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Transcript
91 University Pl.
Princeton, NJ 08540
www.mccarter.org
609-258-2787
For more information, contact:
Tom Miller, Director of Public Relations
[email protected]
609-258-6524
McCARTER AND PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
TO PRESENT THE EVERY 28 HOURS PLAYS
PRINCETON, NJ: McCarter Theatre Center will partner with the Princeton University Lewis
Center for the Arts and Department of African American Studies to present The Every 28
Hours Plays on October 24, 2016 at 7:00 p.m. on McCarter Theatre Center’s Matthews Stage.
“Every 28 Hours” is a theater project and national partnership inspired by the widelyshared and hotly-debated statistic that a black person is killed by the police, security
guards, or neighborhood watch vigilantes every 28 hours in the United States. Conceived
shortly after the August 2014 killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, MO, The Every 28 Hours
Plays tap into the role that the arts have played in helping people to process and protest
what happened in Ferguson — from the death of Mr. Brown and the unrest that followed, to
the issues of racial inequality that it raised.
McCarter, the Princeton University Lewis Center for the Arts, and the Princeton University
Department of African American Studies will partner to present a 60-minute collection of
the plays, performed by a combination of professional and student actors.
The presentation of one-minute plays will be directed by Megan Sandberg-Zakian, an
award-winning director and a current recipient of the Princess Grace Foundation Theatre
Fellowship whose current production of Nathan Alan Davis’ play Nat Turner in Jerusalem
can be seen at New York Theatre Workshop. The Every 28 Hours Plays include works by
such notable playwrights as Tarell Alvin McCraney, Lynn Nottage, Dominique Morriseau,
and David Henry Hwang, among others.
The presentation of the plays will be followed by a community discussion designed to
highlight and create awareness of the people and organizations in our community who are
doing anti-racism work. This discussion will feature a panel of featured guests gathered to
discuss the topics at hand. The most updated list of panelists may be found here.
The goal for the evening is to create a space of artistic response, community discussion, and
forward action to address the ongoing national discussion on systemic racism and violence.
Additionally, McCarter’s education staff will work closely with drama students at Middlesex
County Vocational Technical High School as they create their own short plays, dances, films,
and other artistic responses to ongoing civil rights activism after attending the performance
at McCarter. Several MCVTS students will also perform age-appropriate roles in the
performance at McCarter. The MCVTS student work will be presented publicly on October
26th on the school’s East Brunswick campus.
“Since the beginning of my career in the theater, I have been committed to exploring the
connection between theatre and social justice,” said McCarter’s Artistic Director, Emily
Mann. “In these heartbreaking and infuriating times, when African Americans are facing so
much violence and the rest of the country is finally being forced to witness what black
Americans have been facing all along, we as a theater committed to our community have to
take action. Bringing members of our community together from all sides of the issue to
share stories and engage in constructive, empathic dialogue is a first step towards affecting
change. I look forward to the discussion.”
The Every 28 Hours Plays will be performed on October 24, 2016 at 7pm on the
Matthews Stage. Tickets are free, and may be reserved by calling the McCarter Ticket
office at 609- 258-2787 or visiting www.mccarter.org/E28H .
ABOUT THE EVERY 28 HOURS PLAYS
Originally produced by the Oregon Shakespeare Festival under the leadership of Claudia
Alick and The One-Minute Play Festival with Dominic D’Andrea, in association with St.
Louis-based University of Missouri theatre professor Jacqueline Thompson, this project was
conceived as a multi-year process with the goal of capturing the history in the making of our
current Civil Rights Movement.
Last October, theater makers from around the US, including a member of McCarter
Theatre’s staff, traveled to Ferguson and St. Louis to listen, learn, and create a theatrical
response alongside local artists. They met with historians, high school students, police
officers, community organizers, and other residents of the city before crafting one-minute
plays around the theme of police violence and inspired by the Black Lives Matter
movement. The collection of 72 plays was presented as staged readings in St. Louis and
Ferguson in October of 2015.
“The goal…is to experience the multiplicity of voices and perspectives on this issue within
our community and from the country,” said OSF Producer Claudia Alick. “While all theater is
a political act, we have always been very clear that this piece of theater was created without
a singular political viewpoint. Our curatorial process was open, and we asked our
playwrights to reflect on the Civil Rights Movement happening today and the events that
inspire the Black Lives Matter movement. The process has included dialogue with both law
enforcement and activists, and that dialogue continues. Theater, culture workers and law
enforcement are designed to serve the community in their own unique ways. Theater offers
a space to explore our differences, find our commonalities and practice empathy.”
The upcoming phase of the project is a coordinated series of national readings and
engagements all over the country sponsored and presented by partnering theatres. This
year, theaters and universities across the US will join forces and offer individual
presentations of The Every 28 Hour Plays during the month of October. The mission is to
open each city’s public spaces to engage in this critical conversation. By the end of October,
over 100 theatres and universities across 25 states will have participated in the creation,
performance, or other forms of engagement with these plays.
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