mind. Instead, it’s a collaborative process that takes months, involving many conversations with directors and actors. Through ongoing communication, DeVita discovers which plays, authors, and subjects the artists are most excited about tackling next. Then it’s a matter of fitting the projects and schedules together with the theater’s core company of actors to finalize the nine productions the company will put up over the course of five months.

Read More
Gwen Rice
MTG's "Wait Until Dark" -- A Long Wait for a Little Thrill

In his 1967 review of the Audrey Hepburn movie, “Wait Until Dark,” legendary film critic Roger Ebert wrote that the classic thriller, about a blind woman being terrorized by three conmen, depends on what he coined “an idiot plot.” Ebert summarized it as “one or more characters being idiots. They get trapped in a situation that they could easily get out of with common sense. But they don’t, being idiots. If they did, they’d solve the problem and the movie would be over.”

Read More
Gwen Rice
APT's "Creditors" Explores the Psychology of Revenge

The term “sexual predator” is all over the news of late, but more than a century ago August Strindberg created a character even more powerful and terrifying — the sexually charged “psychic murderer.” In his 1887 essay of the same name, the Swedish playwright described a type of sexual warfare where the winner could, through intellect and sheer force of will, “coerce a more impressionable psyche into submission.”

Read More
Gwen Rice
Beware the Thundering Herds, in "Rhinoceros"

In a French provincial town, two friends are meeting in an outdoor café for a drink when suddenly a rhinoceros stampedes through the village square.

Naturally the friends abruptly stop talking. Shopkeepers and villages gather around to gawk. But instead of alarm or distress at the intrusion of the enormous beast, all the crowd can muster is, “Well, of all things.” A slightly more eloquent version of, “huh,” this clichéd expression so encapsulates the public’s passive response to a clear threat, it occurs in the play 26 times.

Read More
Gwen Rice
The Mineola Twins Peaks and Valleys

Playwright Paula Vogel has an Obie Award for lifetime achievement, a Pulitzer Prize for her play How I Learned to Drive, and a place in the American Theater Hall of Fame. Vogel also enjoyed her Broadway debut earlier this year with an acclaimed production of Indecent, which earned three Tony nominations. Two decades earlier, she wrote one of the most creative and compelling plays about the AIDS crisis, The Baltimore Waltz.

Read More
Gwen Rice
University Theatre's Our Town Has a Potent Story to Tell

Halfway through the first act of Thornton Wilder’s classic drama Our Town, the Stage Manager announces that a new bank is being built in Grover’s Corners. He asks the audience what they should put in the cornerstone of the building so that people a thousand years in the future will know something about those who populate the little New Hampshire town in 1903.

Read More
Gwen Rice
A Stunning New Take on Shakespeare's Star-Crossed Lovers

Shakespeare’s classic tale, Romeo and Juliet, has inspired a myriad of artists to interpret the tragic story into different media; books, movies, paintings, operas, symphonies, and ballets, among others. Distinguished Canadian dance company Cas Public will present their own take on the lovers caught between feuding families in Symphonie Dramatique, at Overture Center on October 20th in the Capitol Theater.

Read More
Gwen Rice
Getting Away with Murder — The Musical

Madison’s Overture Center is only the second stop for the national tour of the Broadway hit A Gentleman’s Guide to Love & Murder, which racked up ten Tony nominations in 2014 and came home with four trophies, including the Tony for Best Musical. Part silly British farce, part throwback to old English music halls, it’s a story with a charming and unlikely serial killer as the protagonist. The production also features a very strong ensemble, a gorgeous, light operetta score, and a lot of clever stagecraft that lends great theatricality to the evening.

Read More
Gwen Rice