How to Start an Arts Career

When I finished my theater degree at the University of Denver, I wasn’t sure what would come next. It was the middle of a global pandemic, and the field I had dedicated myself to looked like it could be on hiatus for a long time. But when I heard about Local, I knew this was a place I could take my knowledge and jumpstart my theatrical career.

I’ve learned a lot in just 10 months of working with Local. What felt so far off and unachievable, now feels real and tangible. I used to daydream about starting my own theater troupe, putting on plays and musicals that I wrote and directed with my friends. But even after my college education, those ideas of mine still felt like a pipedream.

With Local, I’ve seen the ways a small group of people can achieve big things. Pesha Rudnick, Founding Artistic Director, has given us such a clear vision of the company and all these big ideas that our programs aim to capture. The sense of unity and community this team has, all while giving plenty of agency and responsibility to each member of the staff, has made me realize that starting a company isn’t as abstract and scary as I initially thought. These are all artists like myself, regular people just trying to bring great theater into the world.

I just launched my own theater with some friends called 2¢ Lion Theatre Company. With our first production and kids’ camp set to launch this summer, I feel confident what I’ve learned firsthand from Local will be critical to the success of my personal venture. Of all the theaters on the Front Range, I’m grateful to work with and learn from Local.

Theater: It's All About Collaboration

Why theater?

I could write a whole series of essays to answer this question. To sum it up in a blog post, I can narrow it down to one reason. Why theater? Because it is collaborative.

I first fell in love with theater in the costume shop at my high school. I was struck by how many people with different perspectives, ideas and talents come together to create a production. I realized that collaboration was what fueled this art form. My focus in college shifted to stage management because I was interested in facilitating and deepening collaboration between the various people involved in a production. Now, as a producer for Local Theater Company, collaboration is central to what I do every day and why I have found so much joy in producing.

Great art is a collaborative process.

Now to be more specific. Why Local Theater Company? And to be even more specific—why Local Lab? Why would I spend my weekend in Boulder attending this festival?

Because Lab is the PEAK of collaboration—in even more ways that a regular production.

For the playwrights, it is an opportunity to deepen their work as they hear the perspectives of other theater-makers. For many Lab playwrights, it is the first time their characters are embodied by an actor and guided by a director. The work is changing and growing, making it an exceptionally exciting rehearsal process for everyone involved.

And for the audience, it is a unique opportunity to be a collaborator. When you step into a theater as an audience member, you become part of the art. Each audience is unique, which is one of the reasons why no two performances of a play are the same. But Lab gives you a chance to engage in the work in a deeper way. Your perspectives, your thoughts and your questions help propel the work forward. You are an essential part of the creation of a new play.

I love Lab because it is a time when our community comes together in a collaborative way to make meaningful theater. I hope you will join us!

What is a LTC Postshow Conversation?

By Betty Hart, Local Lab 11 Co-Director

Local Theater Company is deeply committed to the development of new American plays. Not only do we create a space for the play to come to life in the rehearsal process, but we also are interested in a very special piece of the puzzle: you, the audience. 

How the words on the page are received is something that can’t be determined in isolation. We need you. You are the fourth part of a relay race. The first leg of the race is the playwright crafting ideas and the first draft of the play. The second leg of the play is feedback from friends, dramaturgs, and performers, which leads to the next draft. The third leg is the workshop where the world of the play is explored, questioned, and brought to life. And then, the fourth leg is where you, as the audience, come in. Do you laugh unexpectedly? If so, a drama could become retitled as a comedy or a serio-comedy. Those responses can be gauged by observing the audience during a reading. Discovering meaning, interpretation, and moments of epiphany, however, can only happen when you reveal that to us. 

