Local Newsroom — Local Theater Company

Local Lab, Boulder’s Premiere New Play Festival | April 25-27 | The Nomad Playhouse, Bldr
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Pesha Rudnick

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

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

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