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Humana Festival of New American Plays

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Humana Festival of New American Plays is an internationally renowned festival that celebrates the contemporary American playwright.[1] Produced annually in Louisville, Kentucky by Actors Theatre of Louisville, this festival showcases new theatrical works and draws producers, critics, playwrights, and theatre lovers from around the world. The festival was founded in 1976 by Jon Jory, who was Producing Director of Actors Theatre of Louisville from 1969 to 2000.[2] Since 1979 The Humana Festival has been sponsored by the Humana Foundation which is the philanthropic arm of Humana.[3]

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Transcription

History

The Actor's Theater of Louisville hosted the first Festival of New American Plays in March 1977. It was founded by the former artistic director of the Actor's Theater, Jon Jory. The Gin Game by D.L. Coburn, one of the plays presented that year, went on to open on Broadway later that year and would win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1978. The 1978 festival line up included Marsha Norman's Getting Out, and in 1979, Crimes of the Heart by Beth Henley. It was also the first year that the festival was sponsored by the Humana Festival.[4]

Over the 400 plays (short pieces, ten-minute plays, one-acts, and full-lengths) the festival has produced, many have gone on to win several awards. Dinner With Friends by Donald Margulies, The Gin Game by D.L. Coburn, and, Crimes of the Heart by Beth Henley have all won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Keely and Du by Jane Martin, Becky Shaw by Gina Gionfriddo, and Omnium-Gatherum by Alexandra Gersten-Vassilaros and Theresa Rebeck have all been finalists for the prize.[4]

Lucas Hnath's The Christians, Appropriate by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, Big Love by Charles Mee, Slavs! by Tony Kushner, My Left Breast by Susan Miller, Marisol by José Rivera and One Flea Spare by Naomi Wallace have all won Obie Awards.[4]

How to Say Goodbye by Mary Gallagher, My Sister in this House by Wendy Kesselman, A Narrow Bed by Ellen McLaughlin, My Left Breast by Susan Miller and One Flea Spare by Naomi Wallace have won the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, and nine other plays produced at the festival have been finalists.

[4]2 by Romulus Linney, Dinner with Friends by Donald Margulies, Getting Out by Marsha Norman, and Jane Martin's Talking With…, Keely and Du, Jack and Jill, and Anton in Show Business have won the Steinberg/American Theatre Critics Association New Play Award, and Dinner with Friends by Donald Margulies, Big Love by Charles Mee, After Ashley by Gina Gionfriddo, Great Falls by Lee Blessing, Edith Can Shoot Things and Hit Them by A.Rey Pamatmat, and Lucas Hnath's Death Tax and The Christians have won Steinberg/American Theatre Critics Association New Play Award Citations.

Jeff Augustin's and Peter Sinn Nachtrieb’ s plays, Cry Old Kingdom and BOB: A Life in Five Acts respectively, have won the Barrie and Bernice Stavis Award, given by the National Theatre Conference to outstanding emerging playwrights.[4]

List of plays produced

Source:[5]

2016[6]

The Ten-Minute Plays:

  • Coffee Break by Tasha Gordon-Solmon
  • This Quintessence of Dust by Cory Hinkle
  • Trudy, Carolyn, Martha, and Regina Travel to Outer Space and Have a Pretty Terrible Time There by James Kennedy
2015[8]

The Ten-Minute Plays:

  • Rules of Comedy by Patricia Cotter
  • So Unnatural a Level by Gary Winter
  • Joshua Consumed an Unfortunate Pear by Steve Yockey
2014[9]

The Ten-Minute Plays:

  • Winter Games by Rachel Bonds
  • Some Prepared Remarks (A History in Speech) by Jason Gray Platt
  • Poor Shem by Gregory Hischak
2013[10]

The Ten-Minute Plays:

  • Halfway by Emily Schwend
  • 27 Ways I Didn't Say "Hi" to Laurence Fishburne by Jonathan Josephson
  • Two Conversations Overheard on Airplanes by Sarah Ruhl
2012

The Ten-Minute Plays:

