Showing posts with label Kennedy Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kennedy Center. Show all posts

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Kennedy Center Recognizes Susan Zeder for Teaching Playwriting

For the record:

Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival

 

 

 

 THE MICHAEL KANIN PLAYWRITING AWARDS

Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival
The Michael Kanin Playwriting Awards
Presented in the Kennedy Center Theater Lab, April 20, 2013


THE JOHN CAUBLE AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING SHORT PLAY
THE LIGHTHOUSE
by Michael Parsons, Boston University

THE KCACTF TEN-MINUTE PLAY AWARD
TATTOO YOU
by Lisa Kenner Grissom, Lesley University

THE ORCHARD PROJECT SCHOLARSHIP
J. Isabel Salazar, California Institute of the Arts

THE MILAN STITT AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING TEACHER OF PLAYWRITING
Suzan Zeder
University of Texas at Austin

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Opinion: Kennedy Center President Michael Kaiser on Changes in Arts Criticsm, Huffington Post, November 14


Since his brief commentary (ironically, in the Internet newspaper www.huffingtonpost.com) has roused so many hackles, here it is, entire:


Huffington Post Arts



Michael Kaiser


The Death of Criticism or Everyone Is a Critic

November 14, 2011

One of the substantial changes in the arts environment that has happened with astonishing speed is that arts criticism has become a participatory activity rather than a spectator sport.

Every artist, producer or arts organization used to wait for a handful of reviews to determine the critical response to a particular project. And while very few critics for a small set of news outlets still wield great power to make or break a project (usually a for-profit theater project which runs longer and therefore needs to sell far more tickets than any other arts project), a larger portion of arts projects have become somewhat immune to the opinions of any one journalist.

This has happened for three reasons.

First, far fewer people are getting their news from print media. There is a reason the newspaper industry is in trouble. Advertisers are spending less in print media because fewer people are reading hard copy newspapers. And for those arts projects aimed at younger audiences, hard copy newspapers are no longer a central element of a marketing strategy. Younger people get virtually all of their information online, through news web sites, social media and chat rooms. And older people are increasingly getting their information online as well.

Second, because serious arts coverage has been deemed an unnecessary expense by many news media outlets looking to pare costs, there are fewer critics and less space devoted to serious arts criticism. Even the New York Times' arts section is dominated now by features and reviews of popular entertainment -- television, movies and pop music -- rather than serious opera, dance, music or theater.

And third, the growing influence of blogs, chat rooms and message boards devoted to the arts has given the local professional critic a slew of competitors. In theater circles alone one can visit talkingbroadway.com, broadwayworld.com, theatermania.com, playbill.com and numerous other sites. Many arts institutions even allow their audience members to write their own critiques on the organizational website.

This is a scary trend.

While I have had my differences with one critic or another, I have great respect for the field as a whole. Most serious arts critics know a great deal about the field they cover and can evaluate a given work or production based on many years of serious study and experience. These critics have been vetted by their employers.

Anyone can write a blog or leave a review in a chat room. The fact that someone writes about theater or ballet or music does not mean they have expert judgment.

But it is difficult to distinguish the professional critic from the amateur as one reads on-line reviews and critiques.

No one critic should be deemed the arbiter of good taste in any market and it is wonderful that people now have an opportunity to express their feelings about a work of art. But great art must not be measured by a popularity contest. Otherwise the art that appeals to the lowest common denominator will always be deemed the best.

Click to view at Huffington Post (comments accepted there)

The Death of Criticism or Everyone Is a Critic

One of the substantial changes in the arts environment that has happened with astonishing speed is that arts criticism has become a participatory activity rather than a spectator sport.

Every artist, producer or arts organization used to wait for a handful of reviews to determine the critical response to a particular project. And while very few critics for a small set of news outlets still wield great power to make or break a project (usually a for-profit theater project which runs longer and therefore needs to sell far more tickets than any other arts project), a larger portion of arts projects have become somewhat immune to the opinions of any one journalist.

This has happened for three reasons.

First, far fewer people are getting their news from print media. There is a reason the newspaper industry is in trouble. Advertisers are spending less in print media because fewer people are reading hard copy newspapers. And for those arts projects aimed at younger audiences, hard copy newspapers are no longer a central element of a marketing strategy. Younger people get virtually all of their information online, through news web sites, social media and chat rooms. And older people are increasingly getting their information online as well.

Second, because serious arts coverage has been deemed an unnecessary expense by many news media outlets looking to pare costs, there are fewer critics and less space devoted to serious arts criticism. Even the New York Times' arts section is dominated now by features and reviews of popular entertainment -- television, movies and pop music -- rather than serious opera, dance, music or theater.

And third, the growing influence of blogs, chat rooms and message boards devoted to the arts has given the local professional critic a slew of competitors. In theater circles alone one can visit talkingbroadway.com, broadwayworld.com, theatermania.com, playbill.com and numerous other sites. Many arts institutions even allow their audience members to write their own critiques on the organizational website.

This is a scary trend.

While I have had my differences with one critic or another, I have great respect for the field as a whole. Most serious arts critics know a great deal about the field they cover and can evaluate a given work or production based on many years of serious study and experience. These critics have been vetted by their employers.

Anyone can write a blog or leave a review in a chat room. The fact that someone writes about theater or ballet or music does not mean they have expert judgment.

