Showing posts with label playwriting prize. Show all posts
Showing posts with label playwriting prize. Show all posts

Friday, January 13, 2012

Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig Wins 2011 Wasserstein Prize, Theatre Development Foundation


Following a link provided by the Department of Theatre and Dance, University of Texas, an announcement from the

Theatre Development Fund





December 29, 2011


Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig named 2011 Wasserstein Prize winner

Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig (via www.tdf.org)Playwright will receive $25,000 prize from the Educational Foundation of America (EFA)

December 29, 2011

Emerging playwright Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig will receive the 2011 Wasserstein Prize in recognition of her work to date and her promise, as exemplified in part by her play 72 Transformations. 72 Transformations is about a woman's attempt, in modern China, to define herself in relationship to her family and to her changing country. The Wasserstein Prize is given by the Educational Foundation of America (EFA) to encourage the work of a young woman playwright in honor of the late Pulitzer and Tony Award-winning playwright, Wendy Wasserstein, who died in 2006. The $25,000 prize is awarded to a young woman who has not yet received national attention. The Wasserstein Prize is funded by the Educational Foundation of America (EFA) and administered by Theatre Development Fund.

Established in 2006 by the Educational Foundation of America and the Dramatists Guild of America in memory of their friend and board member, Wendy Wasserstein, a strong advocate for emerging women writers, the Wasserstein Prize is intended for a writer for whom the prize will make a substantial difference in her professional life. It is hoped that the prize, which was first awarded in 2007, will provide her with encouragement and national exposure.

Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig’s play Lidless received the Yale Drama Series Award, an Edinburgh Fringe First Award, the Keene Prize for Literature, and the David Calicchio Emerging American Playwright Prize. She has been a finalist for the Blackburn Prize, received residencies at Yaddo, MacDowell, Ragdale, and the Santa Fe Art Institute, and is under commission from South Coast Rep and Seattle Rep. Her plays have been produced by Trafalagar Studios 2 on the West End, Page 73 Productions in New York, Interact Theatre in Philadelphia, and the Contemporary American Theatre Festival in West Virginia. They have been developed at the Hedgebrook Women Playwrights Festival, Seattle Rep, PlayPenn, the Alley Theatre, Marin Theatre Company, Ojai Playwrights Conference, the Playwright’s Foundation and Yale Rep. Frances received an MFA in Writing from the James A. Michener Center for Writers at UT Austin, a BA in Sociology from Brown University, and a certificate in Ensemble Created Physical Theatre from the Dell’Arte International School of Physical Theatre. Her work has been published by Glimmer Train, Methuen Drama, and Yale University Press. Frances was born in Philadelphia, and raised in Northern Virginia, Okinawa, Taipei and Beijing.

The previous winners of The Wasserstein Prize were Linda Ramsey (2007), Laura Jacqmin (2008) and Marisa Wegrzyn (2009).

THE EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATION OF AMERICA (EFA) was founded in 1959 by Richard Prentice Ettinger and his wife, Elsie. The foundation's giving is currently focused on the following four areas: the arts, education, population control and reproductive freedom, and the environment. For more information, go to: www.efaw.org.


Thursday, October 27, 2011

Arts Reporting: UT Gives Steven Dietz Creative Research Award


From the University of Texas:


UT Gives Steven Dietz Creative Research Award

(www.utexas.edu) October 26, 2011Steven Dietz (photo by Lauren Tarbel)

Department of Theatre and Dance Distinguished Professor of Playwriting Steven Dietz received the Creative Research Award last week at the Robert W. Hamilton Book Awards, an annual event honoring the scholarship of faculty members. [ . . .]

“The award is an acknowledgement of the extraordinary professional accomplishments of Steven Dietz,” said Brant Pope, chair of the Department of Theatre and Dance. “Our students, faculty and audience at The University of Texas at Austin are the great beneficiaries of the amazing talents of this playwright, director and teacher.”

“Steven Dietz has tremendous scope as a playwright, achieving the same humane economy of language and action whether writing serious drama, children’s theater, historical adaptations, comedy, or criticism of contemporary theater and theater education,” added College of Fine Arts Dean Douglas Dempster. “He is one of the leading playwrights of our day and exactly what we strive for in a first-class research university that values the arts.”

The Creative Research Award caps off a banner year for Dietz. He is the third recipient of the nationally-coveted Ingram New Works Fellowship from the Tennessee Repertory Theatre and recently premiered a new play in Minneapolis, A Year Without Summer, commissioned by the famed Tyrone Guthrie Theater.


Read full text at site for UT Theatre and Dance . . . .

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Seminar: Writing the Impossible, with C. Denby Swanson, Austin Scriptworks at Dougherty Arts Center, June 26


Received directly:

Austin Script Works Dramatis Personae Series

WRITING THE IMPOSSIBLE

A workshop with Colin Denby Swanson

Saturday, June 26th from 2-4pm
Dougherty Arts Center , 1110 Barton Springs Rd.

COST: $20 ASW members/ $30 General
INFO/RESERVATIONS: 512.454.9727; christi@scriptworks.org

Playwright Jose Rivera encourages us to include at least one impossible thing in each of our plays. In the play that you are writing or even just thinking about, what is your one impossible thing? What *can* it be? We’ll study Rivera’s “36 Assumptions About Playwriting,” and specifically the idea of impossibility. The workshop will also include writing exercises to make room for impossibility in character, dialogue, scene direction and events.


More information at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Arts Reporting: Marchbanks Foundation in Austin Establishes $30,000 Playwriting Prize to Honor Horton Foote



Found on-line at New York Times:





January 5, 2010, 2:00 p.m.

Playwright’s Prize Established in Honor of Horton Foote

By DAVE ITZKOFF

Horton Foote’s work includes the “Orphan’s Home Cycle” of plays and the screenplays for “To Kill a Mockingbird” and “The Trip to Bountiful.”

The name and spirit of Horton Foote, the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and screenwriter, will live on in a playwriting award that will be given out for the first time this fall.

The creation of the Horton Foote Prize was announced Tuesday and was endorsed by Mr. Foote before his death in March. It will be awarded every other year to “an American playwright who has written an original work of exceptional quality,” its organizers said in news release.

The competition will invite 65 resident theaters to submit a play by an author who has written at least three original full-length plays that have been produced by professional theaters; selection committees will choose a short list of finalists; and the winner will be determined by a group of four artistic directors Mr. Foote worked with closely: Andre Bishop (of Lincoln Center Theater); James Houghton (Signature Theater Company); Michael Wilson (Hartford Stage Company); and Andrew Leynse (Primary Stages).

The $30,000 prize will be supplied by the Greg and Mari Marchbanks Family Foundation of Austin, Texas. Ms. Marchbanks is also the founder and executive director of the prize committee.

= = =

WEBSITE for the prize: HortonFootePrize.org
[image of Horton Foote posted at HortonFootePrize.org]

Read more at AustinLiveTheatre.com . . . .