Just Wrought

Recovering playwright, once won a STRANGER Genius Award for theater. Now writing a bloated novel about… G-d help me! Theatre.

Tag: Louis Broome

  • Fooled Again? The Seattle Outrageous Fortune Discussion

    Estragon: I can’t go on like this.

    Vladimir: That’s what you think.

    Allow me to share with you the opening paragraph of an amazing essay that Carl Sander brought to my attention a few weeks ago:

    The American non-profit theatre movement is nearing disaster.  Without an adequate sense of tradition or sense of social responsibility, it is in danger of becoming a movement whose only purpose is self-perpetuation.  This idealistic movement begun some generations ago has been unable to achieve a living wage for its actors, a livelihood for its playwrights; it demands that its designers accept twelve to fifteen productions a year just to make ends meet, and forgoes its responsibility to train directors while permitting, under the heading of financial survival, the average income of its audience members to climb higher and higher until this once bastion of social ideas and aesthetic concerns as become the plaything of the upper middle class and the very wealthy.

    Isn’t that amazing?  Doesn’t that paragraph just go straight to the heart of our current situation, and by doing so make you a little bit more hopeful that smart people are talking about theatre’s endemic crisis in such an insightful way, since surely, if we talk about this cogently and passionately, we will inevitably move toward making things better?

    There is only one problem.  This paragraph was written by Richard Nelson for an essay in PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art in 1983.  So whether you like it or not, whether you knew it or not, these problems are way over a quarter of a century old.  And since Nelson’s incendiary bit of insight was published, absolutely nothing has changed.

    Last Monday, a bunch of Seattle theatre folk sat in a room and listened to Todd London, Ben Pesner,  and Tory Bailey present their findings on the state of the American playwright– findings which culminate in a book called Outrage Fortune: The Life and Times of the New American Play.  I cannot heap enough praise on these professionals for their efforts not only in researching and authoring this book but in their willingness to tour the country to discuss it.  Thank you, London, Voss and Pessner, as well as Tory Bailey, Executive Director of the Theatre Development Fund. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.  I hope we happy few in Seattle can make progress worth your effort.  I hope this, while understanding that hope is not a plan.

    I fretted over how best to how best to shape my thoughts about the day, and then I realized I already had a loose outline in the form of the bite-sized tweets I was firing off live from the room.

    Roll Call” and “Good Mix and Size

    The first two blog posts were longer than what I could manage later, and were dedicated to making note of the very impressive cross-section of artists and administrators who came to share in the discussion.  I am proud of my city for the turnout.  My only caveat: I did not see a large number of actors– certainly nowhere near the proportion they hold in the larger theatre community.  If playwrights really want to get traction in making locally grown new plays a priority then we are going to have to do a better job of convincing local actors why this is important.  I have myself been petulant on this point  in the past and pledge to do better.

    Within “Good Size and Mix” I posted the first of many quotes that I enjoyed: “We are finished with talking with playwrights in one room and artistic directors in another.  This tour is the first salvo of setting playwrights and artistic directors in a room talking to each other.” Soon after I began tweeting quotes with little or no context.  I will try to make up for that here.

    Commissions are what a theatre gives a playwright they like when they don’t want to produce your play.

    Boy howdy, ain’t that the truth!  Understand if you can that in the upside-down, through-the-looking-glass world that is regional theatre everything you learned about money and investment flies out the window.  The larger the commission the less likely the theatre is to actually produce what they have paid you to wright.  Why?  Because it is easier to score a grant funding a commission than it is to get one large enough to underwrite an entire production of a new play.  In the regional theatre world, commissions are an easy win.  The playwright gets paid.  The theatre looks generous.  So long as everyone calls it good, it’s good, right?  (Note: actual play seen by actual audience not included.)

    “‘Everyone wants the same ten playwrights.’– Anonymous Artistic Director

    I ripped this from one of London’s slides.  It is a key point from the book.  There was no argument on Monday from anyone representing the Big Houses, nor have their season selections provided any compelling contradictory evidence.  Plus, when it comes to locally grown, that list of ten can be reduced to one: Steven Dietz, who, while beloved of all, has actually lived in Austin for the past half decade. 

    “Right now Q&A has bogged in a rather tedious, though I suppose necessary analysis of the survey methodologies.”

    Typical Seattle talkback static. “I need to show you how smart I am by questioning your research process while agreeing with its conclusions.  Really, I just want everyone to know I’m smart.  Does everyone know that now?  Great.  I’ll sit down.  What were we talking about?”

    “Things are looking up. A touch of crazy has blossomed in the room.”

    I would live to rue these words, after someone stood up and complained at length about how no one in New York wanted to produce her one-woman show about the day JFK was shot.   Crack-pottery suits the status quo defenders because it helps them lump the legitimate playwrights in with lunatic amateurs.  They can then turn to their boards, shake their heads sadly, and say, “You see what I have to deal with?  You don’t pay me enough to screen out these maniacs.”

    “Okay, now it’s become a pattern– unique to Seattle?– that crazy flowers are dominating Q&A because the smart folks are too smart to pipe up.”

    See above.  But note that the smart people are complicit as well.  And I admit, I too was biting my tongue and sitting on my hands.  But in my defense, I get to mouth off a lot, and was genuinely interested in what other folks had to say.  Come on good folks, speak up!

    “Good question leading to discussion of potential of collaboration across theaters of differing sizes. In other words, a pipeline. Duh.”

    This is what we we need to be talking about, friends: a pipeline: some way of delivering plays across the tiers of theatres in this town.  Todd London talked about how incredibly hard this is to do, and I do not doubt it.  So was going to the moon.  So was writing Hamlet.  So is raising a family.  Can we try something hard?  Can we as Seattleites lead a cultural change instead of hoping Austin figures it out?  (Which by the way, according to London, Austin may already be doing.)

    “Good question from a good friend involved in development asking to identify a “sweet spot” for breaking down silos so that all the people in this room can better collaborate towards developing new work (ideally locally grown).”

    Some sort of pipeline is the sweet spot, I am convinced.  There are other options worthy of research and development: playwright residencies, season slots dedicated to new work, etc.,  but I figure those will be a lot harder for the Big Houses to swallow than a pipeline, which they will wager they can quickly abandon when the pressure’s off (i.e. ACT’s abandonment of its highly successful FirstACT program.)  So I say, let’s convince them to build the pipeline and then let’s defend it vigorously.  Keep the pressure on, forever, forcing them to pull the plug only at their p.r. peril.