Postshow conversations are created to embrace diverse opinions to learn more about the play. The playwright has specific questions about the play, and my job is to create a scaffolded experience that allows the playwright’s questions AND other pertinent information to come forth. Some of this will take place during the live postshow conversation. The rest will be revealed from responses to the written survey. We’ve discovered that something happens as we listen to others talk about moments in the play. Thoughts are crystallized. Feelings can be expressed. In some cases, moments of clarity emerge where originally there was confusion. We believe you are a necessary part of play development. We want it to be engaging; we want it to be fun; we want it to be part of building community. I’ve seen conversations get sparked among former strangers after hearing a comment in a postshow conversation. So, we invite you to stay and participate verbally or physically with your presence, and then PLEASE fill out the written survey. Your thoughts matter; so, do you. 

We appreciate however you enter the work and truly desire to learn from you, so each play can grow and mature and become ready to be released into the world!

Local LOVES Dogs & Theater!

How many weekend activities do you share with your dog? If you’re anything like me, the answer is “nearly all of them, because he's awesome.” I’ve brought my pup on numerous hikes on the Front Range—always a fun adventure for us both. He also comes to work with me, and because I work at Local Theater Company, he’s had the opportunity to take in a few world premiere plays and musicals. Long story short—he loved them! 

His first show was Discount Ghost Stories at Trident Bookseller and Cafe in 2019. He came to rehearsal and I couldn’t get him to leave. The music, melodies, and lights caught his attention and I just knew—he’d been bitten by the theater bug. He quickly cozied up to composer and lyricist Alexander Sage Oyen and stayed for that evening's performance. He rated the show “four paws up” (He has great taste).

Next weekend is Spring Lab in Boulder, and although my pup pal won’t be able to take in the new play readings at The Dairy Arts Center, he plans to join the Local team for a morning hike and participate in a few of the outdoor activities planned around Local Lab. I’m so lucky―he’s everyone’s best friend, a theater lover, and my Colorado adventure buddy: ride or die!

Pesha's LOCAL LAB Cheat Sheet

Dear Friends, 

Wondering what to do next weekend (April 22–24)?  New to Boulder?  Enjoy great theater, a dance party, and robust conversations about race, privilege, and a band called PHISH?  Local Lab is back! 

If you don’t know by now, Local Lab is Local Theater Company's annual new play festival filled with new work, visiting artists, stimulating conversation, and rousing parties.  This spring, all shows are presented at the Dairy Arts Center, but the parties and ancillary events are scattered throughout Boulder.  It’s an amazing weekend.  As I reflect on ten years of Local Lab, two words come to mind: uniquely Colorado.  

Developing new plays is not unique to Colorado.  The way we do it at Local is.  

We believe that audiences are smart.  We believe that plays grow when artists take risks and tinker BEFORE going into full production with costumes, lights, sound, etc.  Local Lab is our bare bones and most vulnerable phase of new play development.  We’re excited to share the incubator with you. 

To get the most out of Local Lab, bring a bandana and saddle up for a fun ride.  Here are some tips: 

1) Invest in an All-Access pass.  You don’t need to come to all four shows but you will enjoy and understand the diversity of the work if you do.  If you can’t attend a show, let us know and we’ll donate your seat.

2) Attend the parties!  Get to know the artists and your fellow audience members.  Build trust so that when you have a pithy comment, you will feel comfortable sharing it. 

3) Speak up.  We think you are smart.  Share your feedback after the shows or write to us.  We read everything.  We listen. 

4) Love postshow conversations? Hate them?  Be honest with yourself.  The postshow conversation is optional and we won’t be offended if you step out after the show. 

5) Wear your nametag all weekend.  You are going to meet lifelong friends at Local Lab.  It happens every year.  

6) Finally, eat the free food.  There’s a reason we provide nosh; active listening is hard work.  Think of yourself as a theater athlete and pace yourself. 

A teaser for each day: 

Friday—It’s Earth Day.  Join the Lab artists for a sunrise hike at Chautauqua 8 am–9:30 am. ALL-ACCESS PASSHOLDERS are welcome.  

At 5 pm, ALL-ACCESS PASSHOLDERS can join us for the pre-party at Walters & Hogsett Jewelers. Free food, wine, and mingling with your fellow theater lovers.

