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in dialogue: Fast and Loose, with Ethics
May 2004
If you discover an awful secret, should you tell? Should we base our ethical decisions on principles, or only on consequences? Must we really take the interests of others into consideration? Are there intrinsically right and wrong acts?
These four questions form the basis of Fast and Loose, an ethical collaboration, at the Humana Festival at The Actors Theater of Louisville. It is a piece that engaged the collective wits, morals and talents of playwrights Jose Cruz Gonzalez, Kirsten Greenidge, Julie Marie Myatt, and John Walch.
For the past five years, the ATL has commissioned a collection of short plays written around a specific theme by as many as 18 writers. Last years theme was phobias. The result, called Trepidation Nation, explored "that particular species of fear that holds a special fascination because of its extreme, illogical nature," as the notes say to the Humana Festival 2003 compilation. Interesting work begins with provocative ideas.
This years collaboration found its starting place in a newspaper advice column, "The Ethicist" by Randy Cohen, which appears in The New York Times Magazine. Literary Associate Steve Moulds read, and then asked the playwrights to read, Cohens recently published book, The Good, the Bad, & the Difference. As the idea for the play grew, the artistic staff came up with five provocative questions. Each of the four playwrights picked their two favorites and were eventually assigned just one.
But playwriting, like ethics, is rarely that simple. Certainly this project looked for complicationscomplications to the questions, complications to the process, complication to the audience, actor, and artist experience. Following a "track system," each playwright wrote a first scene from his or her question, and then handed off the idea to a second writer, who wrote a second scene. Eventually, all four writers contributed tracks to all four plays.
Its something like the drawing game you might have played as a child: on a thrice-folded paper, one person draws the head, leaving only the mysterious lines of the neck to guide the next artist, who draws the torso, whose legs extend to the final third of the paper, to be imagined by the final pen. The unfolding often reveals an inspiringly distorted Frankenstein of a being who nonetheless yields a whole of unexpected integrity and unfailingly unique character.
At ATL, Moulds and Wendy McClellan (Director of the Apprentice and Intern Company) gave the writers a little bit more to guide them than the pencil-line necks and limbs of childhood days. Along with the first scene based on their assigned question, they asked each writer to write a "track outline."
"The track outline was basically a way that the originating author could lay down some broad rules, or writing prompts, for the following authors, without being too prescriptive in terms of what would happen next," says Moulds. The artistic staff then read the track and decided what writer should continue it. The conversation, according to Moulds, went something like this: "I think this piece needs to go somewhere totally left field. Lets give it to John." But the writers never read the previous scenes; the track outlines were the only thing that got passed on.
As playwright Walch notes wryly, "Other people gave plot lines, the sort of notes that say, This is what Im thinking. I was like, Make the choice after the obvious choice. Include the word sage."
In Fast and Loose, things fall from the sky: a pink dollhouse that eventually serves as the lid for a smoking barbeque grill; a disintegrating mummy, hanging grimly above the audience entrance, from which pecans occasionally drop onto the stage. These writers share an ability to express a compelling vulnerability. They bravely welcome big, startling, and terrifying images that were striking even when the plays themselves dont entirely hang together.
Each of the four plays four tracks are interwoven in unpredictable ways on an undulating set of furniture partly buried under green grass. Are these characters real intentions hidden or exposed?
In Wake Gods Man, a trio of sisters confront the truth of their childhood relationships with an abusive priest. Union shows workers in a cotton factory struggle with the question of unionization in the face of the managements threat to move operations overseas. The Mating Habits of the Sage Grouse starts when a guys friends decide its time for him to get laid. And then one pal gets the hots for the girl theyve picked. In This House is about a couple adopting a baby girl. The birth mother has only one request, that they give the baby a specific middle name which is Native American and is impossibly, almost farcically long. The couple agrees, and then shortens the name to Anna. They dont tell the birth mother.
The program listed the names of the four playwrights, the titles of the four plays, the four questions, and the list of twenty-two characters. But it had a glaring omission: attribution. Who wrote which tracks? We werent supposed to know.
The audience made a game out of trying to match scene with writer. After the show, we stood in the lobby and compared our guesses. Some of the time we were dead on. But it was strangenot one person I overheard consistently got all four scenes right. The way that they were pieced together sometimes threw us, like colors tend to change or blend in pointillism.
The primary purpose of Fast and Loose, as with every years collaborative project, is to provide the company of twenty-two acting interns a platform to show their skills. "This is a piece commissioned for a very specific purpose," Moulds says. "Even if the play might be stronger, you cant cut roles. Everybody needs to be in it. These considerations outweigh the writers voice." Heres where the ethics comes in to the playwriting process.
At the very start of the process, McClellan and Tanya Palmer (Director of New Play Development) sat down with a list of people they wanted to work with. They looked for the right combination of writing style and collaborative experience. Gonzalez, Greenidge, Myatt and Walch hadnt worked together before, and they were not completely familiar with each others work. But McClellan had seen all four of them at other readings and retreats, such as the now-defunct ASK Theatre Projects. "They were writers who enjoyed working things out. There were no divas."
