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Playfest provides a platform for student playwrights

Max Collins/Daily
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BY EMMA JESZKE
Daily TV/New Media Editor
Published March 16, 2010

This weekend, Ann Arbor has an opportunity to see theater in its rawest, purest form. Playfest, a festival that features staged theatrical readings of student-written plays, offers a new twist on the traditional productions put on at Studio One. With no sets or costumes, and actors with scripts in hand, audiences can get an inside look at student playwrights as their work is presented in public for the very first time.

The process behind this year’s Playfest started last fall with the course Theatre 327: Intermediate Playwriting, when Department of Theatre & Drama Prof. OyamO selected six student playwrights whose work seemed ready to be pushed a little further. Consequently, these writers enrolled in Theatre 429: Playwriting Towards Production, a course designed to help them understand their work as an object to be produced, culminating in productions during the week-long Playfest.

“In a sense, (the course) is kind of like a whisper of a professional developmental situation,” OyamO said. “The object is to have (students) develop the play as far as they can.”

“The thing isn’t to make people write in a particular, rigid form,” OyamO explained. “This is art, there is no such thing as (a right way) in my opinion. But the idea is to somehow or another get them to recognize what they are doing and why they are doing it. And to remind them to write from their heart and intuition as opposed to some particular notion of how a play is supposed to be.

“I mean, Edward Albee does not write like Shakespeare,” he added.

After students enrolled in the course discussed their work in class, each play was assigned a student director to draw up theoretical scenic designs and, of course, cast the plays. In Theatre 429 students with all different areas of theatrical expertise are given the opportunity to work together on something original and virtually independent from the authority of a professor.

“Playfest is representing the collaboration process,” said Emilie Samuelson, a School of Music, Theatre & Dance junior and one of the Playfest writers. “And that’s what theater is about — collaboration. To take what we’ve learned and to try it out on our own, to apply it to something, is really important.”

Audiences attending Playfest will have a chance to participate in the collaboration process too. The director of each play will lead a talk-back session with the audience, during which audience members can ask the playwright questions or offer general comments. The playwright will then ask the audience questions, aiming to gain feedback on the production and gauge the overall response.

“It’s hard to imagine how something is going to be received,” Samuelson said. “You can justify it in your head all you want, but whether or not the audience is going to get it, you never know.”

OyamO believes the talk-back session with the audience is crucial to the professional developmental aspect of Playfest.

“When we get that audience feedback, it becomes a very educational situation where you are learning by doing,” he said. “Some kids get very excited and some may be a little scared, but you have to get over that.

“There is no such thing as failure if you learned something,” he added.

Playfest gives students who may not necessarily be writing concentrators a one-of-a-kind opportunity to have their voices heard and to participate in keeping the contemporary theater fresh.

“Going out into the real world, the chance of getting a staged reading for an inexperienced playwright is slim to none,” Samuelson said.

“With the way the theater is right now, it seems like there are so many revivals,” said Matt Bouse, School of Music, Theatre & Dance junior and Playfest writer. “So it encourages students to write and then rewrite. New work is cool and important, and it helps to keep the theater alive.