EAST WEST PLAYERS ANNOUNCES INAUGURAL PLAYWRIGHTS GROUP

East WestEast West Players (EWP), the nation’s longest-running professional theatre of color in the country and the largest producing organization of Asian American artistic work, is pleased to announce the launch of its inaugural playwrights group, providing space and artistic support over the course of a year for six writers. The 2017 program is directed by playwright Alice Tuan and composed of all-female playwrights, as part of EWP’s 51st Anniversary Season, Radiant, that focuses on featuring stories by and about women.

“The inaugural playwrights group is a brilliant and amazing gathering of artists, whose work I deeply admire and cannot wait to have in residence at EWP over the coming year,” says EWP Artistic Director Snehal Desai. “East West Players hopes to provide an artistic home for these talented playwrights, so they can explore their creative voice. Each playwright will focus on a new work of their choosing while in residency.”

“I look forward to engaging with these exciting playwright voices and continue to activate (and agitate) vibrant theatrical artistry,” says playwright Alice Tuan. “I’m thrilled to be part of Snehal Desai’s vision for EWP, his programming of new Asian American voices, and bringing a collective of interdisciplinary talents to Little Tokyo.”

The members of the 2017 inaugural playwrights group are Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, Larissa FastHorse, Sigrid Gilmer, Erin La Rosa, Jeanne Sakata, and Kristina Wong.

Frances Cowhig

Frances Cowhig

Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig’s produced plays include Snow in Midsummer (Royal Shakespeare Company) and The World of Extreme Happiness (Manhattan Theatre Club, Goodman Theatre), and she was awarded the Wasserstein Prize.

 

 

 

Larissa FastHorse

Larissa Fasthorse. Photo credit: Conor Horgan

Larissa FastHorse is a member of the Sicangu Lakota Nation. Her produced plays include What Would Crazy Horse Do (Kansas City Repertory Theatre) and Urban Rez (Cornerstone Theater Company), and she is the recipient of the PEN USA Literary Award for Drama.

 

 

 

 

Sigrid Gilmer

Sigrid Gilmer

Sigrid Gilmer’s produced plays include Harry and the Thief (Skylight Theatre Company) and Slavey (Clubbed Thumb). She is a recipient of the Map Fund Creative Exploration Grant and The James Irvine Foundation Fellowship, and is a USA Ford Fellow in Theatre.

 

 

 

Erin La Rosa

Erin La Rosa

Erin La Rosa is the author of two nonfiction works, Womanskills and The Big Redhead Book. She currently serves as the Deputy Editorial Director for BuzzFeed and has performed at Mortified, “Funny but True” at the LA Times Book Festival, and Sunday Night Sex Talks.

 

 

 

Jeanne Sakata

Jeanne Sakata

Jeanne Sakata’s solo play about Gordon Hirabayashi, Hold These Truths, had its world premiere at East West Players in 2007 and will be produced at Pasadena Playhouse, in association with EWP, in May-June 2017, and at Arena Stage in February-April 2018.

 

 

 

Kristina Wong

Kristina Wong

Kristina Wong’s produced performances/plays include Wong Street Journal (REDCAT) and her solo show, Wong Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (toured nationally). Her favorite accolade is being named #2 Trump Twitter Troll by Black Enterprise!

 

 

 

Alice Tuan

Alice Tuan

Alice Tuan is best known for Ajax (por nobody), which premiered at The Flea Theater in New York City, toured at the Melbourne Fringe, and was produced at Toronto’s SummerWorks Festival. Her other plays include Hit (The Los Angeles Theatre Center), BATCH (Humana), Last of the Suns (Berkeley Repertory Theatre, Ma-Yi Theater Company), Roaring Girle (The Foundry Theatre), Ikebana (World Premiere at East West Players; Taper, Too; Dramalogue Award), and Coastline (Serious Play!, Edinburgh Fringe Festival). Four of these plays are archived in the Billy Rose Collection of the New York Public Library. She is currently commissioned by Yale Rep/Binger Centre for New Theater.

As the nation’s premier Asian American theatre organization, East West Players produces artistic work and educational programs that foster dialogue exploring Asian Pacific Islander (API) experiences. Founded in 1965, at a time when APIs faced limited or no opportunities to see their experiences reflected outside of stereotypical and demeaning caricatures in the American landscape, EWP not only ensures that API stories are told, but works to increase access, inclusion, and representation in the economy.

For more information about East West Players, please visit www.eastwestplayers.org.

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