2010 Winners
Meet the ANPF 2010
Playwrights and Their Winning Scripts
Technicolor
Life by Jami Brandli
Jami Brandli’s play The
Sinker had its world premiere at HotCity
Theatre in St. Louis in May 2010, and she was
recently a visiting playwright at the 2010
WordBridge Playwrights Lab. Jami lives in Pasadena
with her husband, Brian Polak, where she’s at work
on scripts for both stage and screen as well as
writing a novel. At her day job, she teaches
writing at Lesley University’s MFA program in
Boston. Technicolor
Life is
the winner of the 2010 John Gassner Playwriting
Award.
In Technicolor
Life, war hero Billie Hunter, recently
home from Iraq with a missing left hand, is
angry and secretive. Her adoring teenage sister,
Maxine, discovers Billie’s diary, a highly
charged account of what Billie endured in Iraq.
Enter Franny, the flamboyant grandmother, who
formulates a plan to help Billie and in the
process makes an announcement that throws the
entire family into chaos.
Directed by Caroline Shaffer,* the cast included
Vilma Silva,* Jeffrey King,* Brandy Carson, Rachel
Kaiser, Tai Sammons, Brent Rose,* Pamela Bullock,
and Sarah Jane Millan. Technicolor Life was performed
Thursday, October 21, at 2 p.m. and Friday,
October 22, at 8 p.m.
The
Exceptionals by Bob Clyman
Bob Clyman's works have been produced
across the nation at leading repertory theatres
from California to New York. His awards include a
Eugene O’Neill Summer Conference Fellowship, an
Edgerton Foundation New American Play Award, an
Edward Albee Foundation Fellowship, and a
nomination for an Outer Circle Critics Award for
best script in 2008.
In The
Exceptionals, Gwen and Allie meet at a
research institute that has matched both of them
with sperm donors whose IQs top 180. Instant
adversaries, both women have guilty, deeply held
secrets that are gradually revealed. Tension
mounts as they find the institute imposing control
over their children, and each is forced to make a
decision that will test her values and ambitions.
Are children to be the sociopolitical pawns of the
future?
Directed by John Stadelman, the cast included
Tamara Marston, Danforth Comins,* Holly Weber
Neimark,* Sarah Foster, and Kymberli Colbourne. The Exceptionals
was performed Wednesday, October 20, at 8 p.m. and
Sunday, October 24, at 2 p.m.
A Gold Star in
the Window by Harlene Goodrich
Harlene Goodrich is a late bloomer,
having returned to the University of Southern
California at age 50 to earn a master’s degree in
professional writing. Since graduating she
has won playwriting competitions in California,
Iowa, and New York. Her short play Picture Perfect was
published by Samuel French in the Best of Off-On
Broadway series for 2006. She filled six journals
extolling the beauty of the California coastline
when she and her husband walked from the Mexican
border to Oregon in 2005.
In A Gold Star
in the Window, Mardelle, mourning the
death of her veteran son, is outraged by the
government’s refusal to honor him with a gold star
to hang in the window. Her husband, daughter, and
son-in-law are opposed to the gold star because it
will draw attention to the way he died. Over the
course of one afternoon, an apparition pays a
visit, quarrels escalate, jealousies are revealed,
and patriotism is redefined.
Directed by Lenny Neimark, the cast included
Judith Sanford, Douglas Rowe,* Brent Hinkley,* Eve
Smyth, Paul Roland,* and Holly Weber Neimark.* A Gold Star in the
Window was performed Friday, October 22,
at 2 p.m. and Saturday, October 23, at 8 p.m.
The Insidious
Impact of Anton by David Hilder
David Hilder’s short play just exactly like was
a finalist for the 2010 Heideman Award. His other
plays and musicals have been produced in New York
by Raw Impressions, theAtrainplays, Ensemble
Theater Studio, and many more. David is also a
director and a recovering actor.
In The Insidious
Impact of Anton, Francesca, a hip,
audacious urbanite with a wicked sense of humor,
has challenged and insulted everyone around her.
Her self-satisfied ways have become tiresome to
her friends and family. Then she meets Anton, a
mysterious stranger, and the oddest things begin
to happen. What is the insidious impact of Anton?
Directed by David Salsa, the cast included Sophia
Palosaari, Kimbre Lancaster, S. A. Rodgers,*
Jonathan Dyrud, Christian Gervasi, Monica Keaton,
and Russell Lloyd. The Insidious Impact of Anton
was performed Thursday, October 21, at 8 p.m. and
Saturday, October 23, at 2 p.m.
Host Playwright EM Lewis
EM Lewis, an ANPF 2008
winner with her play Song of Extinction, is returning
to Ashland this year as our ANPF 2010 host
playwright, welcoming this year's winners, leading
the talkbacks, and teaching a playwriting
workshop. Lewis won the 2009 Steinberg/ATCA New
Play Award from the American Theater Critics
Association for Song
of Extinction, which premiered in Los
Angeles, produced by Moving Arts at [Inside] the
Ford. The play also won the University of Oregon’s
EcoDrama Festival, the Ted Schmitt Award for the
premiere of an outstanding new play from the Los
Angeles Drama Critics Circle, and Production of
the Year from the LA Weekly Awards. It was
published in Dramatics
magazine and by Samuel French, leading to
productions in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and
Ion Theater in San Diego over the summer and at
the Guthrie early next year. Lewis also wrote the
Primus Prize–winning Iraq War hostage drama Heads and Infinite
Black Suitcase, about a group of people
dealing with tragedy in rural Oregon. Lewis is a
member of Moving Arts Theater Company, the
Dramatists Guild, the International Centre for
Women Playwrights, and the Alliance of Los Angeles
Playwrights. She is originally from Oregon, lived
in Los Angeles for quite a while, and is at
Princeton University now—the recipient of a
2010–2011 Hodder Fellowship—working on a new play.
*Member of
Actors' Equity Association
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past winners
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