By design, each writer got to start a track, continue a track, and finish a track. They met twice in Louisville. The first time, which because of scheduling conflicts happened in pairs, was to meet the acting interns. The second time was for a read-through of the first draft. As Walch describes it, "We basically had like a TV meeting that daythe 12 hours that we were all together." ("The last two were at my house with a bottle of bourbon," adds McClellan.") "And we had all read the pieces and had notes. We basically put them into workshop. Like, okay, so what is this?"
Rather than assigning a sort of script captain to each track, they kept the process collective. They kept odd shifts in tone. They figured they could make sense of sudden shifts in time. Collectivity, interestingly enough, was empowering. "We wanted to preserve the individual voices," Walch says.
The collaborators talk about the piece as if it were a road trip theyd all been on together, and the imagery, language, and plot points are like landmarks along the way. It was flat and then there was a pink house. It was flat, and then there was a union strike that no one comes to. It was flat, and then there was an abusive priest. Hes dead.
"Kirstens original impetus for using the house came out of discussions we held with the apprentice company at the beginning of the process," Moulds explains of the piece In This House. "One of the apprentices, responding to the question of ethics possibly just being cultural differences, talked about everyone staying within their own spheres. He said something like, You can have your standards in your house, and Ill have mine. And it wont be a problem unless you step into my house."
He continues. "And then theres a monologue by this character in the househes the father of the babyhe sort of comes out of left field. But hes related to the scene. You never knew if the next piece was going to engage theme more or engage plot and character more."
The way that track, theme, character and writer engaged each other was actually sort of tidal for the audience to experience. The water underneath us crested, curled under, then went back out beneath us. Something else rose. This became the pieces structure, a fluid and counter-linear experience. Story wasnt always revelatory. It wasnt always satisfying. Stakes changed for some characters mid-way through, or slid out from under them entirely. Obviously the process had its challenges.
"We were trying to serve three masters," Walch says, "The apprenticesmaking sure people got equal stage time; the piece itself; and our own individual, well, deal." Maybe the biggest question the process asked was, What are our obligations as artists to each other?
McClellan describes the Fast and Loose writers as open-hearted and says that this is one of the keys to the projects success. Its true. They were open to the process. And, ultimately, Moulds says, Fast and Loose "felt bigger than the actual play could depict. That these worlds go on somewhere in the imagination and were only seeing four little snippets."
Walch describes himself as a laborious writer. "Im slow. I tend to get stuck, and when I get stuck I kind of, I know theres something wrong in the piece, or something untrue, or somethings going on that I cant seem to get around, and so I kind of create these little blocks for myself that last and last and last. And what this taught me was, there are certain things I just couldnt change. I cant change the scene thats come before me. I can ask questions about it. I couldnt change it. I had to accept what I was given and move on. And thats a really big lesson for me and if I can apply it to my own work, Ill finish a lot more plays in my day. A lot of what the block is, is fear. I dont know whats coming next. But I have to let that be. I have enough knowledge and understanding of the piece to carry on, to just see where it goes."
excerpt: Fast and Loose, an ethical collaboration: Wake God's Man
José Cruz González is currently working on an epic piece, Three Tuesdays, about a Mexican woman who lived a hundred years.
Kristen Greenidge also had a mainstage production at Humana this year, a surreal piece called Sans-culottes in the Promised Land.
Julie Marie Myatt is currently traveling in Cambodia, where she is researching a new play about young girls and the sex slave industry, funded by the Guthrie Theaters New Play Project, which is funded by the Bush Foundation.
John Walch is finishing up a Sloan commission for Manhattan Theatre Club.
C. Denby Swanson, a former Jerome and McKnight fellow, currently lives in NYC area. Her play The Death of Cat receives its world premiere in September at Salvage Vanguard Theater. In October, Minneapolis-based 15 Head will produce her new play Vactionland!
IN DIALOGUE is a column written by playwrights about playwrights, with a focus on showcasing new texts. If you are a playwright, and would like to write a column, please contact Emily DeVoti at: editorial@brooklynrail.org
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The Independent Press Association-NY recently honored The Brooklyn Rail with the following awards:
1st place: Best article about Immigrant Issues or Racial Justice--Gabriel Thompson, "One Immigrant's Journey" (September 2004).
1st place: Best article about the Arts*--Amy Zimmer, "The Brownsville Rec. Center" (April 04)
2nd place: Best article about the Arts--Brian Carreira, "Harlem Arts: A Faux Renaissance" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
2nd place: Best editorial or commentary--T. Hamm, "The Issue is Free Speech" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
3rd Place: Best Investigative News Story--Marjory Garrison, "Minimum Matter of Survival" (May 04)
Honorable mention: Best Investigative News Story--Williams Cole, "Housing vs. the RNC" (June 04).
Honorable mention: Best Original Feature--Yvette Walton, "My Life in the NYPD" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
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