Featuring Free Public Readings by Three Native American Playwrights

May 27 and 28, 2015
Autry National Center of the American West, Los Angeles
May 30 and 31, 2015

La Jolla Playhouse, La Jolla

LOS ANGELES – Native Voices at the Autry, America’s leading Native American theatre company, presents its 17th Annual Festival of New Plays at the Autry National Center of the American West and La Jolla Playhouse. The festival features staged readings of new and in-progress plays by Native writers followed by audience talkbacks in which each viewer becomes an important part of the collaborative process.

“This is the most exciting event in our development season,” said Jean Bruce Scott, Native Voices Producing Executive Director. “The playwrights workshop their scripts with a dedicated cast while in residence at the Autry. They hear their plays read and discussed for three different audiences: the first day for the full company (actors, directors, producers, dramaturges and designers), a week later for a public audience at the Autry, and two days after that for a public audience at the Tony Award-winning La Jolla Playhouse. The separate readings, meetings with designers, and daily workshops help the playwright to revise or rewrite as needed based on what they learn. Public readings are an invaluable tool, allowing the playwright to evaluate how the language, structure, story and themes are being heard. This is why the audience is so vital to the playwright’s process and is such an important part of what we do at Native Voices.

A weeklong playwrights retreat that precedes Native Voices’ highly respected festival brings together beginning, emerging, and established Native American playwrights to shape their plays with nationally recognized directors, dramaturges, and an acting company of exceptional Native American actors. Many works developed during this project have gone on to enjoy successful runs on Native Voices at the Autry’s main stage and elsewhere, including Off the Rails (2015), The     Bird House (2012), and The Frybread Queen (2011).

The Festival of New Plays is free but reservations are recommended.

For reservations and additional information, visit TheAutry.org/NativeVoices.

About the Featured Readings and Authors

Timestop by Joseph Valdez (Navajo*)

An artist attempts to reconcile a tragic event in order to reclaim his identity.

Valdez received the Presidential and National Hispanic Scholarships to study at the University of Southern California where in received his BA in Theatre (Magna Cum Laude). He has written three plays: Little Big Joe the Bug Squasher, Swimming to China in My Birthday Suit, and Timestop. Little Big Joe and Swimming to China both premiered at the Powerhouse Theatre as part of the first two What’s the Story? Festivals. Timestop was workshopped by Theatricum Botanicum’s Seedlings playwriting development series. Valdez is also an accomplished actor, most recently starring as Alessandro in the 2015 Ramona, California’s Official Outdoor Play.

Readings:

Wednesday, May 27, 4:00 p.m. at the Autry in Los Angeles

Saturday, May 30, 2:30 p.m. at the La Jolla Playhouse in La Jolla

They Don’t Talk Back by Frank Henry Kaash Katasse (Tlingit-Eagle/Tsaagweidí*)

A young teen discovers the meaning of family when he is sent to live and work with his Tlingit grandparents in a remote Alaskan village.

 Katasse is an actor, director, producer, and playwright. He majored in Theatre at the University of Hawaii, Mānoa, where he performed with the University’s theatre program and improv group, as well as Kumu Kahua Theatre. Katasse is involved with Juneau’s Perseverance Theatre, Theatre in the Rough, and Morally Improvrished. He also has acted in short films and contributed as a script developer for other independent playwrights. Katasse currently serves as the Vice President of Juneau Douglas Little Theatre.

Readings:

Wednesday, May 27, 7:30 p.m. at the Autry in Los Angeles

Saturday, May 30, 7:00 p.m. at the La Jolla Playhouse in La Jolla

 So Damn Proud by Justin Neal (Squamish*)

A former dance prodigy fights to shut out her past and her troubled brother as the biracial siblings carve out their identities in a divided world.

Neal received his undergraduate degree at Western Washington University’s Fairhaven College with an interdisciplinary degree in Cultural Diversity and the Dramatic Arts. He is currently pursuing a joint master’s degree in Creative Writing and Theatre at the University of British Columbia. The writer, actor, and collaborator on theatrical projects has worked with Quiet, International WOW, The Anthropologists, Rady & Bloom, and Shotgun Players, among others. He has served as executive producer and actor for the web series Green-ish and co-founded The Oakland Playhouse (now San Francisco-based Big City Improv). Neal has produced Brave New Play Rites for two years, a collaborative festival between UBC playwrights and actors, directors, and technical artists throughout Vancouver. His original short play What’s New premiered at the 2014 festival.

Readings:

Thursday May 28, 7:30 p.m. at the Autry in Los Angeles

Sunday, May 30, 3:00 p.m. at the La Jolla Playhouse in La Jolla

*Refers to tribal affiliation.

Visit TheAutry.org/NativeVoices for more information.