    “A little bit of fireworks there. ‘Not enough good plays for the Big Houses.’ ‘Aesthetic absolutes.’ ‘You either get what you want or you don’t.”

    Finally voices from the Big Houses start piping up.  At times to call me out by name to both praise and dismiss me in the same breath.  I am used to this tactic.  It has never cut much ice with me.  Praise is a director’s easy currency.  Many actors crave it.  It soothes them.  There is nothing wrong with this.  At the moment, however, I happen to have my playwright hat on, and I have been to Hollywood.  I know exactly how much such praise is worth.  Instead, I prefer to focus on fighting words, such as “We are looking for excellence and not finding it.”  Bullshit.  You are not looking.  And when pressed, you praise the shit out of anything handed to you in the hopes that the playwright will just go away like a happy little puppy that just got its head patted.  Save the praise.  Let’s do a production.

    “I actually don’t think the system is broken. Just limited resources.”

    Wishful thinking from a Big House voice.  Why is the Center House Theatre packed with people for this discussion if the system ain’t broken?  Are we all crackpots?  Did this all somehow get fixed since Richard Nelson wrote his essay in 1983?  In fairness, you have to expect that this argument will be trotted out, and even perhaps welcome it.  There are people who believe all is essentially well.  Best to know who they are so you can properly provide them  the evidence otherwise.

    “What are you willing to sacrifice?”

    I find this question fascinating.  Primarily aimed at playwrights, the essence is: are you willing to give up a living wage to practice your art?  Are you willing to give up your career to make these changes you are asking for? 

    Answers:  Done and done. 

    I started wrighting plays over twenty years ago understanding I would likely never gain a livelihood from it.  How many actors my age can say the same?  I also hope it is clear by now what I have personally anted up by speaking out here.  Any hopes I had for a nice Dietzian career in this town are herewith spent as payment to sit down  at the bargaining table.  I will not, however, sit without asking absolutely everyone else at that table what they are willing to stake to make this conversation happen.  Are you willing to give up your livelihoods in the theatre to fix this?  Are you willing to sacrifice everything you were hoping for individually, all your preconceptions, to make theatre better in Seattle and across the nation?  Or are you going to defend the status quo because it has gotten you this far?

    Louis Broome wants your figurative head on a platter if you currently make your living at one of Seattle’s not-for-profit theaters.  I just want your actual heart, in your chest, pumping warm blood to your brain so you can have a conversation about producing local plays that matter to the audiences you have never yet managed to reach.  I do not intend to let anyone off the hook because they are having a bad year, or a good year (yes, again, congratulations ACT) or because they absolutely know what quality is and they cannot find it here, the home to some of the finest playwrights living.  Given that I have nothing left to lose, and that I have very little power to comfort the afflicted, I will settle for afflicting the comfortable.

    But let’s not get too excited here.  Heck, it isn’t as if this cause is urgent.  We have at least another 27 years till someone, maybe only 15 years old now, digs up these essays and says, “Damn.  Nothing’s changed.  But we can’t go on like this.”

    That’s what you think, kid.

  • The Seattle Rep Offers Us Locals a Little Love

    The Seattle Rep Offers Us Locals a Little Love

    I wrote recently that there are three kinds of playwrights in this town.  Those ardently dedicated to the continuing existence of Seattle’s large regional theatres despite decades of neglect by those Big Houses.  Those, like Louis Broome, who could not care less and would even prefer to see them all go out of business so a healthier model can take their place, (though in fairness, Louis has been tellingly vague on exactly what that model might be.)  And those, like myself, who have at long last decided to make our caring contingent on getting a little love in return.

    Well, I have to call ‘em as I see ‘em, and it sure does seem like the Rep has just offered us a little love, announcing a week-long summer residency for two full-length plays (two writers, two directors and ten actors) and a solo work.  Hit this link for the details:

    http://mail.tmsmail.us/bin/display_msg?id=B6CCE57E73813BE308C4B50A80B531126161775AB5955202 

    The wording is artfully vague, but it certainly sounds as if the Rep has reserved at least one of these slots for a Pacific Northwest playwright. 

    My good friend and fellow playwright, Scot Augustson often wonders aloud to me why I even bother tangling with the Big Houses.  “Is the regional theater stage the end-all be-all?” he asks.  “Is it really the best for all plays and playwrights?”

    No.  I do not think it is.  Certainly my play The Ten Thousand Things premiered in a perfect place for it, the 40-seat Little Theatre that Washington Ensemble Theatre calls home.  The intimacy and rawness of that space made it feel like you were part of, not just observing, Etta Lilienthal’s simultaneously earthy and ethereal design. 

    On the other hand, a play of mine like Louis Slotin Sonata simply could not fit in so small a venue.  And now that I mention it, I recall that the Sonata owes its existence to a new play development program ACT hosted over a decade and half ago, called FirstACT.  A two-week program that matched four local playwrights to local directors and actors and hosted the resulting staged readings for the public.  Not surprisingly, ACT put a bullet in FirstACT long ago: an early sacrifice to the budget woes that they now seem to have finally put behind them.  (Time to bring it back, ACT, and fund it in a less precarious way?)

    My response to this news from the Rep is simple and selfish.  I have a farce that needs working on.  I need to get it on its feet and see how the frenzied action flows.  So I will be dropping the script off with Braden, though, after all the recent grief I have given him, I could understand if he is tempted to toss it in the recycle bin unread.  Oh, and the curmudgeonly Mr. Augustson?  He is sending something in too:

    Yes yes, I’m going to submit something to Braden’s Summer Bellingham. And yes, you can quote me. But, if asked: I am not anti-big guy institutional theater. I just get tired of them being thought of as the only game in town. In other art forms there seems to be more of a respect for a spectrum of scales. And of course, I’m show folk at heart and wouldn’t dream of not kissing some serious ass to get at their budgets and their marketing departments.

    It is almost certainly too much to hope that both slots would go to local writers, just as it is unlikely that either Scot or I will land one, given how much writing talent exists here, and less abrasive too; but at least now I have a frame to fantasize around: a week in beautiful summer Bellingham, my friend and fellow playwright Scot Augustson is there.  We work hard on already strong local scripts.  We push ourselves.  We push each other.  The directors, the actors, all of us push.  We make each other great.

    As the city 90 miles to the South moves a little bit closer to world class.