But it is difficult to distinguish the professional critic from the amateur as one reads on-line reviews and critiques.

No one critic should be deemed the arbiter of good taste in any market and it is wonderful that people now have an opportunity to express their feelings about a work of art. But great art must not be measured by a popularity contest. Otherwise the art that appeals to the lowest common denominator will always be deemed the best.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

UT Playwright's Transition of Doodle Pequeño (upcoming 11/30) Selected for Kennedy Center 2012


Announced by College of Fine Arts, University of Texas, October 18:


The Transition of Doodle Pequeño selected for Kennedy Center's 2012 “New Visions/New Voices”

Play by M.F.A. candidate Gabriel Jason Dean

Gariel Jason Dean via www.aszym.blogspot.comThe John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts announced its 12th New Visions/New Voices showcase to be held May 18 - 20, 2012 at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. A biennial workshop dedicated to developing new plays and musicals written for young people and their families, New Visions/New Voices will present works from theater companies from New York, NY; Chicago, IL; Malvern, PA; La Jolla, CA; Glen Echo, MD; London, England; Toronto, Canada; and Melbourne, Australia.

The Transition of Doodle Pequeño, written by Michener Center for Writers candidate Gabriel Jason Dean, has been selected as one of eight plays for the Kennedy Center's prestigious showcase. Directed by department alumna and current People's Light & Theatre Producer Wendy Bable (M.F.A. 2009), Dean's story provides an inventive look at gender identity, difference, and discovering how things aren't always what they seem. It's Halloween with all the trimmings—oranges the size of pumpkins…vampires…tutus…an imaginary talking goat—and Doodle is the new kid in the quadruplex. When he and his new friend wear skirts, neighborhood bullies take notice.

Since its inception in 1991, New Visions/New Voices has assisted in the development of 80 new plays, musicals, and operas from 72 playwrights and 32 composers working with 51 American and seven international theater companies.

The Transition of Doodle Pequeño will be produced by the Department of Theatre and Dance November 30 - December 3, 2011 at the Oscar G. Brockett Theatre located in the F. Loren Winship Drama Building on The University of Texas at Austin campus.

Click to read interview of Gabriel Jason Dean by Adam Szymkowicz at www.http://aszym.blogspot.com

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Upcoming: Michael Kaiser, Kennedy Center President, on Arts in Crisis, San Pedro Playhouse, San Antonio, December 2



Michael Kaiser, president of the Kennedy Center, comes to San Antonio's San Pedro Playhouse on December 2 at 9:00 a.m. as part of the announced 50-state tour to discuss the crisis in the arts. Jeanne Claire van Ryzin of the Austin Statesman published the date in the Statesman's Austin360 "Seeing Things" blog of November 26.

Kaiser is well on the way to achieving his 50-state goal, announced last February and the subject of an ALT posting on February 9. Recognizing financial and management difficulties for arts organizations across the country, the Kennedy Center put up its website www.artsincrisis.org, offering to link arts organizations in trouble with experts in their areas or with the Kennedy Center's own staff. Here's Kaiser's brief outline of the program:





YouTube offers lots of coverage of some of Kaiser's roadshow presentations, including especially the Q&A session in Los Angeles. A search turns up more than 60 YouTube videos on the subject.

The San Pedro Playhouse is located at:800 West Ashby Place San Antonio, TX 7821.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Upcoming: House of Several Stories, Imagine That Productions at Austin Playhouse, August 6 - 23


Click for ALT review of August 7



UPDATE: Jeanne Claire van Ryzin's interview of playwright John Boulanger, Statesman's Austin 360 "Seeing Things" blog, August 6

Received directly and explored on-line:


Imagine That Productions
presents its inaugural production


House of Several Stories: a tragedy in two acts of nonsense
winner of the 2009 Kennedy Center Student Playwriting Award
written and directed by A. John Boulanger

August 6-23, 2009
Thur-Sat, 8 p.m., Sundays. 5 p.m.
Austin Playhouse at Penn Field
3601 S. Congress

$20 general admission, $15 students,
special champagne opening Friday August 7--$30
tickets available through www.austinplayhouse.com
Media Contacts: www.it-productions.org or (512) 476-0084

Thanksgiving isn’t what it used to be in the absurdist play about an eccentric family and their unusual guests. House of Several Stories explores how stories (whether true, false, or borrowed) help fill the vacuum in our lives caused by death, loss, and dysfunction.

House of Several Stories won the honor of this year’s National Student Playwriting Award from the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival. The Austin professional premiere stars the Lauren Lane (CBS's The Nanny, Zach Scott's The Clean House), Martin Burke (Take Me Out, The Santaland Diaries) Meredith McCall (Caroline or Change, Urinetown) , Adam Pearson and Kelli Schultz (High School Musical) with lighting by Jason Amato, costumes by Jillan Hanel, and set by Griffon Ramsey.

John Boulanger received his BFA in directing from Texas State in 2005 and his MA in playwriting in 2009. House Of Several Stories was originally selected as one of seven productions presented at the regional American College Theatre Festival held at Texas State this past January. It was then chosen as one of four to make it all the way to the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington D.C. This marked the first time a Texas State production had advanced to the national festival and the first time a Texas State student received the National Student Playwriting Award. Past award recipients include Paula Vogel, James Leonard, and Lee Blessing.