  • The Dungeons and the Dragons by Kyle John Schmidt
  • Hero Dad by Laura Jacqmin
  • The Ballad of 423 and 424 by Nicholas C. Pappas
2011
  • Mr. Smitten by Laura Eason
  • Maple and Vine by Jordan Harrison
  • Hygiene by Gregory Hischak
  • Chicago, Sudan by Marc Bamuthi Joseph
  • Elemeno Pea by Molly Smith Metzler
  • BOB by Peter Sinn Nachtrieb
  • Edith Can Shoot Things and Hit Them by A. Rey Pamatmat
  • The Edge of Our Bodies by Adam Rapp
  • A Devil at Noon by Anne Washburn
  • The End by Dan Dietz, Jennifer Haley, Allison Moore, A. Rey Pamatmat, and Marco Ramirez.
2010
  • Let Bygones Be by Gamal Abdel Chasten
  • HEIST! conceived and created by Sean Daniels and Deborah Stein, written by Deborah Stein
  • Lobster Boy by Dan Dietz
  • Ground by Lisa Dillman
  • Fissures (lost and found) by Steve Epp, Cory Hinkle, Dominic Orlando, Dominique Serrand, Deborah Stein and Victoria Stewart
  • Post Wave Spectacular by Diana Grisanti
  • An Examination of the Whole Playwright/Actor Relationship Presented As Some Kind of Cop Show Parody by Greg Kotis
  • Sirens by Deborah Zoe Laufer
  • The Method Gun created by Rude Mechs, written by Kirk Lynn
  • The Cherry Sisters Revisited by Dan O'Brien with original music by Michael Friedman
  • Phoenix by Scott Organ.
2009
List of plays from 1976 to 2008
2008
2007
  • 365 Days/365 Plays by Suzan-Lori Parks
  • The As If Body Loop by Ken Weitzman
  • Batch: An American Bachelor/Ette Party Spectacle, conceived by Whit MacLaughlin & Alice Tuan With Text by Alice Tuan Created by New Paradise Laboratories
  • Clarisse and Larmon by Deb Margolin
  • Dark Play or Stories for Boys by Carlos Murillo
  • I Am Not Batman by Marco Ramirez
  • Mr. and Mrs. by Julie Marie Myatt
  • The Open Road Anthology by Constance Congdon, Kia Corthron, Michael John Garcés, Rolin Jones, A. Rey Pamatmat, Kathryn Walat with music by GrooveLily
  • Strike-Slip by Naomi Iizuka
  • The Unseen by Craig Wright
  • When Something Wonderful Ends by Sherry Kramer
2006
  • Act a Lady by Jordan Harrison
  • Hotel Cassiopeia by Charles L. Mee, produced in association with the SITI Company
  • Listeners by Jane Martin
  • Low's Journey: Mediations Trilogy, pt. I by Rha Goddess, a co-production of Divine Dime, Ltd. and Made in da Shade
  • Natural Selection by Eric Coble
  • Neon Mirage by Liz Duffy Adams, Dan Dietz, Rick Hip-Flores, Julie Jensen, Lisa Kron, Tracey Scott Wilson & Chay Yew
  • Six Years by Sharr White
  • The Scene by Theresa Rebeck
  • Sovereignty by Rolin Jones
  • Three Guys and a Brenda by Adam Bock
2005
  • Dream of Jeanie-by-the-Door by David Valdes Greenwood
  • Goody Fucking Two Shoes by Jennifer Maisel
  • Hazzard County by Allison Moore
  • Johannes, Pyotr & Marge by Jeffrey Essmann
  • Long Dream in Summer by Saïd Sayrafiezadeh
  • Memory House by Kathleen Tolan
  • Moot the Messenger by Kia Corthron
  • A Nervous Smile by John Belluso
  • Pure Confidence by Carlyle Brown
  • The Shaker Chair by Adam Bock
  • Uncle Sam's Satiric Spectacular: On Democracy and Other Fictions, Featuring Patriotism Acts and Blue Songs from a Red State by Greg Allen, Sheila Callaghan, Bridget Carpenter, Eric Coble, Richard Dresser, Michael Friedman and Hilly Hicks
2004
  • After Ashley by Gina Gionfriddo
  • At the Vanishing Point by Naomi Iizuka
  • A Bone Close to My Brain by Dan Dietz
  • Foul Territory by Craig Wright
  • Kid-Simple by Jordan Harrison
  • Kuwait by Vincent Delaney
  • The Ruby Sunrise by Rinne Groff
  • Sans-Culottes in the Promised Land by Kirsten Greenidge
  • The Spot by Steven Dietz
  • Tallgrass Gothic by Melanie Marnich
  • Fast and Loose: An Ethical Collaboration by José Cruz González, Kirsten Greenidge, Julie Marie Myatt and John Walch
2003
  • The Faculty Room by Bridget Carpenter
  • Fit for Feet by Jordan Harrison
  • The Lively Lad songs by Quincy Long, music by Michael Silversher
  • Omnium Gatherum by Alexandra Gersten-Vassilaros and Theresa Rebeck
  • Orange Lemon Egg Canary: A Trick In Four Acts by Rinne Groff
  • The Roads That Lead Here by Lee Blessing
  • The Second Death of Priscilla by Russell Davis
  • Slide Glide the Slippery Slope by Kia Corthron
  • Trash Anthem by Dan Dietz
  • Trepidation Nation: A Phobic Anthology by Keith Josef Adkins, Stephen Belber, Hilary Bell, Glen Berger, Sheila Callaghan, Bridget Carpenter, Cusi Cram, Richard Dresser, Erik Ehn, Gina Gionfriddo, Kirsten Greenidge, Michael Hollinger, Warren Leight, Julie Marie Myatt, Victoria Stewart, and James Still
  • Rhythmicity by UNIVERSES (Steven Sapp; Mildred Ruiz-Sapp; Gamal Abdel Chasten; and special guest collaborators: Reg.e.ganes; Willie Perdomo; Rha Goddess; Reggie Cabico)
2002
2001