  • Who should go to the OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE Discussion? Anyone Who Has a Full-Time Permanent Job at a Seattle Regional Theater

    Who should go to the OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE Discussion? Anyone Who Has a Full-Time Permanent Job at a Seattle Regional Theater

    Hypothetical: if my actions made it plain to you that I neither knew nor cared that you existed, would it be rude, or perhaps just presumptuous, for me then to insist that you care deeply if I died? Or would it just be weird?

    Essentially this is the position that Seattle’s regional theaters put me and every single one of my local but nationally known playwrighting colleagues. “You have to understand,” say good friends of mine working at the Big Houses. “We are simply trying to survive here. Surely, you don’t want to see us go out of business. Surely that wouldn’t help your career as a playwright.”

    Surely not.

    Let me state categorically that I do not want to see any of Seattle’s Big Houses go out of business. (My play Louis Slotin Sonata was the Empty Space’s last production before being killed by its board, so I have a deep and personal understanding of the pain such an irrevocable loss can inflict.) Let me state further that I understand that such a catastrophe would surely not help my career as playwright. Here’s the problem. Would it hurt?

    Probably not.

    If I have seemed at times radical or outrageous in my banging on the Big Houses, let me assure you, gentle reader, that among my nationally known local playwright colleagues I am, in fact, a moderate voice.  Allow me to introduce to you, if you do not already know him (and sadly I fear that the artistic leaders at all of the Seattle’s Big Houses suffer from this specific ignorance), Louis Broome, author of the Ovation Award-winning Texarkana Waltz.

    This is from his recent blog reviewing Outrageous Fortune.

    If the tax-exempt laws that have sickened theater were repealed, the very next day almost all of the theaters would shut down and a bunch of administrators would be out of work. The players – the actors, playwrights, designers and directors, who were already out of work most of the time anyway – would no longer have the theaters to blame for their sorry state. They would have to either give up the theater and get day jobs, or figure out a way to make theater pay the rent.

    I love Louis. I love that he is part of this conversation. I see a lot of holes in Louis’s broader manifesto, i.e. all theatre must be for profit. But I am not prepared to wager he will not fill them in time and with cunning. I am dubious of and vaguely bored with his calls for revolution. But I half-wonder if this is not just my own personal aversion to that word. Others, younger and less jaded, will not necessarily share this particular semantic qualm. Louis stands as a healthy reminder, for anyone who cares to listen, of just how broken the theatre has become and just how frustrated we playwrights are with the administrative machines that have knowingly continued down a path they can see leads nowhere, all the while warning us artists not to say anything negative less we hasten their demise.

    So you see, we playwrights run a spectrum. Some care deeply and unconditionally that the Big Houses exist. Some, like Louis, could not care less. And some of us, like myself, have decided at long last to make our caring contingent on getting a little love in return. So show us you care, you happy few who make your living off this thing of ours. Show up on Monday, March 1. It will mean a lot to us. And we have long memories.

    Theatre Puget Sound hosts
    Outrageous Fortune
    March 1, 2010
    9AM – 1PM

    Detail: 9am – 10:30 Presentation by author Todd London

    Break – snacks
    10:40 – 12:00pm Q & A in large group
    Break – lunch type snacks
    12:10 – 1pm small group breakouts and report back

    Center House Theatre

    rsvp: TDFRSVP@tpsonline.org

    Theatre Development Fund, the national service organization, is convening a meeting of playwrights, artistic directors, funders, theatre managers and others in conjunction with Theatre Puget Sound at the Center House Theater in Seattle on March 1, 2010 from 9:00am-1:00pm to stimulate conversation and action to support new American play production. Tory Bailey, executive director of Theatre Development Fund, Todd London, artistic director of New Dramatists, and co-author Ben Pesner will lead the gathering, which will begin with a presentation of the results of an intensive study of new play production in America and then open out to an inclusive conversation.

    TDF has just released the book OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE NEW AMERICAN PLAY written by Todd London and Ben Pesner, with research consultant Zannie Giraud Voss. The book, drawing on six years of research, examines the lives and livelihoods of American playwrights today and
    the realities of new play production from the perspective of both playwrights and not-for-profit theatres. The study represents the most comprehensive field study in the history of the not-for-profit theatre to analyze new play production practices and the economics and culture of playwriting in America. Set against a backdrop of dwindling audiences for dramatic work, OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE NEW AMERICAN PLAY makes clear the urgent need for new conversations and practices if the American play is to flourish.

    The March 1 meeting will share the study findings and facilitate the beginning of a conversation in which participants can identify possible ways to improve conditions for the production of new American plays, community by community. We hope that a wide group of individuals from the theatre community in the Seattle area will join this conversation.

  • Just Wrought gets plugged in the UK’s Guardian Blog

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/theatreblog/2010/feb/04/noises-off-theatre-dead-blogs

    But the Brit blogger Chris Wilkinson punks out and regurges the same weak crap I dismiss in ” ‘World Class’ = Fighting Words”, going all weak-kneed for Louis Broome’s empty and conflicted call for “revolution”, as if that red herring held any more inherent meaning than the phrase “world class.”

    Hey England, I thought we already settled the revolution thing with you.  You really want us to crack open that whoop-ass can again? Heck, I’m game. Let’s toss all the English plays in the Charles River along with their tea.  I would be only too happy to see the sun set on the Age of British Theatrical Empire.

  • “World Class” = Fighting Words

    “World Class” = Fighting Words

    The third in a series of essays entitled:
    Towards a World Class Theatre

    When I started mouthing off in a more public and formalized way about the state of theatre in Seattle, I expected some blow back.  This is the Northwest after all.  The very same person who in real life might cross the street in order to avoid saying hello is happy to anonymously savage you in your blog’s comment section.*  What I did not anticipate was that the most controversial thing I could propose would be that theatre professionals should work together over the next five years towards making Seattle theatre world class.  This, apparently, was apostasy that certain Seattleites simply could not abide.  The objections sorted out into three essential themes:

    “What are you talking about?  We’re already world class dammit!”

    Why do people not think it’s a “world class” theatre community now?  If you talk to someone who moves here from… the midwest or the south, they are enthusiastic about the Seattle theater scene.
    Heidi Heimarck, responding to the 2009 Rain City Projects Survey

    We all may look back ten years from now and recognize that Seattle is today a thriving community.  There are issues, yes, but there’s some great stuff going on if you look at it right.
    Jerry Manning, RCP Survey

    Seattle is just about a world class theater community, it just is not aware of it, and seems to refuse acknowledging it.
    Jose Amador, RCP Survey

    “Five years?!?  Are you crazy!?!”

