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2010 NOPE Conference

NoPassport and NUYORICAN POETS CAFE present

4th annual NoPe - NoPassport Conference

DREAMING THE AMERICAS: UTOPIA IN PERFORMANCE

NoPassport and Nuyorican Poets Cafe present a two-day conference with the support of The Armenian Dramatic Arts Alliance, Idiom, The Internationalists, 50/50 in 2020, Conni's Avant-Garde Restaurant, New Perspectives Theatre Company, Welsh Arts Council, and the Lark Play Development Center, and the cooperation of New Dramatists.  

Initiated and Curated by Caridad Svich

Co-curated by Daniel Banks

& Daniel Gallant

Pre- Conference Event:

FEBRUARY 25, 2010 at New Dramatists, 424 W. 44th St, NYC from 6-8 PM

ACROSS THE UNIVERSE with NoPASSPORT PRESS

Moderator: RANDY GENER (Senior Editor, American Theatre)

Join playwrights Oliver Mayer, John Jesurun, Mathew Maguire, Amparo Garcia-Crow, Alejandro Morales, Chiori Miyagawa along with press editors Otis Ramsey-Zoe, Stephen Squibb and Caridad Svich for a conversation on playwriting related to the publication of plays from NoPassport between 2008-2009. *Admission to this event is free.

Conference @ Nuyorican Poets Café/NY

Fri. FEBRUARY 26, 2010 11:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m.

(and 8:30 PM Off-site reading at New Perspectives Theater Company)

& Sat. FEBRUARY 27, 2010 11:00 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.  

Two-day Pass Registration/cover required: $25

FEBRUARY 26, 2010 Panels:

11:00 AM WELCOME/OPENING POETRY TRIPTYCH

with DANIEL BANKS (DNAWORKS), DANIEL GALLANT (Executive Director, Nuyorican Poets Cafe), CARIDAD SVICH (Playwright; founder, NoPassport)

11:30 AM-12:50 PM APPLIED THEATRE: GENOCIDE DRAMA IN COMMUNITY 

Moderators: BIANCA BAGATOURIAN (Playwright & President of Armenian Dramatic Arts Alliance) and MEGAN MONAGHAN (Dramaturg, via Skype)

Panel: MARCY ARLIN (Immigrants Theater Project), STACIE CHAIKEN (Writer-Performer), ERIK EHN (Playwright), CHRISTINE EVANS (Playwright), CATHERINE FILLOUX (Playwright), J.T. ROGERS (Playwright),

KELLY STUART (Playwright), *This is an Armenian Dramatic Arts Alliance session.

1:00-1:45 KEYNOTE:

ERIK EHN: UTOPIA IS THE SHADOW OF DISASTER

ERIK  EHN is Head of Playwriting at Brown University, and former Dean of California School of the Arts.

 We are in the middle of an extraordinary time, if utopia is understood to include moral diversity (heaven and hell). The ways in which we are being disregarded, forced into strange shapes, misunderstood, privileged, urged - are now (briefly) the fracture that permits growth. Making art in holy shadow in obedience to disaster.

2:00-2:45 PM CONNI'S AVANT-GARDE RESTAURANT

This special performance/lunch costs $10 (separate from registration and at event only).

Conni’s Avant Garde Restaurant (a Village Voice Choice and Time Out New York favorite), is not a locale but a group of bold (if fictional) theatrical performers, devoted to the ongoing celebration of the work of Conni Convergence, the beloved icon of stage and screen. Hailed as “devilish dinner theatre” by The New York Daily News, these unique theatrical-culinary events mix the ingredients of fine food and drink, brash Vegas-style song and dance spectacle, and a loving send-up of avant-garde pomposity. www.avantgarderestaurant.com

3:00-5:00 PM IMMERSIVE THEATRE: SITES OF MEMORY/PRACTICE

Moderators: TAMILLA WOODARD and JAKE WITLEN

Panel: MELANIE JOSEPH (Artistic Director, The Foundry), MALLORY CATLETT (director), ANNA KIRALY (Designer), STEPHEN SQUIBB (C-Artistic Director, Woodshed Collective), , IVAN TALIJANCIC (Artistic Director, Wax Factory), IAN ROWLANDS (Playwright, Advisor, Welsh Arts Council), MELISSA F. MOSCHITTO (Founder, The Anthropologists), CATHERINE PORTER (Peculiar Works Project) *This is an Internationalists session.

5-6 PM DINNER BREAK

6 PM 2nd KEYNOTE: HENRY GODINEZ : NEW HORIZONS FOR NEW VOICES

HENRY GODINEZ is the resident artistic associate at the Goodman Theatre and curator of the Goodman's Latino Theatre Festival. Born in Havana Cuba, Mr. Godinez is an Associate Professor at Northwestern University, and was recognized as the 2008 Latino Professional of the Year by the Chicago Latino Network.