The Phone Plays

  • Subliminable by Greg Allen (The Neo-Futurists, Chicago)
  • Hype-R-Connectivity by Andy Bayiates (The Neo-Futurists, Chicago)
  • Call Waiting by Rachel Claff (The Neo-Futurists, Chicago)
  • Owls by Erin Courtney (Clubbed Thumb, New York)
  • Message Sent by Sterling Houston (Jump-Start Performance Co., San Antonio)
  • Click by Brighde Mullins (Thick Description, San Francisco)
  • Somebody Call 911 by Jennifer L. Nelson (African Continuum Theatre Company, Washington, D.C.)
2000

Phone Plays

1999
  • Aloha, Say the Pretty Girls by Naomi Iizuka
  • Cabin Pressure by Anne Bogart & The SITI Company
  • What Are You Afraid Of?" by Richard Dresser
  • The Cockfighter by Frank Manley, adapted by Vincent Murphy
  • God's Man in Texas by David Rambo
  • The T(ext) Shirt Project
  • Y2K (retitled: BecauseHeCan) by Arthur Kopit
  • Life Under 30 — A Bill of 10-Minute Plays
    • Slop-Culture by Robb Badlam
    • The Blue Room by Courtney Baron
    • Dancing With a Devil by Brooke Berman
    • Forty Minute Finish by Jerome Hairston
    • Mpls., St. Paul by Julia Jordan
    • Drive Angry by Matt Pelfrey
    • Labor Day by Sheri Wilner
    • Just Be Frank by Caroline Williams
1998
1997
1996
1995
  • Below the Belt by Richard Dresser
  • Beast on the Moon by Richard Kalinoski
  • Between the Lines by Regina Taylor
  • Cloud Tectonics by José Rivera
  • Head On by Elizabeth Dewberry
  • Helen at Risk by Dana Yeaton
  • July 7, 1994 by Donald Margulies
  • Middle-Aged White Guys by Jane Martin
  • Tough Choices for the New Century: A Seminar for Responsible Living by Jane Anderson
  • Trudy Blue by Marsha Norman
  • Your Obituary is a Dance by Benard Cummings
1994
1993
  • Deadly Virtues by Brian Jucha
  • The ice Fishing Play by Kevin Kling
  • Keely and Du by Jane Martin
  • Poof! by Lynn Nottage
  • Shooting Simone by Lynne Kaufman
  • Stanton's Garage by Joan Ackermann
  • Tape by José Rivera
  • What We Do With it by Bruce MacDonald
  • Various Small Fires by Regina Taylor
1992
  • Bondage by David Henry Hwang
  • The Carving of Mount Rushmore by John Conklin
  • D. Boone (retitled: Loving Daniel Boone) by Marsha Norman
  • Devotees in the Garden of Love by Suzan-Lori Parks
  • Eukiah by Lanford Wilson
  • Evelyn and the Polka King by John Olive
  • Hyaena by Ross MacLean
  • Lynette at 3 A.M. by Jane Anderson
  • Marisol by José Rivera
  • Old Lady's Guide to Survival by Mayo Simon
  • Procedure by Joyce Carol Oates
1991
  • Cementville by Jane Martin
  • The Death of Zukasky by Richard Strand
  • Down the Road by Lee Blessing