    5 years is a short span of time, given the effect the economy is going to have on the arts over that period.
    Anonymous, RCP Survey

    I think Seattle has lots of potential, but I’m not sure it could get there in five years. But lots and lots of potential.
    Rachel Hynes, RCP Survey

    I have packets of Kool-Aid if you’d like some.
    Andy Jensen, RCP Survey

    “Define your terms or prepare to die!”

    I’m not sure what it would mean to be a “world class” theatre community.
    Mike Daisey,  RCP Survey

    Define “world class.” If world class means NY or London, why would we go out of our way to suck that hard? “World class” doesn’t mean anything, it’s not a tangible objective. It’s a marketing term, a feeling, some kind of psychological compensation. A goal is a $10MM theatre industry by 2020. A goal is 20 Seattle-based playwrights making $100K annually by 2020. A goal is every Seattle theatre at 90% capacity by 2020. Whatever the goal, it has to be tangible – something that can be measured in precise terms.

    Louis Broome, RCP Survey

    Does it mean Seattle theatre is regularly discussed in world newspapers? …Other countries regularly import Seattle productions to run in their local theatres? Plays written by Seattle natives are produced in other countries?  Seattle theatre gets lots of mentions in The Drama Review? …  What goals do you propose that when met signify arrival? How is Seattle tracking today against those goals?
    Jeffery Reid, commenting on my kick-off essay “Towards a World Class Theatre

    I hate the need to be world classy unless someone can define it for me.
    Matthew Smucker, 2009 RCP Survey

    To have a world class theatre town, you must first define what that means.  You define the goal.  I believe that we discussed the importance of having a goal and you coyly responded several times that that was not necessary.

    Margaret Mullin, my sister, in an email I asked permission to quote.

    My sister is right.  I did respond that it was not necessary to define my terms, but there is nothing coy about it.  We not only do not need to lock down what “world class” means, it would be unwise for any single one of us to try to do so.  Louis Broome hit it on the nose:  “‘World class’ doesn’t mean anything …. It’s a marketing term, a feeling…”  Such was always my intention.  All the extremely smart Seattleites, Louis and my sister included, who demand something perfectly specific and quantifiable are, to my mind, like a group of outraged soda lovers storming Coca-Cola headquarters demanding: “What do you mean, ‘Coke is it?’  What the hell does ‘it’ mean?  You say you’d ‘like to buy the world a coke’?  You can’t be serious?  Do you know how much that would cost?”

    Having worked at the lowest levels in corporate America for nearly two decades to support myself and my family, I am exhaustively acquainted with the standard management mantras: 

    You cannot change what you do not measure.

    If you’re not measuring, it doesn’t count.

    But as someone who has heard these litanies chanted, at putatively great Seattle companies where I have worked from MidCom to WaMu— companies that dominated their industries and then ultimately failed— I know how deeply data-bedazzled senior management can fixate on charts and dashboards that actual workers have no realistic way of affecting for good or ill.  Such high-minded, good intentioned strategizing has become the roadmap for enfeebling an entire nation.  As my good friend and great editor, Charlie Loyd points out: “WaMu failed precisely because it had goals so clear and measurable that they took over from sanity.”

    So what I am proposing is a little different.  I am asking all of my colleagues to decide for themselves what would make Seattle a world class theatre town, and then work on those goals on which they believe they can individually move the needle.  We can employ the “wisdom of crowds” to get this done.  Surely a gifted scenic designer like Matthew Smucker has different ideas about how to elevate the game to “world class” than a gifted managing director like John Bradshaw, and both of them would differ from a poor playwright’s approach.  With us all working diligently, though, in our separate tracks, overlapping when possible and appropriate, we could certainly reach our collaborative goal of world class theatre; and once there, not need to debate the point, because, like Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart espousing his timeless definition of pornography, we will “know it when [we] see it.”

    We are theatre professionals— I usually prefer “show people”, but for the sake of this argument, make no mistake, we are professionals, whether or not we pay dues to an out-of-touch union.  We ply the art of theatre—the art of “say-so”.  I say it, and thus it is so. 

    I am the King of England come to Agincourt.

    This wooden O holds the vasty fields of France.

    Seattle will be a world class theatre town in five years.

    I understand not everyone is sympathetic to this particular brand of rhetoric-as-reality.  Louis Broome again: “As mission statements go, ‘Seattle as a world class theatre town,’ stirs me not at all. ‘Seattle is the epicenter of a theatre revolution,’ is a good start.”  But I have misgivings about bandying a word as inescapably violent as “revolution.”  It implies a zero-sum game— some winning while others lose.  The game I suggest, if played well and with underlying generosity, need not have any losers at all.  Revolutions come and go and tend to be suggested by folks who do little if any of the actual fighting.  This city craves something more sustainable.  (And if Chairman Mao taught the world anything, it is that nothing is more hateful than a sustained revolution.)

    Then there are those who see the effort as beneath us, like my colleague, former Seattle Weekly drama critic John Longenbaugh, responding to my essay “1448 Afterwords and Forwards”: “I really wonder if the whole question is frankly provincial. I really don’t think that London, Chicago or New York artists, critics or audiences worry if they’re still doing ‘world class theatre.’ So why should we?”

    Ah.  I think I see.  Nothing is more provincial than aspiring to be more than provincial.  What wonderful latte logic: frothy, appealingly bitter, and artfully laced with a barely noticeable hint of syrupy self-loathing masked as indifference.  But the strong and black cup-o’-joe fact is that you can safely bet your sweet ass Chicago cares.  A lot.  As do New York and London.  As a former reviewer, John might take particular notice of the title The Chicago Tribune’s drama critic Chris Jones came up with for his blog, Theater Loop: News from America’s Hottest Theater City.  How is that for self-aggrandizement?  And from a critic no less!  Boosterism like this is a flogging offence among Seattle’s professional theatre goers, as S.P. Miskowski, who recently moved to Los Angeles, points out in her response to Longenbaugh’s comments.

    The work I’ve seen in Seattle is, as John said, on a par with New York and London. What is not world class is the way theater is perceived in Seattle. When people decide where the limited amount of money will go, they fail to consider that theater is making the city more livable, more exciting, and more interesting. They fail to give theater its due. So do (some of)  the critics. My view is that theater artists accept lousy critiques from unqualified reviewers on a regular basis out of fear that if they don’t make nice they will be squashed. …And there’s the smug assumption that positive reviews are what we want when we say we want better reviewing. It isn’t. We want people who can read and write and evaluate. We want people who stay for the entire show. We want people who write about the show and not themselves. Most of all, I hereby call for a change in attitude among editors and critics–to take theater seriously as an art form. I dare you to take it seriously…. Take as a given that Seattle IS a world class theater city, and keep that in mind when you plant your butt in a free seat and start taking notes?

