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Pride Films and Plays Announces

The Five Finalists in

The 2013 Great Gay Play Contest

Five finalists have been named in Pride Films and Plays' Great Gay Play Contest for 2013. These five plays will be performed as enhanced staged readings (with movement and design elements) by members of the Artistic Ensemble of Pride Films and Plays during Gay Play Weekend, May 16 to 19, 2013 at Center on Halsted's Hoover-Leppen Theatre, 3656 N. Halsted, Chicago. A full performance schedule for the weekend will be announced in January.

 

The finalists include Directions For Restoring The Apparently Dead by Martin Casella, The Red Train by B. V. Marshall, Dancing In The Mirror by Perry Ojeda, Forbidden Glass by Kirt Shineman, and Sand Man by G. Williams Zorn. PFP congratulates the finalists and all who entered the contest.

 

"The quality and variety of the works we read during this contest round was exciting," said PFP's Executive Director David Zak. "The variety of themes being explored and the styles being experimented with bring great hope for the future."

 

Synopses of the plays and bios of the playwrights:

 

Directions For Restoring The Apparently Dead by Martin Casella, New York, NY

 

Two men in their 40s, best friends since childhood, one gay, one straight, make an escape to the north of England after both have experienced life-changing tragedies. As past and present overlap and intersect, they begin to examine the origins of their relationship, and the limits of it as well.

 

Martin Casella's award-winning plays include The Irish Curse (off-Broadway, London, published by Samuel French); Scituate; Grand Junction; Beautiful Dreamer; Desert Fire; Paydirt; Mates. He was the bookwriter for Play It Cool (off-Broadway; GLAAD, OCC nomination); Saint Heaven; Paper Moon; Happy Holidays; Taking Care Of Mrs. Carroll. A Cal Arts graduate, he also teaches playwriting to LBGTQ kids at NYC's Harvey Milk High School. Member of the Dramatists Guild and WGA. www.martincasella.weebly.com

 

The Red Train by B. V. Marshall, Plainfield, NJ

 

Julian, a young composer, finds his idol drunk in a Parisian café. The older man spews invective and insult instead of wisdom, while both men covet the same waiter. Julian then rejects his idol, his best friend, and everyone else until he faces the emotional turmoil he's helped to create.

 

Benjamin V. Marshall's plays have earned recognition from HBO New Writers Project, New York's Theatre for a New City, and in play festivals from Alaska to Australia, including Purchasing Power for Chicago's WBEZ radio.  Awards: NJ State Council on the Arts, VCCA, and Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation. Dramatists Guild.

 

Dancing In The Mirror by Perry Ojeda, Studio City, CA

 

Dancing In The Mirror is a drama with original music and dance. Professional dancer Danny Torres, in the twilight of his career, inherits a dance studio from his childhood mentor. Returning to his rural home town in southern Michigan, he must wrestle with the ghosts of his past reopening old wounds with the family he left behind. 

 

Perry Ojeda, writer and actor, received critical acclaim for his first solo performance piece, The Trick, which was presented in New York, Chicago, and Dublin. He has written and produced the webseries "H.A! Homosexuals Anonymous." As an actor, Mr. Ojeda has performed on and off-Broadway, in London's West End, and in television and film. For more info:www.PerryOjeda.com

 

Forbidden Glass by Kirt Shineman, Peoria, AZ

 

Forbidden Glass is a story of illicit desires in a foreboding land. When Javad, a gay Iranian, sweet-talks Barry, an American reporter, into helping him get an interview for sanctuary in Turkey, he unravels a tale which has unforeseen consequences. Unluckily, the telling of his tale spills blood, rather than sand. 

 

Kirt Shineman, a full Professor of Communication at Glendale Community College in Glendale, Arizona, has won multiple national and international directing and playwright awards. He is currently working on a play about Faust and Gutenberg titled The Black Art. In 2012, the off-Broadway premiere of Allie Oop's Last Fantastic Day at the Manhattan Repertory Theatre played to sold out audiences. The play was published in 2012 by Original Works Publishing. His play Forbidden Glass (Emerging Artists' Theater, New York City, 2010 and 2011), was an O'Neill Theater Conference semifinalist, and presented PT 2nd Draft Series 2011, and received a staged reading in Palm Springs at Script2Stage2Screen Theater Company, January 2012.  In 2012, his 10-minute play monologue, First Person, was performed and filmed by Artists' Path Company. His play Germs and Viruses was a finalist in the FABUM's 2011 Playwright Competition in Washington DC. 

 

Sand Man by G. William Zorn, Kalamazoo, MI

 

In 2007, a boy named Lawrence King was shot in the head for giving another boy a valentine.  Over a two-week period, no major news outlet reported on the story.  Sand Man is about one man's frustration with the media's willingness to ignore this kind of account and the consequences of caring about it at all.

 

G. William Zorn - Bill - is currently in the last year of the English Ph.D. program at Western Michigan University.  His plays have been produced all over the country and he has won numerous awards for playwriting, including the 2009 Mark Twain Prize from the John F. Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. and the Gwen Frostic Playwriting Award in 2010 and 2012.

