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Scripts In Play: Season 30

Scripts in Play: Season 30

Curator: Quill Nebeker (Associate Producer, Avant Bard)
Festival Producer: Jon Jon Johnson

Avant Bard’s signature play-reading series showcases fresh scripts with huge potential, presented by rising local professional talent. This year’s selection is about new stories that engage with the past. That might mean stories from antiquity told in a new way, or a fresh twist on characters from the theatrical canon, or stories from history not yet well known. In each specially-curated live event, you’ll see artists reckoning right now with what it means to be a classic today. 

Meet Murasaki Shikibu Followed by Book-Signing, and Other Things
By Julia Izumi
Directed by Dan Westbrook
Friday, December 13, 2019 | 7:30 PM
Theatre on the Run

She’s finally doing it. After a millennium, countless translations and a well-earned place in the canon of literature, she’s…going on a book tour. Who? Oh, only Murasaki Shikibu, the semi-anonymous author of, oh, only the first novel in the history of the world, The Tale of Genji. In this sharp satire, a timeless Lady Murasaki visits your favorite small, independent bookstore. She speaks on important historical subjects like juice cleanses, Taylor Swift, the extremely overrated Sei Shonagon, and, when she feels like it, her very important book. Along the way, she’ll touch on a millennia of cultural change, what it means to lose one’s language, and what it feels like to be forgotten before you’re ever properly remembered. 

In three words: tender, cutting, 雨宿り[Japanese: Amayadori, meaning “to take cover from the rain until it passes”]

The Sweet Science of Bruising
By Joy Wilkinson
Directed by Rebecca Speas
Saturday, December 14, 2019 | 7:30 PM
Theatre on the Run

London, 1869. An amphitheatre in Islington, right at the intersection of London’s upper and lower class. Tonight’s entertainment? The Lady Boxing Championship of the World. The Sweet Science of Brusing follows four women of widely different standing, all on a quest to be the best. Boxing is brutal, but it’s the fights for women outside the ring, the ones that became the movement we now call Feminism, that leave the deepest bruises. The Sweet Science of Bruising is “a well-aimed swing at the politics of sex and class: …a knockout.” (The Times of London).

In three words: eloquent, smarting, righteous

bobrauschenbergamerica
By Charles Mee
Directed by Quill Nebeker
Sunday, December 15, 2019 | 2 PM
Theatre on the Run

“(A chicken slowly descends from the flies on a string. It has a sign around its neck that says: bobrauschenbergamerica.)” Thus begins Charles Mee’s absurd collage of pop art americana. The play was written in the same way Robert Rauschenberg made art: putting things together on a feeling rather than logic, working (as he would’ve said) in the gap between art and life. Before the night is done, you’ll see a laundry ballet, hear a pitch for an extremely problematic but quintessentially American film, experience a truck stop slip ‘n slide made of gin and tonic, and feel more than a few love stories and heartbreaks. 

In three words: absurd, delighting, flyingchickenamericana

Men on Boats 
By Jaclyn Backhaus
Directed by Toni Rae Salmi
Thursday, December 19, 2019 | 7:30 PM
Theatre on the Run

Ten explorers. Four boats. One Grand Canyon. Men on Boats is the true(ish) story of an 1869 expedition, when a one-armed captain and a crew of insane but insanely loyal volunteers chart the course of the Colorado River. In this retelling, though, there aren’t any men, nor are there any boats, for that matter. That’s because the story is performed entirely by…well, not men. Called “off-the-canyon-wall funny” by Variety and “marvelously destabilizing both as history and theatre” by New York Magazine, Men On Boats charts a new course on the old story of male bravado. At once comic and sincere, it is an honest look at the fallible intentions of the so-called American pioneers.

In three words: earnest, canyoneering, machismo-ish

By Sea
By Laura Fuentes
Directed by Aria Velz
Friday, December 20, 2019 | 7:30 PM
Theatre on the Run

Amanda is the widow captain of the good ship Forthright. At her side is the ever-stalwart first mate Henrietta (she’d prefer you call her Hank). While they try to make an honest seafaring living in a feudal town, Amanda’s daughter Priscilla wants to form a family of her own. When timid scholar Neils falls overboard for Priscilla, Hank realizes she may have cabin fever for a certain widow captain herself. Did we mention this all takes place at the docks of Elsinore, featuring cameos straight out of Hamlet? Written in Elizabethan-style free verse, By Sea is a dockside romantic comedy about ships, storms, and sanctuary in unexpected harbors.

In three words: romantic, seafaring, very like a whale

Paper Dream
By Lyra Yang
Directed by Jennifer Knight
Sunday, December 22, 2019 | 2 PM
Theatre on the Run

From 1910-40, roughly 175,000 Chinese immigrated to the United States, most through Angel Island in San Francisco Bay. Paper Dream is the story of four generations of Chinese women imprisoned together on Angel Island. It is about the ghosts they left behind, the spirit of who they are, and the dream of what they might become. It is a haunting period drama that reckons with the spectre of nationalism still stalking immigrants at America’s borders. 

In three words: historical, moving, 阿弥陀佛 [Cantonese: E-Mi-Tuo-Fuo, meaning “Buddha blesses”]

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This program is supported in part by Arlington County through the Arlington Cultural Affairs division of Arlington Economic Development and the Arlington Commission for the Arts, and by the Virginia Commission for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.

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