Then, hop aboard for "YOU ENJOY MYSELF” at 7 pm; the 90-minute play about a family with a history of following PHISH, the band.  This sweet, heart-centered play is full of humor, music, and the rituals that bond (and separate) us.  Get to bed early.  Tomorrow is a long day....

Saturday—we begin at 2 pm with “THE LOTUS," our first collaboration the with CU Department of Theater and Dance!  This inspiring new student play was written during the first few months of the pandemic by Esther Omegba. 

Next is "GOODNIGHT COWBOY" at 6 pm, 70 minutes. Come for a dazzling, dizzying, and dance-filled one-woman show inspired by the Children’s book Goodnight Moon and cinema Westerns. Wanna learn more, read the American Theatre Magazine feature HERE. You don’t want to miss this.   Stay for the afterparty, a free drink, more food, and an open dance floor at DV8—Boulder’s only queer bar.  I’ll dance with you. 

Sunday—

12–1:30 pm—ALL-ACCESS PASSHOLDERS, get ready to create. Yours truly, along with Local Lab 11 Co-Directors Nick Chase & Betty Hart will lead a theater-making workshop for nontheater-makers (okay, theater-makers will enjoy it, too). 

"AFFINITY LUNCH MINUTES" at 2 pm; 90 minutes A fancy private school.  Two teachers (a Black woman and a biracial man) in a school of hundreds of white students, all trying to do the right thing.  Missing the point over and over again.  This beautiful and compassionate play is the conversation we assume everyone is having (but realize we all feel alone in the conversation and are afraid we might get it wrong).  

I look forward to meeting you next weekend.  Again, be sure to wear your nametag so I know your name when we meet at the charcuterie board. 

Warmly, 

Pesha

Meet the Playwrights: "THE LADY M PROJECT" (2022)

Q&A with Mare Trevathan, Anne Penner, and Hadley Kamminga-Peck

The Lady M Project was co-conceived by Anne Penner and Mare Trevathan, co-written by Hadley Kamminga-Peck, Anne Penner, and Mare Trevathan, and directed by Mare Trevathan.

Q: Could each of you introduce yourselves and your roles in The Lady M Project?

Anne Penner (she/her/hers): Hi, my name is Anne Penner and I’m one of three writers on The Lady M Project, and I am also playing Lady M.

Hadley Kamminga-Peck (she/her/hers): Hi, I'm Hadley Kamminga-Peck. I'm one of the three writers on The Lady M Project and I play Senga.

Mare Trevathan: I am Mare Trevathan, she/her/hers pronouns, and I am the third of the three writers on The Lady M Project, and I will be directing the upcoming Local Lab workshop.

Q: Anne & Mare, you conceived The Lady M Project together. What sparked the idea?

AP: Yeah, I'll start. So, many people–not just me–sometimes wish that the women in Shakespeare’s plays got more stage time, or at least that we heard their perspective of the given circumstances of the story more than we get to. Lady M, Lady Macbeth, was one of those for me. So, in November of I think 2019–Mare it's been over two years–I said, “Mare! I have this idea: I want to take all of the Lady Macbeth scenes in Macbeth, and I want us to explore them and I don't really know what that means, I want her to be more front and center than Macbeth and some of the other characters.” I don't know where we were going with this, but Mare said “sure,” and we took it from there, and then Hadley joined us less than a year after that.

MT: Yeah, so we literally started, you know, pre-pandemic, in Anne’s kitchen, with all of the Shakespeare scenes that included Lady M in them and looked for the through-line of her character, and also what was truly on the page versus what we know of Lady M through hundreds of years of production history that gets embedded into what we think we know about her character, as well. Anne and I were doing research along the way, and I came across somebody’s dissertation online that really got into Lady M and gave a more feminist viewpoint about Lady M, and it was purely coincidental that that dissertation–when I went looking for who the author was to ask their permission to cite it–that it was Hadley. That was her dissertation, and Anna and I had both collaborated with her at the Colorado Shakespeare Festival over the years, so it was a really delightful coincidence.

Q: What was the writing process like? When Hadley was brought in as a co-writer, how did that collaboration play out?