  • In the Eye of the Hurricane by Eduardo Machado
  • Night-Side by Shem Bitterman
  • Out the Window by Neal Bell
  • A Passenger Train of Sixty-One Coaches by Paul Walker
  • A Piece of My Heart by Shirley Lauro
  • What She Found There by John Glore
1990
  • 2 by Romulus Linney
  • Infinity's House by Ellen McLaughlin
  • The Pink Studio by Jane Anderson
  • The Swan by Elizabeth Egloff
  • Vital Signs by Jane Martin
  • Zara Spook and Other Lures by Joan Ackermann
  • In Darkest America by Joyce Carol Oates
1989
1988
  • Alone at the Beach by Richard Dresser
  • Channels by Judith Fein
  • Lloyd's Prayer by Kevin Kling
  • The Metaphor by Murphy Guyer
  • The Queen of the Leaky Roof Circuit by Jimmy Breslin
  • Sarah and Abraham by Marsha Norman
  • Whereabouts Unknown by Barbara Damashek
1987
  • Deadfall by Grace McKeaney
  • Digging Inby Julie Crutcher and Vaughn McBride
  • Elaine's Daughter by Mayo Simon
  • Glimmerglass by Jonathan Bolt
  • Gringo Planet by Frederick Bailey
  • T Bone N Weasel by Jon Klein
  • Water Hole by Kendrew Lascelles

Shorts

  • Chemical Reactions by Andy Foster
  • Fun by Howard Korder
  • The Love Talker by Deborah Pryor
1986
  • Astronauts by Claudia Reilly
  • How to Say Goodbye by Mary Gallagher
  • No Mercy by Constance Congdon
  • The Shaper by John Steppling
  • Smitty's News by Conrad Bishop and Elizabeth Fuller
  • Some Things You Need to Know Before the World Ends: A Final Evening with the Illuminati by Larry Larson and Levi Lee
  • To Culebra by Jonathan Bolt
  • Transports: two one-act plays:
    • 21A by Kevin Kling
    • How Gertrude Stormed the Philosopher's Club by Martin Epstein
1985
  • Available Light by Heather McDonald
  • Days and Nights Within by Ellen McLaughlin
  • Ride the Dark Horse by J.F. O'Keefe
  • Tent Meeting by Larry Larson, Levi Lee & Rebecca Wackler
  • Two Masters by Frank Manley
  • The Very Last Lover of the River Cane by James McLure
  • War of the Roses (now titled Riches) by Lee Blessing

Shorts

  • Advice to the Players by Bruce Bonafede
  • The American Century by Murphy Guyer
  • The Black Branch by Gary Leon Hill with Jo Hill
  • The Root of Chaos by Douglas Soderberg
1984
1983
  • Courage by John Pielmeier
  • Eden Court by Murphy Guyer
  • Food From Trash by Gary Leon Hill
  • In a Northern Landscape by Timothy Mason
  • Neutral Countries by Barbara Field
  • Sandcastles by Adele Edling Shank
  • Thanksgiving by James McLure
  • A Weekend Near Madison by Kathleen Tolan
  • Fathers and Daughters: two one-act plays:
    • A Tantalizing by William Mastrosimone
    • The Value of Names by Jeffrey Sweet

