GA Voice

Topher Payne’s ‘Morningsid­e’ playing Georgia Ensemble Theatre

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For someone used to being busy, Topher Payne may even be outdoing himself this season. His new play “Morningsid­e” just opened at Georgia Ensemble Theatre, then he steps into the lead role of “The Santaland Diaries” at Horizon Theatre for the holidays.

“Morningsid­e” is a project that began roughly three years ago for the gay playwright. When he went through a divorce in 2014, he took a lot of notes – not necessaril­y a journal, just random thoughts he wrote down. He told himself that one day he would do something with them.

“I started developing a concept about a woman throwing a baby shower for her daughter two days after she has separated from her husband,” Payne said. “It’s that period of time when you are not fit for company, but she is bound and determined to prove that the ruins of her life are not going to impact the party. That is where we start, and it get worse from there.”

Set in the Morningsid­e area of Atlanta, the play has an all-female cast. Some of the other characters are a guest of honor, who is expecting her first child and is trying to figure out the balance of being career-driven and being a great mother; a best friend, who is a lesbian pediatrici­an without children; and is a lesbian; a bartender from Charleston; and a conservati­ve aunt from Texas. The drama is based on the perspectiv­es all these women have.

“That is what I really wanted to do,” Payne said. “I see shows like ‘ Glengarry Glen Ross’ or ‘Twelve Angry Men’ with a big group of men but not those kinds of shows for women that often”.

Payne is known for his witty dialogue and three-dimensiona­l characters, especially his women.

“I know that I am drawn to women in general because they are more open to disclosure, and as a playwright I find it interestin­g when a character is willing to give voice to their needs and fears and opinions,” he said. “That is certainly true in the women in my life.”

This is the playwright’s fifth show with Georgia Ensemble Theatre, and he will continue his collaborat­ions with new artistic director Alan Kilpatrick, who is taking over for theater founder Bob Farley in the spring.

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