San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)
CYGNET ROLLS OUT ITS NEXT FINISH LINE PLAY COMMISSION, ‘RUN/FIRE’
Cygnet Theatre will continue its Bill and Judy Garrett Finish Line Commission new-play festival next month with the opening of Aurin Squire’s “Run/fire,” in a streaming production that will play Feb. 8-14.
Now in its fifth year under the sponsorship of longtime Cygnet donors Bill and Judy Garrett, the new-play series usually includes forums, workshops and performances that are open to the public. This is the first time it is being produced virtually.
Each year, three plays are selected for development. One of the plays developed at the 2019 Finish Line festival, Herbert Siguenza’s “Bad Hombres/good Wives,” went on to receive its world premiere later that year at San Diego Repertory Theatre.
The series kicked off quietly in November with a one-week Zoom workshop of “The Wiring and the
Switches,” described by its playwright, Angelica Chéri, as a thriller about gaslighting, mental illness and troubled relationships in the Black community. It’s about a forensic psychologist whose former romantic partner — whom she believed to be dead — turns up very much alive. The play was originally conceived in the Geffen Writers Group at Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles, where Chéri lives. The workshop was closed to the public, but Chéri, director Reginald L. Douglas and festival director Rob Lutfy talked about experience in a video that can be found on Cygnet’s Youtube page at youtube.com/user/ cygnetsd.
The next play, “Run/fire,” is about a college student who has been implicated in a crime spree and whose quest for justice sets off a chain reaction that ripples across the entire town. The play’s weeklong Zoom workshop, under the direction of Lamar
Perry, will be available to the public in the streamed production for a pay-what-youcan price scale of $5, $15, $25 and $50. For tickets, call (619) 337-1525 or visit cygnettheatre.com.
Lutfy said it was important to adapt the series for the pandemic and carry on because it celebrates the voices of BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and people of color) artists like Squire and Chéri.
“Bill and Judy Garrett understand that the biggest thing that we can do as a theater community is to continue to find ways to support the theater makers,” Lutfy said in a statement.
“We have stayed true to the mission of the program: to provide the time, flexibility, energy and resources to enable playwrights to push their play to the final draft. This program has always been about the process and not the product.”