6:30-7:50 PM  NOPASSPORT PRESS BOOK LAUNCH

Moderators: RANDY GENER (Senior Editor, American Theatre) & OTIS RAMSEY-ZOE (Dramaturge)

 Panel: MIGDALIA CRUZ, OCTAVIO SOLIS, KAREN HARTMAN, CHIORI MIYAGAWA, SAVIANA STANESCU and ALBERTO SANDOVAL-SANCHEZ (Mount Holyoke College), PRISCILLA PAGE (Univ. of Massachusetts), JOHN EISNER (Artistic Director, Lark Play Development Center),  SHARON FRIEDMAN (NYU, Gallatin School)

NoPassport Press presents excerpts from new work (read by authors) and a conversation about the global voice in the age of globalization with five writers who have newly available plays, along with scholars and theatre-makers who've written about their work.

8:30 PM CHAMACO - BOY AT THE VANISHING POINT (2004)

a reading of a play

by Cuban playwright Abel González Melo

English Translation by Yael Prizant

Directed by Joe Salvatore

@ Off-site venue: New Perspectives Theatre, 456 West 37th Street, NY, NY 10018

Omar Valiño writes, "Chamaco... is one of the most important works of contemporary Cuban theater and, with time, will become even more important. The play brought a new thematic outlook to the theater of the island through its inclusion of, and dialogue with, innovative textual and performative discourses...."

Chamaco is an elegant and brutal portrait of the street, full of desires. Veiled in a common crime narrative, the play reveals transgressions far more disturbing and painful than any illegal acts. González Melo's vivid characters have an intimate relationship with Havana and its rhythms.  They encounter the world as Cubans, grasping at their island's skewed interaction with tourism, its housing shortages, its limited job prospects, its lively and interactive culture.  Yet their palpable loneliness, their distance from each other, and their fervent desire to connect is collective, basic, and utterly recognizable to audiences, in any language.

FEBRUARY 27, 2010 PANELS:

11:00 AM: TERESA EYRING (TCG): CONVOCATION

TERESA EYRING is Executive Director of Theatre Communications Group. Previous positions include Managing Director of the Children’s Theatre Company (CTC) in Minneapolis, Managing Director of the Wilma Theater in Philadelphia and Assistant Executive Director of the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis.  She holds a BA in International Relations from Stanford University and an MFA in Theatre Administration from Yale School of Drama.

11:30-12:50 AM THEATRE-MAKING AS AN ACT OF UTOPIA-MAKING: 50/50 in 2020

MELODY BROOKS (Artistic Director, New Perspectives), JENNY GREEMAN (Artistic Associate, NPTC), SUSAN JONAS (Dramaturge), LUDOVICA VILLAR-HAUSER (Director-Dramaturge, VIP of Programming for the League of Professional Theatre Women)

New Perspectives Theatre Company, The League of Professional Theatre Women and 50/50 in 2020 explore what it means to make art in a culture that only values capital. Is the act of creation a radical act? Can theatrical space be viewed as utopian space? The panel will investigate these theoretical questions and move toward practical solutions for reassessing the value of theatre and its makers. In particular, representatives of the newly formed 50/50 in 2020 will share their plan for achieving parity for women artists by 2020.

1:00-2:10 PM IDIOM: Between Art and Theater: Genealogies of Performance

Moderator: STEPHEN SQUIBB (Editor, Idiom) Panel: SHAWN MARIE GARRETT (Columbia University), JOEL BASSIN (Hunter College), JESSE ARON GREEN Artist, Whitney Biennial), ANDREA MERKX (Artist, dance curator) & TBA

The arrival of widespread interest in performance amongst contemporary artists has not immediately translated into an expanded interdisciplinary interest in that other, classically time-based medium, the theater. Nor has the theater, broadly speaking, seen fit to expand its categories to correspond with the sudden promiscuity of its traditional methodology. What is the nature of this reciprocal ignorance? Is it simply a question of incompatible constituencies? No doubt there is a deep divide in each community’s respective method of production – but are we so determined? This panel aims to examine the recent history of performance as it relates to current patterns of production and dissemination, with special consideration given to the divide between contemporary art and theater.

2:15 PM JEFF McMAHON: COUNTER INDICATIONS

Counter Indications, a collaboration between writer JEFF MCMAHON and media designer JACOB PINHOLSTER, is a live performance/installation examining forced confessions, the parameters of what is considered "cruel and unusual" treatment, and the role of influence in determining truth.  JEFF McMAHON, Assistant Professor in the School of Theatre and Film at Arizona State University, is the recipient of 8 NEA Fellowships in Choreography. His live works combining live speech and movement with media have been presented since 1980 at P.S. 122, Dance Theater Workshop, The Kitchen, PS 1, LACE, Cleveland Performance Art Fest., Jacob's Pillow, Highways, and numerous other venues in the U.S. and Europe.  He recently completed a writing residency at the Edward F. Albee Foundation. www.jeffmcmahonprojects.net

 3-4 LUNCH BREAK

4-6 PM NEW DRAMATURGIES: ARTS AND/IN THE ACADEMY

Moderators: JEFF JANISHESKI (O'NEILL THEATRE INSTITUTE) and ELEANOR SKIMIN (Dramaturge, PHD candidate, Brown University)

