cityArts July 20, 2009

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CityArts www.cityarts.info

New York’s Review of Culture

JULY/AUGUST 2009

MARIO NAVES REVIEWS JAMES ENSOR AT MOMA.

Uptown Girls (and Boys) Major theater institutions offer opportunities in their smaller spaces for emerging playwrights to find their way BY MARK BLANKENSHIP

Joan Marcus

Lila Rose Kaplan’s Wildflower will be presented as part of Second Stage Theatre Uptown’s series.

econd Stage Theatre Uptown. Atlantic Stage Two. LCT3. No, they’re not sequels to summer blockbusters you never saw: They’re programs from major theater companies—“LCT” stands for Lincoln Center Theater— designed to support emerging playwrights by fully staging their work in small venues. A direct response to the “development hell” problem, in which promising scripts get workshopped forever and never produced, these initiatives have become so popular that every prominent theater seems to want one. Keep an eye out for Vineyard 2: The Reckoning. Launched in 2002, Second Stage Theatre Uptown is among the oldest of these programs, and it has given close to a dozen

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writers a long-awaited break. Playwright Lila Rose Kaplan, for instance, has been getting readings and regional productions for years, and her play Wildflower, about a volatile summer in a tiny Colorado town, has had two major workshops. On July 27, it will have its world premiere at Second Stage’s intimate McGinn/Cazale Theatre, located at Broadway and West 76th Street, and Kaplan will finally have a serious New York presence. But as associate artistic director Chris Burney notes, the series isn’t just about finding good scripts. “Obviously, the entry point is a specific play that makes you so passionate that you want to put it on right away. But ideally, that’s just the beginning of a relationship,” he says. “Ideally, you and the writer are going to

discover that you like each other and want to keep working together. In that way, it’s not just about the show. It’s about the life of an institution.” Second Stage has certainly reaped fruit from its Uptown experiments. After mounting Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa’s gothic drama The Mystery Plays uptown in 2004, the theater named him its resident playwright, and last season, it presented his sexually charged drama, Good Boys and True, on its Off-Broadway mainstage. (The company recently purchased Broadway’s Helen Hayes Theater.) Similarly, Judith Ivey directed the comedy, The Butcher of Baraboo, for the Uptown series in 2007, and now she’s helming Vanities, a mainstage musical running through August 2.

So what makes a good artistic relationship here? For Second Stage, the Uptown series is a chance to learn which promising writers are also equipped to handle the pressure of being produced in New York. Though they’re under less scrutiny than Broadway productions, the shows are still open for review, and with only three weeks of rehearsal and a few weeks of previews, they have to come together quickly. For a writer who’s mostly used to staged readings and grad school courses, the experience can be eye opening. “In that last moment during previews, when the playwrights have to make the hard, soul-searching decisions— that’s when you find out who gets separated as

see UPTOWN GIRLS on page 6


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