 

About Pride Films and Plays

 

Pride Films and Plays, based in Chicago, links an international network of writers with professionals working in film and theater.  PFP fosters excellent writing for the stage and screen that speaks not only to the GLBT community, but is also essential viewing for all audiences.

 

Using stories with gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender characters or themes, Pride Films and Plays develops human stories that become a cultural bridge to understanding.   

 

Through readings, contests, classes, screenings, and full theater productions, PFP engages artists and audiences in the full developmental process needed to make great artistic experiences.  

 

In addition to the Great Gay Play Contest, PFP conducts the Great Gay Screenplay Contest, and Women's Work for plays and screenplays with lesbian characters or themes written by women. It is also staging a full season of work in Chicago this year, including the world premiere of previous contest finalists At The Flash (running now through December 16 at Center on Halsted) and the musical Under A Rainbow Flag (running March 23 to April 21 at the Main Stage), as well as a 20th anniversary revival of Beautiful Thing (running January 16 to February 16 at the Athenaeum Theatre.)

 

About Center on Halsted

 

Center on Halsted is the Midwest's most comprehensive community center dedicated to advancing the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) community and securing the health and well-being of LGBTQ individuals. More than 1,000 community members visit the Center every day, located in the heart of Chicago's Lakeview neighborhood. The diverse programs offered range from volleyball, yoga, and cooking classes to free rapid HIV testing, group therapy, vocational training, and comprehensive senior and youth programs. For more information, visit www.centeronhalsted.org

 

For more details on the Great Gay Play Contest, or any of PFP's writing contests or productions, visit www.pridefilmsandplays.com.                    

 

BEAUTIFUL THING MAKES A MOVE!

Director John Nasca and his cast are hard at work on the 20th anniversary production of Jonathan Harvey's great Beautiful Thing. And, like many great show biz sagas, Beautiful Thing has had its share of twists and turns.  Follow all of the exciting details on cast member Robert Hilliard's blog.  

In short, Beautiful Thing will now be performed at The Athenaeum Theater, 2936 North Southport. For tickets to Beautiful Thing, go here

And please consider supporting Beautiful Thing by making a tax-deductible donation to Pride Films and Plays here
David Leeper

Only two weekends remain to see

our Jeff-recommended Production of

At The Flash, 

starring David Leeper!

 

Performances are Wednesday through Saturday at 7:30, and Sunday at 3:30 to December 16 only. (Please note there is NO performance on Friday, December 7.)

 

Get tickets here.

  

"Leeper delivers many moments of exquisite poignancy...the show's vision of a gay club as an incubator for social change is ultimately moving."

   -Justin Hayford, Chicago Reader

 

"Under the direction of David Zak, however, the vividly etched portraits never disintegrate into caricature, but remain distinct and immediately recognizable throughout the show's brief 80 minutes of playing time. The stories make for an engaging and surprisingly epic narrative."

   - Mary Shen Barnidge, Windy City Times

 

"Gay or straight, you will enjoy the show, there will be a part of the play or a line you will not forget. 'I swear to Cher' this show will make you think. It will make you think about how (far) the LGBTQ community has come since the 1960s. The show made me laugh, made me think, made me reflect on my own life as a coming out later in life as a lesbian. I truly enjoyed the show and encourage everyone to see it."

   - Anna Costillo, TheQu.co

 

"At The Flash succeeds most as an accurate and heartfelt piece of gay history. It's one which can be shared with audiences of all types, as it has little actual sexual content or references that might be uncomfortable for those with more conservative sensibilities. At The Flash could be a great primer on gay history for younger members of the community or anyone else seeking a better understanding of America's journey toward providing space for LGBTs to live open lives with the same opportunities for safety, security and happiness as anyone else in the society."

   - John Olson, ChicagoTheaterBeat.com

 

Get tickets here. 

At The Flash
Find a complete calendar of PFP Events here.  
 
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PRIDE FILMS AND PLAYS

www.pridefilmsandplays.com 

 

David Zak

Executive Director

 

John Nasca   

Artistic Associate

 

Allison Fradkin   

Literary Coordinator Women's Work

 

Artistic Ensemble

Derek Van Barham 

Charles A. Berglund 

Derek Bertelsen 

David Besky

Tom Chiola

Brian Grey

Sean-Edward Hall

Michael Hampton

Jude Hansen

Valerie Heckman

John Highberger 

Kris Hyland

Kelley Keough

Joan McGrath

Michelle McKenzie-Voigt

Kyra Morris

Tiffany Nasca 

Cyra K. Polizzi 

Stewart Quarles 

Beth Richards 

Nelson Rodriguez 

Chad Ryan 

Patrick Rybarczyk 

Mark Smaglinski 

Jamie Smith  

Andrew Souders 

Alex St. John 

Nicholas Stockwell 

Kelli Walker

Kevin Webb

Lee Wichman