Pacific Playwrights Festival brings new works to SCR
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Young Chang
From a farm in South Wales to a prep school in South Africa, from a
shabby stage graced by a theater-hopeful named William Shakespeare to a
stop at Costa Mesa’s Noguchi Garden, this year’s Pacific Playwrights
Festival is as varied in subject as it is in locale.
With 10 productions, more than eight script readings and a
collaboration production by five Latino writers for SCR’s Hispanic
Playwright’s Project, playgoers and play-writers will gather at the
Repertory through July 1 to see as well as be seen.
“What we hope to establish is that the work we’re doing here is really
quality,” said Jerry Patch, project director for the festival. “That some
of the best new plays in the country are being seen here every year.”
Patch added that part of the goal is to have other theaters pick up
original commissioned pieces from SCR and produce them as part of their
season.
He is especially confident of this year’s shows.
“I think it’s perhaps the strongest group of plays that we’ve had
since we started the festival,” Patch said.
Begun in 1998, some of the past commissioned pieces from the festival
have since gone on to premiere at SCR’s Mainstage and Second Stage. This
year’s festival incorporates the 16th annual Hispanic Playwright’s
Project, designed to further writers of Latino ancestry.
Their collaboration piece, “California Scenarios,” is one of the
festival’s newest features.
Set in Costa Mesa’s Noguchi Garden and penned by five Latino writers,
the series of short plays were written to celebrate California’s deserts,
waterways, pine forests and grassy hills.
Writers Luis Alfaro, Joann Fari’as, Anne Garci’a-Romero, Jose Cruz
Gonzales and Octavio Solis teamed up for a story themed, unintentionally
almost, with the idea of home.
“Of finding a place that is home, of connecting to a place that feels
like home,” Patch said.
Jennifer Kiger, associate director of the festival and literary
manager for the Repertory, said each playwright was brought to the garden
and asked to record pretty much whatever inspiration they came up with.
“What we ended up with was this amazing collection of very distinct
voices that all come together in this space,” Kiger said. “This is the
first time we’ve attempted anything like the “California Scenario.”
The Pacific Playwrights Festival’s lineup also features Amy Freed’s
“The Beard of Avon,” Lucinda Coxon’s “Nostalgia” and readings of works
including “Sweaty Palms,” “Hold Please” and “The Falls.”
“All the plays are different from one another and I’m very
enthusiastic about all of them,” Patch said. “I don’t think there’s any
play I wouldn’t trot out to whoever was interested.”
FYI
Tickets to the festival are $8-$18. For information on dates and
times, call (714) 708-5555 or go to o7 https://www.scr.org.
f7
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