    Where I differ with S.P. is that I think critics own less responsibility for the “it-ain’t-cool-to-think-you’re-cool” campaign than many artists and artistic directors themselves.
    60; Then again, I have innate issues with ceding any undue influence to a questionable and ever shrinking handful of opinion mongers.  Certainly no one can deny that this self-defeating predisposition against self-promotion runs deep and wide through Pacific Northwest culture.  Its origins are beyond my East Coast ken or caring to explicate, but suffice it to say, in the theatre at least, we can and will change it.

    Chicago, New York and London never miss a chance to promote their respective scenes.  They not only “worry” about it.  They spend money on it.  Lots and lots of money to make sure their theatre districts keep drawing tourists and locals alike, to the playhouses themselves and to all the businesses that depend on them: the restaurants, bars, souvenir shops, and so on and on.  We want, in a few short years, to be able to go to our mayor, now newly elected, and say, “Seattle is now a world class theatre city.  We said it would be so.  We worked at it and made it so.  Everybody who lives here and everybody in the greater American theater community knows it.  Now kindly spend some of that money and prestige we have earned this city back on us.”

    As I inveigh against self-defeating specificity, let me be specific about one thing.  I am not asking that we benchmark ourselves against New York or London or Chicago.  Playing a toy replica-scale, inferiority complex-driven version of their game gets us nowhere.  Our smallness and uniqueness and, yes, even our geographic remoteness can work just as strongly for us as against.  You can get your arms around the Seattle theatre scene.  You can, if you work hard enough and long enough, confidently claim to know all, or almost all, of the players.  A small, nimble, semi-quarantined community such as ours can make its own unique claims on world class.  We can, if we want, be doing work that no one anywhere else could possibly do.

    We are show people.  We can claim to be anything we want to be.  The more outrageous and untenable, the better, so long as we ultimately back it up through sheer creative brilliance.  We are not obliged to subscribe to any preordained corporatized benchmark.  The audience is our only arbiter.  So long as we give them what they want, or better– what they did not even realize they wanted until we made them want it in the first place– we are doing our jobs superbly.  We should stake our claim, without irony or arrogance, to becoming a world class theatre community, and when, and only when, we convince our audiences, then world class is what we will be.  Because we say so.

    ****

    *I no longer allow anonymous comments on my blog.  As I wrote when the first one was posted: 

    I know it’s considered the custom of the internet country to post anonymously, but there is no tradition of it in the theatre. In the world of live performance, one says one’s words in public and stands by them with their body. So as a rule I won’t be accepting any more anonymous posts. Stand and deliver, people!

    Many of the quotes I have included in this essay came from the 2009 Rain City Projects Survey, which, as a member of the RCP Board, I helped to design and distribute, and then analyze the returning data.  The results were made public in August of 2009 and a more detailed report is available at RCP’s Facebook page:  http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/notes/rain-city-projects/the-rain-city-projects-survey-results-are-in/123960970745

    Because I am an unrepentant data geek, and because this essay does not have any other pictures let me share one of the results graphs here.  You can draw your own conclusions, but clearly a majority of the Northwest theatre community currently believes Seattle is a good but not great theatre town.  Its rating as a new play community is significantly less high.  I think these are connected.  Once we get better at developing and disseminating strong locally grown plays, our stock as a theatre town will rise to “world class.”  That is a data gauge needle that I can get behind trying push.

  • The Blog You Need to Follow, the History You Need to Know, the Book You Need to Read and Rally ‘Round (or Against)

    Folks, I am so excited right now that I am leaping heart first into this blogging without thinking thing.  If you have agreed with what I have been saying so far, or conversely, if you have been vehemently disdaining it, you need to go to http://theatreideas.blogspot.com/ to see what I am trying to say said by someone who actually knows how to say it, better, more thoughtfully, more informedly, and more consistently than I can offer it here, life-addled playwright that I am.  What Scott Walters is saying is so clear and bold and brilliant that I basically insist that you stop reading this right now and go check out this:  http://theatreideas.blogspot.com/2007/08/welcome-new-readers.html

    Yup, that’s right.  In August of 2007 he called for, what I so boldly and presciently just called for in December of 2009.  (Hey, I’m a playwright.  I’m used to being irrelevant and my betters preceding me.)

    Just recently Scott posted this: a very cogent history of what went wrong with the regional theatre movement in America.  (BTW: thanks a lot, Tyrone Guthrie.  Do we need to fight another war to get you British to finally fuck off?) 

    Naturally I subscribed to the guy’s blog, and just yesterday he comes out with this:  http://theatreideas.blogspot.com/2010/01/outrageous-fortune-chapter-1-build.html

    It is the first in his chapter by chapter analysis of Outrageous Fortune: The Life and Times of the New American Play, the hot new treatise which examines the “collaboration in crisis” between playwright and those who produce their work by Todd London, Ben Pesner and Zannie Giraud Vos.   The book is available on line at www.tdf.org/outrageousfortune.  (Though trust me: there is already a promo copy sitting unopened on your favorite theatre critic’s desk.) 

    This is it, folks.  You mark my words.  This book is going to spark the revolution Louis Broome has been so ardently calling for from his comfy day job office in Redmond.  I have not read it.  I have no idea if it is ultimately any good.  But that hardly matters because it is going to spark the deep struggle that will turn this whole art form upside down in the space of four years.  The powers-that-be already have their forces out, desperately, snarkily trying to put out the fire.  The first missile of dismissal comes from Chris Jones.

    “’Outrageous Fortune’: Playwright book full of whine and din”

    I’d respond, but my guy, Walters, does it so much better:

    Chris Jones may characterize this as whining, but that is a term that is always used as a weapon to shut up anyone who questions the status quo. The consistency of the complaints is indicative of a real problem….  The larger picture — this study uses 250 surveys received from “working professional playwrights at all stages of their careers, including Albee, Congdon, Dietz, Letts and many others whose names you would recognize …  , as well as surveys of almost a hundred theatres across the country — reveals an entire system in disarray, not simply individuals in dismay.

