Archive for category Photos
Photos from “The Monkey At the Wedding” in Texas
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Uncategorized on May 16, 2018
Louis Antonelli shares these photos from the recent production of my one-act THE MONKEY AT THE WEDDING by Red River Revue in Clarksville, Texas in early May.
More photos here.
This script was previously produced at a high school in Massachusetts in 2015 where it won four awards.
THE MONKEY AT THE WEDDING
A wedding goes afoul when the ringbearer — a monkey — swallows the ring. Chaos, and comedy, ensues. Features a motorcycle gang, and someone in a monkey suit. Cast: 12 or 13 — 5 male, 5 or 6 female, 2 non-gender. Running time: 30 minutes
Backstage photos from “This Rose Has Thorns” in Australia
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Uncategorized on May 16, 2018
Finally got around to downloading photos from my OTHER camera that I took to Australia to see the premiere of my play THIS ROSE HAS THORNS.

This was one of the most amazing sights I’ve seen: The cast gathers before the show for a pre-show rally, led by actor Nick Sidari (somewhere in the center of this scrum).
Lots more backstage photos here.
More on THIS ROSE HAS THORNS:
* Review: Shakespeare Oz likes “This Rose Has Thorns”
* Photos from first read-through
* New poster for THIS ROSE HAS THORNS
* First international production of a full-length script announced
“Spirits From the Vasty Deep” is semi-finalist at American Shakespeare Center
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Uncategorized on May 2, 2018
The American Shakespeare Center in Staunton, Virginia has launched what it bills as a 20-year project to find “companion pieces” to each of Shakespeare’s 38 plays. Every six months or so, the center will announce four plays for which it is seeking companions. The first round was announced last year — with the eligible plays being COMEDY OF ERRORS, MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR, THE WINTER’S TALE and HENRY IV, PART 1.
I chose to compete in the HENRY IV, PART 1 category. Out of that challenge, I decided to tell the story of one of Shakespeare’s minor characters — the Welsh nationalist leader Owen Glendower. Glendower appears in just one scene, where Shakespeare portrays him as a wild barbarian with mystical leanings — he talks of summoning “spirits from the vasty deep.” In fact, Glendower was a cultured man for his age. One notable fact: He taught his daughters to read, which was not common for that era. Another: He was a patron of the arts, who kept a retinue of poets and musicians at his Welsh estate. He was also briefly king of Wales — Prince of Wales was the title he preferred — in a nationalist uprising that succeeded for time, until finally being crushed by Henry IV.
To prepare my script SPIRITS FROM THE VASTY DEEP — but adhere to the ASC rules forbidding prior productions — I held an invitation-only staged reading in September 2017. Mill Mountain Theatre graciously provided the free space, and Linsee Lewis signed on as director.
The good news: SPIRITS FROM THE VAST DEEP was a semi-finalist. The not-so-good news: It did not win. However, the world now has a new play about Owen Glendower. Here are photos from that secret staged reading.
SPIRITS FROM THE VASTY DEEP
In Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Part 1, one scene depicts Owen Glendower, a Welsh nationalist leader who led a rebellion against the English crown. In Shakespeare’s play, Glendower was depicted as a mystical barbarian who claimed he could call “spirits from the vasty deep.” In fact, Glendower was a cultured man – a lawyer who had served the English king and was known for keeping a retinue of poets and musicians at his estate in Wales. This play looks at some of the events of Henry IV, Part 1 from Glendower’s perspective. The story as told here follows actual historic events but, for dramatic purposes, conflates many of them and omits others, just as Shakespeare himself did. For instance, Glendower had many children. For dramatic purposes, this script just shows three. Glendower was eventually defeated, but never captured. