The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Internatio­nal Playwright’s Festival begins Friday

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TORRINGTON — The Warner Theatre will present its 6th annual Internatio­nal Playwright­s Festival held in the Nancy Marine Studio Theatre, Friday and Saturday night.

The mission of the Internatio­nal Playwright­s Festival is to recognize the work of emerging and establishe­d playwright­s and to build a link between playwright­s, the theatre community and our audiences. The festival is a celebratio­n of new works by playwright­s from across the country and around the globe. For the sixth year, more than 200 plays were submitted from across the United States and Canada and as far away as Australia. Nine winners have been selected and one play is invited to participat­e in the 2017 festival.

This year's festival is themed Things Aren't Always As They Seem and the schedule is as follows: Friday, October 13, 8 p.m. “Crystal Ball” by Donna Spector (New York) , Directed by Earle "Wes” Baldwin.

Playwright Donna Spector was walking down Lexington Avenue in Manhattan and saw a sign “Psychic Readings” in the window of an exotic looking shop and that sparked the idea for this play.

Madame Anastasia, a fortune teller in Manhattan’s West Village, encounters problems when her critical and demanding Ghost Mother emerges from a crystal ball and interferes with Anastasia’s attempts to tell Monique, a young actress, what the future holds for her. Then Paul, a journalist, enters and falls in love with Monique, as predicted rather irascibly by Anastasia’s mother.

“Signing Off” by Steven Otfinoski (Connecticu­t). Directed by Sharon A. Wilcox.

Steven Otfinoski is a member of the Dramatists Guild and Squarewrig­hts, a playwright­s’ group in Stratford, Connecticu­t. Twice a year the Squarewrig­hts put on an afternoon of tenminute plays at the local library called “Quickies in the Stacks.” All the plays must relate to a central theme. In the case of “Signing Off,” the theme was potboilers.

Romance author Delia Lockheart, has come to Dayton, Ohio to promote her latest effort, Passion’s Burning Ember. Among those attending the book signing is Richard Daley, whose wife is one of Delia’s most devoted readers. Richard, however, has his own reasons for meeting Delia and their strange encounter will have surprising repercussi­ons for both of them.

“Never Give Up” by James Hutchison (Alberta, Canada). Directed by Katherine Ray.

James Hutchison is a playwright focused on comedy, romance and mystery. The play was inspired by his own attempts to win the Pint Sized Play Festival in Tenby Wales.

Festival director Todd Sparks has asked Playwright Nigel Davenport to stop entering the Short Cuts Playwritin­g Festival because Nigel is such a terrible playwright. But instead of quitting, this only inspires Nigel to try harder so he can win the festival and make his mother proud. (Incidental­ly this year, after four years of trying, NEVER GIVE UP is also a winner at the Pint Sized Festival in Wales, too).

“Mountain Life” by Stanley Toledo (California). Directed by Keith Paul.

Stanley Toledo’s fulllength plays have been produced by the Morgan Opera House in Aurora, New York, and the Las Vegas Little Theatre in Las Vegas. He lives in California and the idea for this play came to him while driving in rural Northern California. Stanley saw a roadside sign that cautioned drivers, “Bigfoot Crossing.” Fantasizin­g as he motored along, he heard bits of dialogue, which soon formed a plot. The result is a different but interestin­g story around the Bigfoot legend.

An angry woman on the run stops at a café in the mountains. The café owner shows her as much local hospitalit­y as he can. But when a dark limo pulls up to café, the owner soon finds himself in the middle

of a situation he wants no part of.

“Mark My Worms” by Cary Pepper (California). Directed by Taryn Glasser.

Cary Pepper has had work presented throughout the United States and internatio­nally. Cary is a member of the Dramatists Guild, and a four-time contributo­r to Applause Books’ Best American Short Plays series. The play was inspired by his experience­s working in the pre-autocorrec­t days of typewriter­s, when it became very clean clear that one wrong letter in a worm word could have profound consequenc­es.

Mason has been cast in a newly-discovered, neverbefor­e-seen play by the world-class absurdist LaSalle Montclare. But the play must be performed exactly as written. And Montclare, who worked on a typewriter when there was no Spell Check, was a lousy typist. Which is why the play opens with Mason holding his co-star at gunpoint and having to say, “I’ve got a bun. Come out or I’ll hoot.”

Saturday, Oct. 14, 8 p.m. “Italian Now” by Charlene A. Donaghy (Connecticu­t). Directed by Matt Cornish

Charlene A. Donaghy: production­s and awards from New York City to Los Angeles, in Great Britain and Canada. Madison Square Production­s holds the Broadway option for Charlene’s The Quadroon and the Dove. Hansen Publishing Group publishes Charlene’s Bones of Home and Other Plays. Thrice published in Best American Short Plays. Smith & Krause will publish Italian Now in 2018. Connecticu­t Regional Representa­tive for The Dramatists Guild of America. After 9/11, knowing some of her relatives were being ill-treated because of their heritage, one of her cousins said to her, “We have to be Italian now.” That statement stuck in Charlene’s head for 15 years and, finally, in 2016, with the debates on who should be in America and who shouldn’t, the voices of her family called out to her, so this play, one of her most personal, was born.

Cousins Fadi and Mahmud are starting a new life with a Middle Eastern restaurant,

cooking with their family, bringing to life the old-country recipes of their grandparen­ts. But, when another terrorist attack befalls the United States, identity and safety come into question with choices forced by the reality of terror.

“Saving Grace” by Bara Swain (New York). Directed by Rebecca Russo Ozerhoski.

Bara Swain’s plays and films have been performed in over 100 venues in U.S. and abroad. Critical Care, featured in Serious Daring: Creative Writing in Four Genres (Oxford U. Press), serves as a key reading for the craft of dialogue. Other publishers include Smith & Kraus, Art Age Press, Applause Books, and Original Works. In “Saving Grace,” her goal was to portray the complicate­d mother/daughter bond, fraught with conflictin­g expectatio­ns and misinterpr­etations; love and understand­ing. She was also inspired by a long-ago memory of her own young daughter, who once begged her to buy her a yo-yo because she said, mournfully, “I have no special skills.”

Underemplo­yed Grace is discovered trying out a new skill – balancing a tennis racket on her finger – when her divorced mother makes a surprise visit. The play explores responsibi­lity, disappoint­ment and mother/daughter relationsh­ips when Grace’s Uncle Lenny ends up in a nearby hospital.

“Mr. Roys' Bicycle Repair Shop” by Cynthia Chapman (Massachuss­etts) .Directed by Lucia M. Dressel

Cynthia Chapman is excited to once again have a piece selected for the WTIPF. In 2016, Cynthia was an invited Guest Artist for the 10th Kennedy Center Playwritin­g Intensive. Her full-length play, SkyChef, was a Playwright­s’ Center 2014 Core Apprentice Program Finalist. She holds her MFA from Lesley University. The first moments in Mr. Roys’ Bicycle Repair Shop are inspired from her childhood – as a petite homage to my “Mr. Roys.” From there, the characters of her life are transforme­d through the creative machine, creating a modern day story of family and feminist themes that affect children and the adults that love them.

When Mr. Roys opens his impromptu bicycle shop, he soon finds out he has much more to repair than Lulu’s suspicious­ly flat tire.

“The Mourning After” by John Ozerhoski (Connecticu­t). Directed by Tony Leone.

John Ozerhoski has been involved in the local theatre scene since 1995. He can be heard weekly on the radio as host of FM 97.3 WZBG’s “Backstage with Johnny O”. As a die-hard Hartford Whalers fan since the age of 14, this story basically wrote itself. Since 2017 marks the 20th anniversar­y of when they relocated to NC, John thought there was no better time to pay homage to a team that was the heart of CT and all things sports.

Two friends sort through the agony of losing their beloved sports team to another state altogether. With the help of some booze, a wife, and their fond memories, they seek to find the closure they have been looking for and a way to reconcile with the realizatio­n that they are gone.

“A Lighter Shade Of Dave” by Reed Halvorson (South Carolina). Directed by Sharon A. Wilcox.

North Dakota born, Reed

Halvorson has called Greenville, SC home for 12 years. An MFA Playwritin­g graduate from University of Nebraska Omaha, he teaches theatre at Christ Church Episcopal School. Along with 6 years in HS education, he is an actor and director in his community. His inspiratio­n is his daughter, Carly. “A Lighter Shade Of Dave” began 7 years ago as a local play festival reading inspired by and prior to a production of Psycho Beach Party. Family is one of Reed’s recurring themes. As a father to a daughter, fictional exploratio­ns of their relationsh­ip through humor helps him to weather the oncoming storm of her growing up.

A celebratio­n with friends ends in a life-altering surprise for only child, Maddie. Faced with an entirely new look at her parents, Dave and Valerie, this tight-knit family will be forced to redefine their relationsh­ip through the lens of love.

To purchase tickets, call the Warner Box Office at 860-489-7180 or visit warnerthea­tre.org.

Studio Theatre Series Sponsored by Northwest Community Bank

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? The Warner Theatre will host the Internatio­nal Playwright­s Festival Oct. 13-14 in Torrington.
Contribute­d photo The Warner Theatre will host the Internatio­nal Playwright­s Festival Oct. 13-14 in Torrington.

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