AN INTERVIEW WITH PLAYWRIGHT ANNA ZIEGLER
Plus your weekly round-up of theatre news you may have missed this week!
Welcome to The Scene, your weekly round-up of theatre news you may have missed this week. In this week’s email:
HOT TOPICS: The Scene Special Correspondent Snow Cercone meets Broadway legend Idina Menzel, learn how to get use out of an Expensive Set piece for Every Single Show, and Productions “& Juliet,” “Come from Away,” “Wicked” and more to take part in the UK’s inaugural Schools Theatre Day
THE BIG IDEA: The Scene speaks with playwright Anna Ziegler
THE BROADWAY BEAT: The Scene attended the Broadway opening night of “Cost of Living,” the cast of Broadway’s “Into the Woods” performs on the Today Show, and get a sneak peek inside Broadway’s all-female, transgender, and non-binary, “1776.”
SHOWS YOU SHOULD KNOW: Discover the plays of Anna Ziegler
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Hot Topics
THE SCENE SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT SNOW CERCONE MEETS BROADWAY LEGEND IDINA MENZEL - Click here or on the video above to see what happens when this #TheatreKid meets one of her Broadway idols!
HOW TO GET USE OUT OF AN EXPENSIVE SET PIECE FOR EVERY SINGLE SHOW - If you’re on a tight budget, want to go green(er), or need ideas on how to recycle pieces and props from show to show click here.
“& JULIET,” “COME FROM AWAY,” “WICKED” AND MORE TO TAKE PART IN THE UK’S INAUGURAL SCHOOLS THEATRE DAY - The Society of London Theatre has launched a brand-new London Theatre Guide for Schools.
AN INTERVIEW WITH PLAYWRIGHT ANNA ZIEGLER
Anna Ziegler is an Award-winning American playwright and poet, whose work has been produced on the West End and at major theaters around the United States, Australia, Japan, Italy, Germany, India, and Sweden. A graduate of Yale University, Anna holds master’s degrees in poetry from The University of East Anglia (UK) and in dramatic writing from NYU.
Her play PHOTOGRAPH 51 won London’s 2016 WhatsOnStage award for Best New Play. It was also selected as a “Best of the Year” play by The Chicago Tribune, The Washington Post (twice), and The Telegraph. The following year, Williamstown Theatre Festival, The Manhattan Theatre Club, and The Geffen Playhouse premiered her play ACTUALLY (winner of the Ovation Award in Los Angeles for Playwriting of an Original Play), and also in 2017 the Roundabout Theatre Company produced her play THE LAST MATCH. Early next year the Roundabout Theatre Company will be producing Anna’s latest work THE WANDERERS, winner of the 2018 San Diego Critic’s Circle Award for Outstanding New Play.
Most recently, Anna partnered with Broadway Licensing to curate a selection of titles for the upcoming Broadway Book Club box. The Scene spoke with Anna Ziegler this week.
Photo from THE WANDERERS at the Old Globe. Photo by Jim Cox
THE SCENE: When did you first discover theatre?
ANNA: I grew up in New York City and my parents took me to see CATS when I was four or five. I must have loved it because I saw it three more times over the next few years. That said, I'm not sure I ever got any less scared of the costumed actors who would walk through the aisles and (in my memory at least) touch people in the audience. That terrified me.
THE SCENE: What was your experience with theatre in school? Were you ever an actor or director?
ANNA: My final performance as an actor was in 8th grade when I played Louise (a bit part) in a play called Stage Door. Throughout middle school I'd played various small roles -- Villager number 3, that sort of thing. In 12th grade, in 1997, I wrote my first short play in a playwriting seminar but (despite taking playwriting classes in college taught by Arthur Kopit and Donald Margulies) I didn't finish a full-length play until the summer of 2001, right after I graduated. I did, however, attempt to direct a play my sophomore year at Yale -- Michael Frayn's Copenhagen, which I'd seen and fallen in love with the summer before. Not long into the process I realized I had no idea how to direct a play, especially one as complex and unusual as Copenhagen, and so found a more seasoned college director to take over. (Thank you, Colin Spoelman.)
Photo from PHOTOGRAPH 51 at the Noel Coward Theatre. Photo by Johan Presson
THE SCENE: What made you want to become a playwright?
ANNA: I went to graduate school for playwriting and, even though I didn't go into it thinking I'd necessarily emerge a playwright, I did end up getting hooked on the sheer difficulty of writing plays. It motivated me to keep going, to try and write a better one.
THE SCENE: Who were the educators that inspired and encouraged you to become a writer? How did they impact your life and career?
ANNA: When I was growing up, there were many teachers who encouraged me to write (I happened to go to a somewhat hippy-dippy school at which everyone was encouraged to be an artist) but I credit (and sometimes curse) Arthur Kopit with making me a playwright. I took his playwriting seminar my senior year in college. I applied to get into it with a poem because I didn't have a play. He admitted me and from that moment on seemed always to believe in me. He encouraged me to apply to the MFA program at NYU, where he ended up supervising my master's thesis. He invited me to be in The Lark's inaugural Playwrights' Workshop in the summer of 2001, which is where I wrote my first full-length play. If not for him, I'd have taken a job working at the literary journal The Threepenny Review in San Francisco and kept at my poetry. Arthur died last year, and I miss him. He impacted my life and career profoundly.
Photo from Roundabout Theatre Company’s production of THE LAST MATCH. Photo by Joan Marcus.
THE SCENE: What advice do you have for aspiring playwrights?
ANNA: Apply widely! When I was younger, I would scour the Playwrights Center's newsletter for opportunities. Also: show up! Becoming part of the theater community where you live -- by going to readings and productions and events -- is probably half the battle.
THE SCENE: Without giving away the plays you selected for the upcoming Broadway Book Club, how did you approach the process of selecting the titles you included?
ANNA: I looked through the catalog of available titles, highlighting all of my favorites. There were, of course, too many. I tried to cull my list in such a way that the selected plays would represent a diversity of writers, content, and form. All the plays I chose are very different! But probably share a similar heart -- or that intangible thing that draws me to a play: some combination of beautiful language, humor, empathy for its characters, and an awareness of the fragility of our experience here.
Photo from The Geffen Playhouse production of ACTUALLY. Photo by Chris Whitaker
THE SCENE: What’s next for you?
ANNA: My play THE WANDERERS is going to be produced at Roundabout Theater Company in NYC this winter (Jan-March 2023). It'll also be produced this fall/winter at City Theater in Pittsburgh and the Ernst-Deutsch Theater in Germany. A tv miniseries I wrote for -- INVITATION TO A BONFIRE -- will be on this winter too, on AMC.
THE SCENE: Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us today!
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The Broadway Beat
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THE SCENE ATTENDED THE BROADWAY OPENING NIGHT OF “COST OF LIVING” - Check here or on the video above for special opening night access including interviews with playwright Martyna Majok and Director Jo Bonney.
CHECK OUT THE CAST OF BROADWAY’S “INTO THE WOODS” PERFORM ON THE TODAY SHOW - See the October 6, 2022, performance of ‘Agony’ and the show’s title song.
LOOK INSIDE BROADWAY'S ALL-FEMALE, TRANSGENDER, AND NON-BINARY “1776” - The production opening tonight at the American Airlines Theatre stars Crystal Lucas-Perry and Carolee Carmello.
Shows You Should Know
Discover the entire collection of plays by playwright Anna Ziegler. Click on the title below to learn more.