    Walters also knows what it will take to set this all aright:

    As a theatre historian, it is baffling to me how willing artists are in this country to dismiss what has been proven effective throughout most of theatre history. Yes, Shakespeare AND the rest of the Elizabethans created work within ongoing ensembles, yes Moliere AND the rest of the theatre artists of the French Neoclassical era, AND the commedia dell ‘arte troupes, AND Chekhov and Odets and O’Neill and and and. And lest someone wants to make the case that this is a thing of the past, we might look to the Royal Court as a model, or to Ariane Mnouchkine and Peter Brook and Peter Stein and and and. What is it about the American theatre that is so committed to the idea of a “free agent nation,” failing to recognize the artistic value of an ongoing relationship between artists?

    “May you live in interesting times,” goes the Chinese blessing/curse.  These are them, friends.  This is the crisis coming to the head that we have been earnestly ardently waiting for. This book will be pivotal, whether you believe it or not, whether you like it or not.  This is what the forces of change will rally around.  For those who were hoping that they could put it off for a few years, it is too late.  The New York Times is writing about this now.  The problem is receiving wide and deep attention now.  Join the fray or stay away, but this chance will not come again within this decade, if ever.

    So order the book.  Show up at the discussion of it hosted by TPS at the Center House March 1 from 10am – 1pm.  (Stay tuned for details on that.)  Think about how you can make this theatre town world class now that everything’s a’changing, because, trust me brothers and sisters, you will not recognize the place nor the art form in four short years.

  • Theatre Takes Place: Why Locally Grown Plays Matter

    Theatre Takes Place: Why Locally Grown Plays Matter
    The second in a series of essays entitled:
    Towards a World Class Theatre

    Some truths are so self-evident that they can suffer outrageous neglect.  One such is that theatre takes place in places.  There is nothing virtual about it.  Theatre takes place.  In four dimensions: one of time, three of space. (Not even my fancy film friends can do that.)  So it matters where you originally make a play.  Over the last few years I have been having conversations about this subject with my fellow theatre professionals in Seattle: directors, actors, managing and artistic directors, and even arts editors at newspapers; and I have been surprised at how many of them have trouble understanding this fundamental fact of our art form.

    The Lone Playwright Fallacy

    When it comes to art, I’m an amoralist. Just because it’s new and local doesn’t mean it should get produced. If it’s new and local and good, then fuck yes. If it’s new and local and crap and we’ve got a script that’s new and from Missoula and good, then… I choose Missoula. Or New Orleans. Or wherever.

    This quote is from a local theatre critic’s email exchange with me.  He is suffering from what I call the “The Lone Playwright Fallacy”: the noir filmic image of the archetypal writer holed up in a dank unfurnished flat in the middle of a nihilistic nowhere, supplied only with a carton of cigarettes, a quart of scotch (smudged tumbler optional) and a finicky Underwood.  Our dramatist labors in decrepit solitude until he has a complete masterpiece, dog-eared and smeary, which he then wraps in butcher’s paper and tosses over the transom of the nearest literary agency or regional theatre office.  (He looks a lot like a cliché novelist, doesn’t he?  Why does everyone want to make playwrights into novelists?) 

    My email reply to my critic pal:

    Plays aren’t novels or paintings.  Just as in biology the myth of the parthenogenic clone is bogus because all genetic material requires an enveloping substrate of organic “soup” in order to replicate, plays require actors, designers, spaces, audiences, and, yes (god help me) maybe even directors, in order to mature beyond the embryonic.  It’s the reason I have to climb on a plane to LA or NY whenever I want to have a proper workshop with professionals.  This notion that they just appear from “Missoula or New Orleans” is a falsehood convenient for ignoramus artistic directors.  But you of all people need to know better.

    This critic and I have a very loving relationship.

    Locally Grown Throughout History

    Glancing back through the canon, we realize that this myth is belied by the fact that our favorite dramatists almost always worked intimately with a coterie of actors and other artists for whom, and with whom, they tailored their plays.  Shakespeare built his best title roles for Richard Burbage; Moliere cast himself as the Imaginary Invalid, Chekhov’s writing for the stage was reworked and enhanced under Stanislavski’s direction, and Bertolt Brecht had wife and leading lady as a two-for-one- in Helene Weigel, the original Mother Courage.  Working with the same actors and directors, over and over, helps build up trust and a shorthand that allows a playwright to go deeper and farther, faster.  It locks down the fundamentals of collaboration so that greater innovations are possible.

    Beyond palling around with actors and directors, I was curious what other “locally grown” benefits a Shakespeare or Marlowe might have enjoyed;  so I asked my friend and fellow playwright, Louis Broome  (my go-to expert in all things Elizabethan) to weigh in. “Shakespeare”, he says “Had no choice but be locally grown.  London was the world. The King’s Men could only exist so long as they were relevant to their audience.”  (Relevance to their audience, what a concept!) 

    Louis goes on:

    What’s different now, and what sucks, is that Seattle Rep’s audience is their donor base, not the public at large.   Everything about a non-profit theatre is defined by its donors. When it comes to new plays, the Rep’s hands are tied because a non-profit donor base has zero tolerance for risk. Risk isn’t built into their culture. They have no experience managing risk.  Producing a new work by a playwright or director of note, or a work guaranteed to move to NY, carries no risk. There’s no downside.  In Elizabethan England it was impossible for plays to be anything other than a local or regional event.  Playwrights entertained and earned revenue from a relatively small pool of ticket buyers by writing a great number of plays.  The emphasis in Elizabethan London was on writing plays that put the same butts into the same seats over and over again….

    Local Collaboration – It Ain’t Just for Actors

    Over the last decade and a half my own Burbage– the primary actor that served as a siphon on the far end of my personal play development pipeline– has been the actor William Salyers, a relationship that still runs deep and strong.  (For some flavor of it, you can click here.)  But it is worth mentioning other ways that local collaboration can lead to uniquely successful theatre.  Without the designer Gary Smoot I would never have written at least three of my last five plays.  Gary and I had been close friends for years before he began designing for my plays, stunning everyone in 1999 with his evocative minimalistic masterpiece set for the world premiere of Louis Slotin Sonata.