AP: I'm gonna jump in and I’m going to crudely break it into three parts. So, there was first Mare and me, and then there were a few months where Hadley joined, maybe late summer of 2020, and so we had a few months with Hadley to manipulate the script for December 2020, and then, of course, this past year, plus. So, for Act I of this we created fun compositions–I would call them compositions and Mare would call them recipes–they come from the world of viewpoints, where we would take the text of a Lady Macbeth script and then create a bunch of ingredients. It has to include contrast, and it has to include lots of loud noise, and we just kind of played around with these. What I was struggling with was I was really honoring the original Shakespeare too much. So, by the time we had a very casual reading in the fall of 2020, where I think the actors and I are thinking, this is too much like Shakespeare's Macbeth. It's not different enough. And so, with Hadley's help and with the actors–we've had actors we've been working with from the start–we've been really able to very violently or assertively open up the script and really create something that feels much more original than what that first iteration was.

MT: Hadley, do you want to talk a little bit about the process of writing together online?

HKP: Google Docs is our best friend, I think. Not to not to advertise for Google, Lord knows they don't need it. But we jumped on a Zoom and all three of us worked in the same document and we read it aloud a lot, and sometimes we read the same roles and sometimes we mixed it up and everybody popcorns around and reads whatever role you feel like so we get different voices reading the lines and different energies approaching the the characters in different ways. And then, sometimes we break apart and will, you know, say, okay, I'm going to work on this for 15 minutes, you work on that for 15 minutes, Mare will set a timer on her phone, and then we come back together and read what we've worked on. I found it to be a wonderful collaboration in terms of being right there with each other in the moment, being able to listen and work through things together, as a group, but also to break off and give ourselves little tasks that we can do individually and then come back together and share what we've done.

MT: I think this is a quintessential example of how Local Theater Company can work with that idea of locals being anywhere, that theater makes its own local community. Hadley is not in Colorado and Anne and I are, and we've been blessed to do these Zoom readings with actors who are scattered across the country, who, you know, we would have never been able to afford the finances or time for everybody to come together throughout this development process of a couple of years, nor, frankly, would we have taken a couple of years in order to do it under sort of the old model, as theater has to go with these tight timelines outside of a pandemic. There's been a lot of blessings throughout this process, and, boy, are we grateful and eager to all be in the same room this March.

Q: I would love to hear from each of you–especially Hadley, if you want to touch on your dissertation and your motivation behind it–but why the character and story of Lady Macbeth is striking and important, and what makes this Shakespearean character and the Shakespearean story relevant today, and/or why it's important to challenge the Shakespeare text in new and modern ways?

HKP: Do you mind if I start?

AP: Yeah, go for it.

MT: This is your dissertation right there, right?

HKP: Oh my God, there's so many things to talk about, so please shut me up at some point. So, my dissertation discussed female characters throughout Elizabethan drama in the context of Queen Elizabeth on the throne, and kind of said there's no way that these women would be relegated to these very simplistic versions of women when we have this amazing, powerful ruler on the throne running England. I used a political theory that she had us to embrace her ability to rule and applied it to female characters, like Lady Macbeth, and in doing so I really discovered that these characters are so much richer and so much more vibrant than we usually give them credit for being. They have a lot more autonomy, they have a lot more agency, and they are not so simplistically defined.

Lady M is definitely a character, you know, she gets that epithet at the end of the play of the fiend-like queen from Malcolm and that's kind of how she gets treated throughout production history. She's treated as this vicious creature, she's a witch, she pushes Macbeth to do it, it's all her fault, she's violent, she probably killed her own child, like there's all these horrible things that people believe about her and I just don't think any of that is true. I think she's a woman in a really tough situation. I think she has a very strong relationship with her partner, and the two of them want the best for themselves and for their country and they do what they see is best.