Shorts

1982
  • Clara's Play by John Olive
  • A Different Moon by Ara Watson
  • Full Hookup by Conrad Bishop and Elizabeth Fuller
  • The Grapes of Wrath by Terrence Shank
  • The Informer by Thomas Murphy
  • Oldtimers Game by Lee Blessing
  • Talking With... by Jane Martin

Shorts

  • The Eye of the Beholder by Kent Broadhurst
  • The New Girl by Vaughn McBride
  • The Groves of Academe by Mark Stein

Solo: a compendium of one-person plays:

1981
  • The Autobiography of a Pearl Diver by Martin Epstein
  • Extremities by William Mastrosimone
  • A Full Length Portrait of America by Paul D'Andrea
  • My Sister in this House by Wendy Kesselman
  • Future Tense by David Kranes
  • Swop by Ken Jenkins
  • Early Times: a compendium of short plays:

Shorts

  • Chocolate Cake by Mary Gallagher
  • Chug by Ken Jenkins
  • Final Placement by Ara Watson
1980
  • Agnes of God by John Pielmeier
  • Doctors and Diseases by Peter Ekstrom
  • The Coal Diamond by Shirley Lauro
  • Nothing Immediate by Shirley Lauro
  • Remington by Ray Aranha
  • Sunset/Sunrise by Adele Edling Shank
  • They're Coming to Make it Brighter by Kent Broadhurst
  • Today a Little Extra by Michael Kassin
    • Watermelon Boats by Wendy MacLaughlin
  • Weekends Like Other People by David Blomquist
  • The American Project: a compendium of short plays:
    • American Welcome by Brian Friel
    • The Drummer by Athol Fugard
    • The Golden Accord by Wole Soyinka
    • Hooray for Hollywood by John Byrne
    • San Salvador by Keith Dewhurst:
    • The Side of the Road by Gordon Dryland
    • Star Quality by Carol Bolt
    • Switching by Brian Clark
    • Tall Girls Have Everything by Stewart Parker
    • Vicki Madison Clocks Out by Alexander Buzo
1979
1978
  • The Louisville Zoo by Anonymous Authors
  • An Independent Woman by Daniel Stein
  • Getting Out by Marsha Norman
  • Does Anybody Here Do the Peabody? by Enid Rudd
  • The Bridgehead by Frederick Bailey
1977

See also

References

  1. ^ "Columbia University Record (January 18, 2002) Playwriting Alumnus and MTC Fellow's Play to Premiere at Renowned Humana Festival "The Humana Festival is reputed worldwide as one of the most important annual events in American theatre."" (PDF). Retrieved Jun 18, 2019.
  2. ^ Jones, Chris (Mar 11, 2001). "THEATER; Will a New Broom At Humana Sweep The Old Era Away?". The New York Times. Retrieved Jun 18, 2019.
  3. ^ "The Humana Foundation: Contributions to Civic and Culture - Actors Theatre of Louisville's Humana Festival of New American Plays". Archived from the original on 2014-07-15. Retrieved 2012-12-10.
  4. ^ a b c d e "The Humana Festival of New American Plays - Actors Theatre of Louisville". Actors Theatre of Louisville. Retrieved 2017-09-09.
  5. ^ "Plays / Chronology". Actors Theatre of Louisville. Archived from the original on 10 February 2007. Retrieved 8 February 2007.
  6. ^ "2016 Humana Festival Lineup Revealed".
  7. ^ Kramer, Elizabeth (2016-03-18). "Violence, faith subject of Hansol Jung's play". The Courier-Journal. Retrieved 2020-06-10.
  8. ^ "2015 Humana Festival plays announced". The Courier-Journal. Retrieved Jun 18, 2019.
  9. ^ Gaukel, Kirsty (10 November 2013). "ACTORS THEATRE OF LOUISVILLE ANNOUNCES THE 38th HUMANA FESTIVAL OF NEW AMERICAN PLAYS". Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
  10. ^ "Humana Festival 2013". Archived from the original on 2013-04-14. Retrieved 2013-04-13.

External links

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