    Gary raises to a rarefied art form the long-standing tradition of designers crossing out  and ignoring stage directions.  I always say that if there is a way Gary can get out of building something, he will find it and make the absence brilliant.  By the time we got to attempting the world premiere of An American Book of the Dead – The Game Show, I was openly taunting him, demanding an arsenal of increasingly lethal weapons from American History to be used every time a contestant spun the infamous Bardo Wheel.  Starting with a Powhattan tomahawk, I quickly worked my way up to a civil war cannon, then a flame thrower, and finally my coup de grâce, a “Tomahawk” ICBM missile, to be launched onstage.  Smoot took the demands in stride, even though I would hector him daily running up to tech week:  “I want those weapons, Gary.  You can cross out all the stage directions you want but I still call them out in the dialogue.”  “Oh, we’ll make it work,” was all he’d say.  And he did, by painstakingly handcrafting overnight shipping boxes the exact size and shape of each piece.  Every night, before each scene, whatever weapon was called for, the box was pumped full of thick stage smoke which would, after the package  pieces were pulled apart on stage, momentarily hold the shape of the weapon and then dissipate.  From there it was up to the audience to manipulate the meta-object within the space of in their collective imagination.  It was a brilliant, engaging, unique, and uniquely theatrical solution, which could only be arrived at through a close and contentious relationship between designer and playwright, bothering each other in the same room together.

    This sort of intimate relationship between playwright and set-wright is generally frowned upon in today’s play development superstructure.  The alternative model forcefully defended at your favorite regional theater goes something like this: you go to your MFA program, I go to mine.  If, based on the recommendation of the well-known playwright who runs my MFA program, said regional theater decides to develop my play, said theater will assign me the MFA grad designer recommended to them by the  top-tier MFA design school, most assuredly not the same school as the playwriting program.  It is all very polite and respectable, like an arranged marriage without the hot stranger sex.  In the very respectable League of Regional Theatres (LORT), playwrights have no business consorting with designers, let alone taunting them into being brilliant.

    But Wait!  There’s more!

    Sure, the most compelling argument for locally grown plays is the uniquely superior product you arrive at when you work with a talented team over a long-term collaboration.  But in the immortal words of Ron “Ronco” Popeill, that’s not all!  You also get:

    • Local actors evolving a better understanding of how their contribution to the long tradition of our art form can be generative as well as interpretive. 
    • Local theatre-goers evolving a better understanding of how plays get made and how audiences can participate in the process, not just as consumers but as co-developers with a stake in improving the product.
    • Local board members evolving a better understanding of their roles as patrons of the arts.  We need not look further than the embarrassing example of The Empty Space, shuttered over a debt of $70,000.  Maybe we can dare hope that regional theaters will stop being run like internet start-ups and instead be given the time, money, resources, and  personal attention that are the natural hallmarks of arts patronage in cities like New York, Los Angeles and London. 
    • Local funders, artists, and administrators participating in the development of plays as actual investments, with the potential to pump profits back to Seattle in several ways.
    • The potential to address the particular conditions of a  community in a timely fashion, approaching the speed of journalism rather than history, as was the case with our recent production of It’s Not In The P-I: A Living Newspaper About A Dying Newspaper.
    • The entire nation, as well as the entire English-speaking theatre world, getting more plays about a wider variety of places and peoples instead of– let’s face it– knowing arch comedy after knowing arch comedy for, by and about Upper West-Siders.
    • A leg up in keeping theatre a playwright’s art form instead of, increasingly, a director’s game. Over the last fifty years, the model of the auteur director serving as the alpha and omega of dramatic endeavor, imposing his or her “concept” on new play and classic alike— a model borrowed from and encouraged by the film industry— has grown increasingly infectious in American theatre.  You need not look beyond Seattle with Dan Sullivan and Bartlett Sher essentially running their respective shops like Triple A feeder teams for the Broadway big leagues.  (We can expect more of the same from the Intiman’s newly appointed Artistic Director, Kate Whoriskey.  Hand picked by the beatified Sher, she is sure to serve mostly as his marker absently placed in a book he may or may not return to some day.)   Hell, the fact that the recently introduced TPS  Gregory Awards has a category for Outstanding Director but none for playwright is a crystalline example of how far this trend has gotten out of hand.
    • Finally, and yes, selfishly, “locally grown” allows playwrights to choose where to live based on how well a particular city fits their life, instead of forcing them to accept a one-humongous-size-fits-all solution. When I moved back to Seattle from New York in 2002 I ran into Dawson Nichols, my comrade in theatrical arms from Seattle’s fervent ‘90’s.  Each of us was watching our kids at a playground– kids that did not exist the last time we had seen each other.  In that moment we renewed our friendship, and then slowly began building back our artistic partnership, only better this time—less concerned with the competition between us, more focused on improving each other’s and our own work.  We cemented our revived relationship in a revival of my play Tuesday, at Annex Theatre, which he directed and I starred in.  Soon after he invited me to share with him any plays I had sitting on the shelf, unpremiered, especially anything I had for young people.  I gave him The Don Juan Cult Concerto. In 2008 Dawson directed the world premiere of the play at North Seattle Community College, where he serves as head of theatre  department.  He wrote this in the program notes:

    Paul Mullin has written a play that is a love letter to a Seattle that is gone – grown over and displaced by its own success and popularity.   Seattle is still a vibrant and exciting place but in the 1990’s there was an edge.  Philosophers of art tell us that we can only access universal truths through particular depictions.  I believe this is true, but I have noticed Seattle Theaters seem to value particulars from elsewhere for some reason, mainly New York.  This is because Seattle Theatres often have a self-imposed provincial attitude that doesn’t allow them to see that the grass is in fact greener right here in the Pacific Northwest.  Our particulars are as good as anyone else’s, after all, and there are wonderful playwrights living in our midst.

    It is a play about Seattleites, for Seattleites, by a Seattleite.  And I couldn’t have been prouder to see students using it to learn their craft as they premiered it in the city of its conception.  It was the seminal moment of my current understanding of how important locally grown work is.  A year and a half later, in that same theatre, using some of the same student actors, six Seattle playwrights, including Dawson and myself, premiered It’s Not In The P-I: A Living Newspaper About A Dying Newspaper.

    Leveraging Seattle’s Innate More-Locally-Conscious-than-Thou Snobbery

    The entire Pacific Northwest already embraces the locally-grown movement when it comes to more tangible consumables like cheese, chocolate, wine and beer.  Kate Kraay, a local actor and budding playwright, describes her day job working as a tour guide at Theo Chocolates in Fremont, the only bean-to-bar chocolate factory in the United States:

    I have to admit that I have had more people stop me on the street and recognize me from Theo than from plays I have been in.  But then, it is probably my longest running gig, and it is always a full house.   Over the last two years I have worked there, I have seen it grow exponentially, and in a recession to boot. 

    That’s all quite nice, you may say, but why buy a Theo chocolate bar as a Seattleite, when I can get a grocery checkout line bar for less?  For one thing, you are getting a lot less chocolate than you think, as most chocolate bars have lots of lovely fillers in them (hydrogenated trans-fats or wax, anyone?).  Theo also uses as many local ingredients as possible. It has become a point of pride for locals, winning awards from London to New York, while being fully invested as part of the community.