In terms of why it's still relevant today, I mean, Hillary Clinton was called Lady Macbeth. She got called that in the newspapers. Just, oh God, it wasn't even that long ago, it was like 2010, the Prime Minister of Australia was accused of being Lady Macbeth. It's definitely a term that we identify with powerful women today, and so I think it's worthwhile to go back and reexamine who this woman actually was and was she as horrible as people would like to make her out to be, or is there something else to her, is there more to her past? What's her motivation? What are all the different elements of her that reflect the actual person? And one of the things that I've really enjoyed doing in this process is researching the historical women and researching more of historical women in Scotland, witchcraft in Scotland, and all of these elements of history that we can bring up and make contemporary and show how they are actually very relevant to today.

MT: The New York Times just published an article last Saturday that Anne brought to our attention, which is about female antiheroes on TV and how there is a shift in culture to accept a little bit more of what we think of we've categorized as “not feminine” and tolerating that in TV, but there persists this resistance to women as the antihero. There's a long tradition of men being the antihero, and we still find them compelling, appealing, charismatic, even attractive, and there's certainly a gender gap there in the way public perception treats the female antihero.

AP: Yeah, we want to explore, you know, the box in which she historically has been put in and and, to some extent–it is evidenced in the script–where it's just very black and white, that she's a bad guy, right? She's a bad, evil woman, and we thought, well, what if–God forbid–what if she weren't, or what if she was partly that and partly not? What if it was much more nuanced? What if she actually enjoyed the badness, right, to some extent? We’re just trying to complicate this perception of her. Yeah, that article is fascinating, [it’s interesting] that that marriage is referenced and that it was written by two CU Denver English professors who have a book on this. And another thing–which doesn't have to do so much with Lady Macbeth so forgive me–but they talk about Somebody, Somewhere, which is this new HBO Max show with Bridget Everett, but so just like the antihero in the sense of, like, does someone have to be ambitious as the protagonist of a story? I feel like Lady M of course is, to some extent.


Q: I would love to hear, without giving too much away, the biggest strides and changes from the previous version of The Lady M Project that was presented in 2020? How has Local, as a new play incubator, created room for growth and change of this story?

AP: Can I jump in? There's a lot, I have like three things I want to say, and we have to make sure we don't share too much. I'm so grateful to Local for helping us support both the December 2020 one and now this in-person one. I also found that some of the people, Pesha and Nick in particular, with that first iteration, were really there for us in terms of sharing ideas and hearing our ideas and kind of mapping out. They’re really just supporting the writing process and helping us improve the writing without being oppressive, without being instructive, or, you know, paternalistic in any way.

I also want to speak to the actors. Since the end of December, we had five actors–three of them are still with us–and I'm happy to name them if that would be helpful, but they were essential. They were amazing collaborators, and they've been really essential in helping us figure out the rules of this play and how we need to sort of set up the rules so the audience knows how to watch this play. And then, once we set up the guardrails, we can break the guardrails, we can break the rules, but the audience needs help figuring out how to watch this play–the story–progress. The one big change I’ll say without, I think, spoiling too much is–

HKP: I think we can say we’ve added a third act, there's a lot less reverence to the original text, a lot more of our own words on the page, and I would say also that the actors and Local have been really instrumental in helping us be brave enough to be irreverent with the text and to push against it more, to set up the rules and break the rules, as Anne said. I think we've managed to embrace that stuff more in this new iteration.

MT: I think an element, the critical element, of that is having more liberty at whose story gets told, and, I mean, obviously Lady Macbeth being the primary one there, but whose else’s story, you know? We have some characters that are unnamed in Shakespeare that appear as named, more complex humans in our version, and that's been a fun ride, too.


Q: What would you like audiences to take away from The Lady M Project?

MT: I would love for audiences to walk away with a filter that they can carry around in the world, and as they look at the art that they consume, the media that they consume, to question what's comprising that filter. I think that we're all in a moment of societal shifting where we're starting to see where some of those filters have been–personal, societal–and I think this is an opportunity to, the next time somebody looks not just at Shakespeare, but even as we were talking about before with contemporary TV, what is it that's in place that is affecting how a character is being portrayed and seen.

