David J Glover

Tags >> one acts
May 23

Blogging playwrights pile on

Posted by: Glover |

Brouhaha of the week: Blogging playwrights pile on

Posted in Upstaged by Helen Shaw on Mar 22, 2011 at 5:17pm

Oh, how sharper than a serpent's tooth is a playwright incensed over varying gradations of privilege! Some seriously tart exchanges on ye olde Internet this week were touched off by this, Mat Smart's HowlRound post, in which the playwright brought the tough love to his fellow emerging playwrights. Smart challenged what he sees as the defeatism of emerging playwrights, asserting that: "In the end, our approach to our own work is the only thing we can control—and I believe that you have to love the doing. You also have to love the chase, love the absence of any resemblance of fairness, justice, or due course. And as long as it doesn’t make you too desperate or crazy—there is a nobility in this endurance, in this brand of foolishness. There must be a sense that 'I am going down with the ship.' And frankly, it is a commitment that I don’t see many emerging playwrights make."

This comes in the middle of a long essay on playwright laziness, which, despite its inflammatory wording, is written from the perspective of someone who wants to hammer home the importance of a work ethic. It should be a familiar refrain—we've heard it from every other writer who has ever told us ass-in-chair time is the secret to success.


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Sep 28

24 hours of ‘PlaySlam’

Posted by: Glover |
Tagged in: towson , theatre , one acts , comedy , 24 hour project

24 hours of ‘PlaySlam’

Towson Towerlight, 20 September 2006 By Sam Sinclair 

For Towson theatre students, the chance to write, direct, produce and perform a play is the highlight of their college education. Beginning Friday, around 30 students had that opportunity in “PlaySlam,” but there was one catch. All the tasks had to be completed within 24 hours. “It’s an opportunity for [freshmen] to do a show within the first three weeks of college,” David Glover, the producer of this event, said. “It’s also a chance for a jolly good weekend.” But the event didn’t just involve first time students. Upperclassmen, ranging from sophomores to graduate students, write and direct the plays to experiment with ideas. When participants of “PlaySlam” gathered Friday night, the sleep depriving madness began. After engaging the students in some team bonding experiences, Glover assigned the actors to a writer and director. Each group was given a character, a location, a CD of music, and a quote. These four elements were encouraged to be included in the final production. The writers created the pieces, then the directors and actors came in again Saturday morning to block movements and rehearse their lines. That evening, each of the six groups performed 15 to 20 minute long plays. The pre-show featured Lane Pianta, who used his guitar to create a variety of sounds while Mariana Osario performed movement pieces wearing a mask. Pianta described it as “an intersection of music and stage action.” “America’s Freakheart,” by Bobby Libby, was about an uneducated man who rescues a deformed baby from a portable toilet. The man raises the child and profits from her as a sideshow. The girl goes on to star in a reality show and becomes a celebrity. Later, God visits the adopted father and tells him that he has raised the anti-Christ. Libby (who was the only participant to both write and direct his play) called the Slam “probably the most educational weekend of my life, in terms of theatre.” He emphasized that, while stressful, the time limitations were a driving force. “There’s no real time for doubt or any prospect of giving up,” he said. “You just have to push through and do it. At 8 o’clock, you must have a show to present, so you just have to put up the best possible show you can.” “Plankton – A Whale of a Tail” was a musical written by Ryan Haase and Alex Kliner. The story centers on a plankton that develops a crush on a cowgirl that was just swallowed by a whale. The plankton becomes intrigued by land life and wants to dine at Dairy Queen. Haase believes the idea ends here. “It was fun, but trite and stupid,” he said. “Sweet Pie,” set in a laundromat, featured two women with dark secrets. One has a human head in her duffel bag and the other has loads of granola bars. In “Choices,” a mother and daughter are re-united at a morgue and argue over an assortment of topics, like the mother being responsible for the daughter’s divorce. “Picking up a chick in an artistic and whimsical way” was how writer Becca Wyrick described her material, “Theories.” This act involved a deep level of thinking in which the characters mirrored each other’s movements. Director Siobhan O’Loughlin said her three actors were very accepting. “They didn’t bat an eye,” she said. The Ruth Marder Studio Theatre filled its 125-person capacity and the show ended with a standing ovation. “It taught me a lot about having faith in myself and having faith in the actors in any future writing or directing I will probably do,” Libby said, “but I will never direct my own piece in a 24-hour situation again, for my sanity’s sake.”

 

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