 Panel: ELAINE AVILA (Playwright, University of New Mexico), RANDY GENER (Playwright), CHARLOTTE MEEHAN (Playwright, Wheaton College), LISA SCHLESINGER Playwright, Columbia College Chicago), MATTHEW MAGUIRE (Playwright, Fordham University), LINSEY BOSTWICK (Big Art Group)

6-6:30 PM CLOSING EVENT: BRIAN KNEP: SPIRITUAL COMPUTING

BRIAN KNEP is a new media artist who uses science and technology to explore change, healing, struggle, and acceptance. Often his works are immersive and interactive, sensing and reacting to the people around them. Knep has exhibited internationally, including solo shows at the New Britain Museum of American Art and the McColl Center for Visual Art and group shows at the Milwaukee Art Museum and the Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art. His works have won awards from Ars Electronica, Americans for the Arts, AICA/New England and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. In 2005 Knep became the first artist-in-residence at Harvard Medical School in a program co-sponsored by Harvard's Office for the Arts. Knep lives and works in Boston and is represented by Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, NY and Judi Rotenberg Gallery, Boston.

7:00-9:30 PM ARTIST RECEPTION hosted by the Lark Play Development Center, 939 8th Avenue (@ 55th Street.

NoPassport’s work is made possible by:

Aravind Adyanthaya, Mando Alvarado, Bianca Bagatourian, Daniel Banks, Stacie Chaiken, Migdalia Cruz, George Fulginiti, Stephanie Gilman, Amy Gonzalez, Anne Hamilton, Karen Hartman, Lanna Joffrey, Madelyn Kent, Robert Leonard, Angelina Llongueras, Michelle Lopez-Rios, Matthew Maguire, Oliver Mayer, Chiori Miyagawa, Otis Ramsey-Zoe, Marco Antonio Rodriguez, Olga Sanchez, Tanya Saracho, Lisa Schlesinger, Octavio Solis, Saviana Stanescu and everyone at this Conference.

Affiliates for this Conference:

The Armenian Dramatic Arts Alliance strives to fulfill its mission of projecting the Armenian voice on a world stage through theater and film by offering contests for new writing, play readings and various educational programs. For more information, please see www.armeniandrama.org or www.biancabagatourian.com

Idiom is an online publication of urban artistic practice. By allowing emerging artists, writers and arts professionals to report on, review, and otherwise cover overlooked or under-thought aspects of the larger creative community, Idiom offers a local, engaged counterpoint to the prevailing discourse of contemporary art. www.idiommag.com

The Internationalists is a collective of directors from around the world whose mission is to create a more open, sustainable and interactive global theatrical community.  We foster creative diplomacy in order to build bridges between artists and audiences of all nations.  By developing a global network of artists, we promote the creation of contemporary performance with an emphasis on cross-cultural exchange and collaboration.  www.theinternationalists.org

New Perspectives Theatre Company (NPTC) is an award-winning company founded in 1991 as a multi-racial ensemble dedicated to using theatre as an agent for positive social change.  Our mission is to 1) develop and present new plays and playwrights, particularly women and people of color, 2) present classic plays in a style that sheds new light on our lives and work, and 3) offer theatre and its benefits to under-served audiences—especially young people and communities in need—to build life skills and promote positive participation in our society.

50/50 by 2020 is a grassroots movement of women theatre professionals and their advocates, with the mission of achieving employment parity by the centennial of winning suffrage for American women. The inequity of hiring practices in theatre is not only an economic and employment issue, but also silences the voices of those who represent more than half of humanity, more than half of the American population, and more than half of theatre ticket buyers.  The time has come to address the inequity—to take action and demand concrete results, and to do so on a specific timeline with a specific goal: 50/50 by 2020.

Lark Play Development Center was founded in 1994, the Lark is a laboratory for new voices and new ideas, providing playwrights with indispensable resources to develop their work. The Lark brings together actors, directors, playwrights and the community to allow writers to learn about their own work by seeing and hearing it, and by receiving feedback from a dedicated and supportive community. The company reaches into untapped local populations and across international boundaries to seek out and embrace unheard voices and diverse perspectives, celebrating differences in language and worldviews. The Lark also plays a leading role in advancing unknown writers and their works to audiences through carefully stewarded partnerships with a host of theaters, universities, community-based organizations, and NGOs, locally, nationally and globally.  www.larktheatre.org

The Nuyorican Poets Café was founded circa 1973 as a living room salon in the East Village apartment of writer and poet, Miguel Algarin. The mission of the Cafe is to create a multi-cultural venue that both nurtures artists and exhibits a variety of artistic works. Without limitation, we are dedicated to providing a stage for the arts with access for the widest public. www.nuyorican.org

New Dramatists is the country’s premier center for the support and development of playwrights. Founded in 1949 by Michaela O’Harra in association with Howard Lindsay, Richard Rodgers, Russel Crouse, Oscar Hammerstein II, John Golden, Moss Hart, Maxwell Anderson, John Wharton, John E. Sherwood and Elmer Rice, New Dramatists gives talented writers time and space to experiment and grow, sustained by an inspiring community of peers. www.newdramatists.org