HKP: Yeah, I think mine is very similar to Mare’s. I would love for people to walk away asking themselves, just because a woman has always been portrayed this way or characters have always been portrayed this way, is that really who she is? Is that really all there is to her, and to ask themselves why is she being portrayed that way, but also, what more lies behind all of that within the character? For all of these characters, we went through a phase where we simplified them a lot, and we like to simplify characters, and I think we're leaning into a place now where we love the complexity and the nuances, as Anne said, and so I hope audiences walk away enjoying that complexity and the nuance that we've brought to Lady M, whether or not they agree with it.

AP: I would love for the audience to walk away realizing that they can be narrators of their own lives, that we took a very traditional play that's existed for 400 plus years and we went topsy turvy with it–we opened it up and unpacked it, in particular Lady Macbeth, and we created our own story of her–and that people can do that as creators or writers or theatermakers, but they also have the power to do that with their own lives and their sort of perception of their role inside of their own life.

LEARN MORE

How We Show Up for Boulder

Dear Community,

One week ago we shared our grief and stood in solidarity with the victims of the mass shooting in Georgia. We are deeply saddened as we sit down to write to you again about the mass shooting that took place yesterday in our home city of Boulder, CO. 

Many of you were in Boulder on Monday, at the King Soopers market or in one of the shops or restaurants nearby.  Some of you lost someone you knew personally.  At Local Theater Company, we lost a fellow theater artist and Local Lab volunteer, Suzanne Fountain.  We are also mourning the loss of Teri Leiker, who our stage manager knew and fondly remembers from the historic Boulder Dushanbe Tea House. Our hearts are with the families of Suzanne, Teri and Tralona Bartkowiak, Kevin Mahoney, Lynn Murray, Rikki Olds, Neven Stanisic, Denny Stong, Eric Talley and Jody Waters.

We reach out to you this evening as fellow community members to share that we are suffering.  We are here to hold space for your grief, suffering, and anger. 

Last year, our Artistic Director Pesha Rudnick’s best friend sent us a wonderful book. Pesha revisited it on Monday evening as we were trying to make sense of this tragedy. How We Show Up by Mia Birdsong reminds of us of our inherent connectedness as human beings and members of a community. Through research, interviews and stories of lived experience, Ms. Birdsong invites us to return to finding strength, safety and support in vulnerability and generosity. We suggest it to you as a resource that might be helpful at this difficult time.  

You can support the victims’ families by donating to this go fund me campaign.

Or you can support them through one of these funds:

The Colorado Healing Fund https://www.coloradohealingfund.org/

The Community Foundation Boulder County Crisis Fund https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=2S8Z6XVC58AKU

If you or someone you know needs support, Mental Health Partners https://www.mhpcolorado.org/crisis/ provides a 24/7 crisis link and is also available at 1-844-493-TALK

Love,

Your Local Theater Company community 

Close to home. A message on the violence in Atlanta, GA.

Local Theater Company stands with our AAPI community in recognizing that extremism and violence against Asian, Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders is on the rise in our country. The attack on Tuesday March 16th took the lives of eight people in Georgia including these four individuals who have been identified:

Xiaojie Tan, 49, of Kennesaw;
Daoyou Feng, 44;
Delaina Ashley Yaun Gonzalez, 33, of Acworth;
Paul Andre Michels, 54, of Atlanta

As a company dedicated to building an anti-racist world, we would like to raise awareness to the important work being done by our colleagues at Stop AAPI Hate (https://stopaapihate.org). Stop AAPI Hate is a national coalition aimed at addressing anti-Asian discrimination amid the pandemic. Please visit their website to learn more, report an incident or access their resource page.

Education resources and articles to understand the current climate of racism and sexism:

How Racism and Sexism Intertwine To Torment Asian-American Women
Facts and Figures: Ending Violence Against Women
“Model Minority” Myth Again Used As A Racial Wedge Between Asians and Blacks


All racial injustice in this country can be traced back to white supremacy and economic injustice and closely linked with the subjugation of and violence toward women.

The History of Tensions-and Solidarity—between Black and Asian American Communities, Explained.