    It is incumbent on us as Seattle theatre artists to transfer this enlightened heightened interest in  local production to what we wright for the stage.  God, sometimes I think I would give a pinkie to tap into the fierce local snobbery of a Northwestern beer nut or cheesehead and focus it on theatre.  I can almost hear them now:

    Oh, you’re going to see Glengary Glen Ross? Oh, no that’s fine if you like stale affected dialogue shoved down your ear’s throat after it’s traveled  2,800 miles from New York and then sat in its packaging for 20 years, after already traveling the 800 miles from Chicago to New York.  Me?  I prefer fresh Kelleen Conway Blanchard.  You should feel how it tickles the ear’s tongue and gladdens the heart’s bowels.  But maybe your palate isn’t quite ready for something so evocative and startling.  Besides, there’s really only enough of it for true Seattle play fans.  You better stick with your 1980’s boiler room boiler plate.

    So There’s No Place Like Home.  How do We Get There?

    Of course there are plenty of blocks on the long road to home grown.  Over the next few years it will be important to hold accountable the artistic leadership at what we Seattle show folks call the “Big Houses”, namely the Intiman, ACT and the Seattle Repertory Theater.  These juggernauts love to  pay lip service to new works, but when you dig beneath the surface of their “new play initiatives,” you find they consist almost exclusively of importing established talent from  New York rather than fostering much at home.  Kate Whoriskey, as she rolls into town, is blithely open in her contempt for Seattle’s local scene.  This from The Stranger in an interview with her when she was first appointed: “She says she has returned to Seattle more because of Sher than for the city itself and seems more interested in finding the best artists, wherever they are, than in cultivating the local theater ecology. ‘The whole world has globalized,’ she said. ‘And it seems the last place we believe in globalization is in theater.’{Emphasis The Stranger’s.}

    To this I could not not possibly come up with a better response than the one comment left on-line, by someone calling himself “Mr. First-Nighter”:

    Odd that Ms Whoriskey would make such a statement, when so much of the rest of the world is currently undergoing a complete re-evaluation of the very concept of globalization, and re-engaging with the long-neglected benefits of localism. Not that there is anything wrong with exposing local audiences and artists to the work and influence of outside artists, per se, but her attitude seems to reflect yet more of the reverse-provincialism we have become accustomed to here. Even more distressing when one contemplates that theatre, unlike other artistic media, relies so exclusively upon the patronage of local audiences, local artists, and local artisans for its growth, nourishment and survival.

    If she has indeed no wish to “cultivate the local theatre ecology”, then she will no doubt express little surprise or alarm when her abject neglect results in that same ecology turning fallow and stagnant.

    Unlike, say, a Greg Falls, who recognized the efficacy of good husbandry, Ms Whoriskey seems rather to envision her role as being akin to a sort of cultural Monsanto, where her only interest is in increasing the yield, while remaining heedless (or worse indifferent) to the irrevocable damage done to the environment in the process.

    Sad to say, this does not bode well, either for Intiman and its long-term prospects (which are precarious at best), or for the Seattle theatre ecology as a whole.

    In reality none of Seattle’s Big Houses have done enough in the last decade to advance locally grown new work.  Moreover, despite their mournful protestations to the contrary, it is not because of their limited resources.  (More on this in my future essay, “Don’t Let the Big Houses Fool Ya, It ain’t about the Money.” )  Yes, it is true that in 2009 the Seattle Rep had its overall operating budget cut about in half, but it’s also true that in this same year, through an admittedly strange quirk of happy fate, their new works budget quadrupled.  Right now it looks like they plan to take that largess and develop two new plays, in tandem with Western Washington University.  Good for them.  What’s not so good is that they’ve already earmarked one of those slots for a New York Playwright, most probably Doug Wright,  who won the Pulitzer for I Am My Own Wife.  It’s unclear who will get the second slot, but the odds don’t favor one of the dozen or so nationally produced playwrights living in the Puget Sound region.    Whatever synergy the Rep hopes to create with Wright, or whatever luminaries they beg to grace us  with from New York for a few months, it will be transitory and do nothing to nurture the local scene or bring Seattle any closer to being a world class theatre town.

    Many of my local playwright colleagues have utterly given up on our Big Houses.  When a friend who works for one recently warned me that I risk being blacklisted by his theater for mouthing off like this,  I mentioned it to Scot Augustson, another local playwright  whom I particularly admire.  He replied, “Oh Paul, how would any of us ever know if we’re being blacklisted by them or not?”  Scot’s right.  And as much as good friends have cautioned me about these essays, it is time to be honest and realize you cannot burn a bridge that doesn’t exist.

    That said, sometimes I feel stupid that I haven’t yet given up.  But I haven’t.  And here’s why.  Those Big Houses essentially belong to us, the citizens of Seattle and the surrounding  region.  We fund them through our attendance and through our generous patronage: direct giving, public arts funding and  donations from the corporations for which we work.  We also support them through our cheap labor as actors, designers and administrators.  They will respond to the demand for locally developed plays.  So long as we make the demand.  Of course, it will not happen easily or overnight or without clever hedging against it on their part.  In the past, when we demanded “new work” all they heard was “New York”.  Artistic administrators also like to blame the boards that have hired them for keeping their creative reins short.  Maybe this is true, but I am tempted to call them on it.  If we need to reach out to the Big House board members to help them understand why locally grown plays are important, we can and will do that.  

    I have had more than one Big House artistic staffer say something along the lines of, “Christ, Paul, it’s almost like you’re saying you won’t be satisfied until we’re producing at least one new play by a local playwright every year in our season.”  To which I reply, “It’s not almost like I’m saying that.  That’s exactly what I’m saying.”

    Here and Now

    Seattle is perfectly positioned.  This is the place, here and now, for locally grown plays to resurge to their historical place of prominence.  There are particular reasons that this is so, and I have tried to illustrate some of them above, but the main reason is because we say so.  We get to decide that Seattle is not a satellite.  We are our own city, with our own voices, our own actors, our own audiences, our own plays.  If, as we proceed down this path, we begin to create great plays that we can then export to other places and thus mitigate to some extent this crushing artistic trade deficit we currently labor under, so be it.  But the main point is we want plays for and by Seattleites.  And we shall have them.  Here and now.  Where theatre belongs.

    *****

    Next up: “What the Hell does ‘World Class’ Mean Anyway?”