The Lark’s 2019-20 Venturous Playwright Fellowships Names Sam Chanse, Dipika Guha, and Dave Harris

2019-20 Venturous Playwright Fellowships NEW YORK, NY –The Lark and Venturous Theater Fund of the Tides Foundation are thrilled to announce that the plays and playwrights selected for the second round of The Lark’s Venturous Playwright Fellowship program are: Trigger by Sam Chanse; Passing by Dipika Guha; and Incendiary by Dave Harris. The fellowship supports the advancement of ambitious, risk-taking, and innovative plays by providing concurrent residencies for their authors, and advocating for their production by partner theaters. Fellows each receivean award of $50,000 over two years, as well as a Production Subsidy Grant of up to $50,000 to support a production of the play at a theater of the playwright’s choosing. Throughout their two-year fellowships, the playwrights will be in residence at The Lark where they will have access to an individually-tailored lineup of new play development and advocacy resources, including readings, workshops, writers’ groups, retreats, career guidance, and community engagement activities, designed to nurture their writing and advance their work into the repertoire.

“There was so much brilliance in the pool of nominated writers for these fellowships. We’re living in intense times, and these are intense plays,” said Lloyd Suh, Director of Artistic Programs at The Lark. “They each explore urgent and vital themes – the criminal justice system, female rage, the emotional devastation of colonialism – in humane, unexpected, and deeply impactful ways. Dave Harris’ Incendiary presents as a topical, satiric hero’s journey, but it explodes the expectations of those tropes with a rocket launcher. Sam Chanse’s Trigger is at once a philosophical treatise on the history of anger, and a primal scream of theatrical imagination. Dipika Guha’s Passing is a delicate puzzle, an impressionistic nightmare, and an intimate, heartbreaking and ultimately empowering portrait of the colonized body. The Lark is honored to partner with Venturous Theater Fund to champion these plays, and privileged to support the continuing adventures of their authors.”

Fellows were selected through a multi-step process, led by The Lark and Venturous Theater Fund staff. Nominations were solicited from artists and theater makers within The Lark’s network, and selections were made based on choosing work identified as “venturous,” defined as challenging in form, controversial in subject matter, ambitious in scale, and/or experimental in concept.

“Sam Chanse, Dipika Guha, and Dave Harris are three exceptionally talented writers, and we are delighted to support them in creating audacious work that defies the conventional wisdom about what makes a play ‘producible,’” said Ben Pesner, Program Director at Venturous Theater Fund. “We look forward to working with the theaters that bring these bold, unconventional plays to the stage; and we hope these fellowships inspire other companies to produce plays by writers who push the boundaries of the theatrical form, embrace risk and experimentation, and create works of scale and ambition. We are proud to continue our collaboration with The Lark in championing ambitious new plays and empowering and supporting the writers who create them.”

Past fellows include Olivia Dufault (For Want of a Horse), Susan Soon He Stanton (Today Is My Birthday, Page 73), and Mike Lew (Teenage Dick, Ma-Yi Theatre Company in association with The Public Theater). Mike and Susan’s plays both received world premieres last season, as a result of the Venturous Playwright Fellowship.

“The Lark and Venturous Fund’s contribution is radical because by putting financial heft directly behind the writer, they break the cycle of playwright infantilization,” Mike said, on his experience of the Fellowship. “The Venturous Fellowship allowed me to approach the producers with a real sense of agency.”

The Venturous Playwright Fellowship is part of The Lark’s acclaimed portfolio of fellowships, which includes the Apothetae and Lark Fellowship, Jerome Fellowship, and Van Lier New Voices Fellowship, among others. These programs are designed to gather and engage a cohort of diverse and extraordinary playwrights at various career levels, from across the country and around the world, to explore the most important issues of our time.

ABOUT THE PLAYWRIGHTS

Sam Chanse is the author of TriggerThe Opportunities of ExtinctionFruiting BodiesThe Other InstinctWhat You Are NowLydia’s Funeral Videoabout that whole dying thing, and Asian American Jesus. A former fellow at MacDowell, the Rita Goldberg Playwrights’ Workshop at The Lark, Sundance Institute Theatre Program, Cherry Lane Mentor Project, and Playwrights Realm, her work has also been developed with and supported by Ma-Yi Theatre, Leviathan Lab, Ars Nova, Ensemble Studio Theatre/Sloan Project, Djerassi, the San Francisco Arts Commission, and SPACE on Ryder Farm. Her plays have been recognized by The Kilroys, and her first solo play, Lydia’s Funeral Video, is published by Kaya Press. Upcoming productions include Fruiting Bodies, directed by Shelley Butler, at Ma-Yi Theater (April/May 2019). She is a resident playwright of New Dramatists and a member of the Ma-Yi Writers Lab.

Dipika Guha’s plays include Yoga Play (South Coast Rep, Upcoming: Gateway Theatre Vancouver, Moxie Theatre & SF Playhouse), The Art of Gaman (Theatre 503 London, Relentless Award semifinalist) and Unreliable (Upcoming: Kansas City Rep). Recent works includes Azaan, a play for Oregon Symphony Orchestra, contributions to You Across From Me (Humana, Actors Theatre of Louisville), Elizabeth for the McCarter Theatre’s Princeton and Slavery Project and In Braunau for Playwrights Horizons Theatre School. Dipika’s current commissions include South Coast Rep, Manhattan Theatre Club/Sloan, Barrington Stage and Oregon Shakespeare Festival. She was a Hodder Fellow at the Lewis Center for the Arts at Princeton University and the inaugural Shakespeare’s Sister Playwriting Fellow with The Lark, A Room of Her Own, and Hedgebrook. Dipika earned an MFA from the Yale School of Drama under Paula Vogel, and a BA in English Literature from University College London. She’s currently writing for the series Sneaky Pete on Amazon.

Dave Harris is a poet and playwright from West Philly. His plays include White History (Victory Gardens Ignition Festival, finalist O’Neill, semi-finalist The Relentless Award), Exception to the Rule (finalist O’Neill), Tambo & Bones (Black Swan Lab at Oregon Shakespeare Fest, SPACE on Ryder Farm), Incendiary(NNPN/The Kennedy Center MFA Workshop), and Everybody Black. He is a member of The Working Farm at SPACE on Ryder Farm, a Cave Canem Poetry Fellow, a Callaloo poetry fellow, and the 2018 winner of The Rattle Poetry Prize. His first full-length collection of poetry, Patricide, will be published in May 2019 from Button Poetry. Dave received his B.A. from Yale and is a second year MFA playwright at UC San Diego.

ABOUT THE PLAYS

Trigger by Sam Chanse​

When Lee recognizes a childhood friend in a video of a racist rant that goes viral, bringing on a swift backlash of vicious — and viciously misogynistic — attacks, Lee’s sister urges Lee to reach out. Against everything her instincts are telling her, Lee does. A play about the fury around and within us, and what happens next.

Passing by Dipika Guha​

On National Sorry Day, an artist called Matilda tells her story. It’s about a couple of ill-matched English colonists who are trying to make their marriage work. That is, until a young girl, raw and bloodied, enters the frame. Passing is a play about love, possession, and an impossible forgiveness.

Incendiary by Dave Harris

Incendiary tells the journey of Tanya, a Black single mother who is preparing to break her deathrow-bound son out of prison. She navigates the practical steps of planning her son’s prison break, like purchasing guns, getting a personal trainer, and preparing her daughter for a lonely life ahead. A collision between the absurd and the tragic, Incendiary explores generational violence, heroism, and the gendered expectations of emotional labor in Black families.

# # #

Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.