If someone you know is engaged in extremist ideology, please report your concern and learn about restorative justice education and programs:

https://www.bouldercounty.org/safety/victim/restorative-justice/
https://www.brookings.edu/techstream/the-promise-of-restorative-justice-in-addressing-online-harm/
https://www.usip.org/
https://en.unesco.org/preventingviolentextremism

Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr, In His Own Words

Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr, In His Own Words

At Local Theater Company, we are anxiously counting down the days until our next Living Room Local with Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. Professor Gates takes on many roles, from scholar and educator to historian and storyteller, and these roles often intertwine in his work. There is no better way to learn about Professor Gates, as a scholar and as a fellow human and American, than by reading his own words. The following statements are from Professor Gates, from his television series and books, that highlight a few of his ideas and beliefs.

Talking about political violence and extremism

Dear Community, 

I hope this letter finds you safe and healthy in this particularly unsafe and unhealthy time.

This week, individuals, families and educators had to decide how they would discuss the domestic terrorism and hypocricy that took place on Wednesday at the US Capitol. We empathize with this difficult task; personally, I hope for a time when this madness ends. In the meantime, as a theater company that sends teaching artists into classrooms and provides playwriting instruction to people of all ages, I am grateful for resources that support communication, healing and truth.

We wanted to share this resource (https://tinyurl.com/y5m3ryxa) that the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) sent out to support difficult conversations about political violence and extremism. Most people know something serious happened on Wednesday. Helping young people understand what is happening in the world around them makes it less scary. Having these conversations with the young people in our lives, as well as our broader communities, helps us all to examine the complicated issues of nation-building and ponder how we can interact with people we disagree with.

Finally, an invitation.  On Sunday January 31 at 12pm MT, we have the great honor of hosting Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr. (Finding Your Roots on PBS) on our virtual stage for our next Living Room Local event.  We hope you’ll join us as Dr. Gates is one of the most profound and influential thinkers, storytellers, producers and educators of our time. You may secure tickets by clicking HERE

Peace,
Pesha

COVID-19 Message to Our Community

COVID-19 Message to Our Community

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused theaters around the world to close their doors and reimagine nearly every aspect of the industry. Here at Local Theater Company, our doors may be closed, but self-expression is thriving all around us: new plays are being written, songs are being composed, and designers are reimagining performance spaces.

 Until it is safe to do so, we will not hold public performances with an in-person audience. We made this decision with the safety of our artists, Season 10 members, audience and staff at the forefront of our minds. Local Theater Company is operating in accordance with the most up-to-date state and local public health regulations.

 Local Theater Company is a member of Actor’s Equity Association (AEA) and is categorized as a “Small Professional Theater.” This means that we hire professional union actors and stage managers, many of whom are members of Actor’s Equity Association. As we consider how and when to resume public performances, we are making sure that we are in compliance with AEA guidelines and safety protocols for in-person performances, which continue to be updated. 

 We are pleased to announce our upcoming Season 10, which will take place virtually for the safety of everyone involved. Until we can guarantee we are able to gather safely, we invite you to join us for a virtual season filled with deep conversations with artists, ten commissioned new plays and robust educational programming.  Our theme this year?  Dwell in possibility. Together we’re going to make it a fantastic experience. 

Thank you to our community for your commitment to Local Theater Company and the performing arts during this uncertain time. We are excited to embark on an innovative and engaging season with you!

How can I help?

Theater is going to need community this year, more than ever. For those with the ability to provide support, here are a few ways you can help:

1. Email your representatives in Congress and advocate for the expansion and recapitalization of the Paycheck Protection Program and the expansion of the duration of the pandemic unemployment benefit. You can do so by using the effective platform provided by The Performing Arts Alliance, the Coalition of Performing Arts Advocates. LINK

2. Identify and donate to performing arts organizations in your community that support BIPOC and LGBTQX voices. 

3. Become a Local Theater Company Season 10 Member Your membership will allow us to continue hiring theater professionals here in Colorado and across the US. This year, we will expand Local Lab to support the development of 10 new American plays. That means we will be employing 10 creative teams of theater professionals as they work together, virtually, to develop their new works.  

 


BLACK LIVES MATTER

Dear Community, 

Local Theater Company was founded on the principle that great stories inspire empathy, and that empathy inspires a more just and equitable society.  We do not stand for racism, violence or discrimination. 

We mourn with our Black colleagues and Black community the recent murders of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor. Their deaths are only the most recent in a series of stark reminders that racism and white supremacy are thriving in our country.  

Like many of us, you might be wondering what you can do. We hope you will join us by getting involved in efforts that will move our society toward non-violence, social justice and peace.  

Get educated.  Some powerful anti-racism books, stories and plays include: 

BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME by Ta-Nehisi Coates 
WHITE FRAGILITY by Robin DiAngelo (read a conversation between Artistic Director Pesha Rudnick and Robin DiAngelo HERE)
THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD by Zora Neale Hurston 
WELL-READ BLACK GIRL: Finding Our Stories, Discovering Ourselves Edited by Glory Edim 
THE CONDEMNATION OF BLACKNESS: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America by Khalil Gibran Muhammad
THE BLUEST EYE by Toni Morrison 
AN OCTOROON by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins
PASS OVER by Antoinette Nwandu

Get involved. Here are a few organizations that could use our support:

Black Lives Matter
https://blacklivesmatter.com/
https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/#

Campaign Zero: a comprehensive platform of research-based policy solutions to end police brutality in America. 
https://www.joincampaignzero.org/

Showing up For Racial Justice (SURJ)
https://www.showingupforracialjustice.org 

Give: 

ACLU of Colorado 
https://aclu-co.org 

NAACP
https://www.naacp.org/

Black Lives Matter 5280 
https://www.facebook.com/BlackLivesMatter5280/

We miss you. Be safe.

Respectfully, 

Pesha Rudnick and Local Theater Company 

ARTS & CULTURE IN THE TIME OF COVID

Dear Community,

Today, many arts professionals face a daunting reality: the expiration of expanded jobless benefits. The Paycheck Protection Program provided sustaining support to some arts organizations, and the $600 weekly supplement provided necessary funds to arts professionals whose employment was reduced or eliminated. Without these programs, our creative community is at risk. Creative professionals are asking, what can I do? Supporters of the arts are asking the same question. Below, please find just a few resources - some for those who wish to support, others for those seeking support. Together, we can ensure the livelihoods of millions of creative professionals across the United States. #savethearts

HOW CAN I HELP?

For those with the ability to support, here are a few ways you can do so. 

1. Email your representative in Congress and advocate for the expansion and recapitalization of the Paycheck Protection Program and the expansion of the duration of the pandemic unemployment benefit. You can do so by using the effective platform provided by The Performing Arts Alliance, the Coalition of Performing Arts Advocates. LINK

2. Identify and donate to arts organizations in your community. 

3. Become a Local Theater Company Season 10 Member, if you have not already done so. Your membership will allow us to continue hiring arts professionals here in Colorado and across the United States. This year, we will expand Local Lab to include 10 new American plays. That means employing 10 creative teams of arts professionals. Become a member below.

WHERE CAN I FIND HELP?  

For those seeking support, here are a few ways you can do so. 

1. The DENVER ACTORS FUND helps members of the Colorado creative community in need of financial assistance. LINK

2. THE ACTORS FUND is a national organization that provides free and confidential social service programs that address a wide array of challenges faced by people in performing arts and entertainment. With respect and understanding, their professional social workers offer counseling and support groups, education, emergency financial assistance and practical help. LINK

On bravery

On bravery

This is Eavesdrop, a series of conversations between artists, playwrights and audience members. Below, we listen in on a conversation between Playwright Andrew Rosendorf and Actor Sommer Carbuccia. The two have worked together on Paper Cut since its workshop at The Playwrights’ Center. The play receives its world premiere this October at the Dairy Arts Center. Previews begin October 17 and opening night is October 20.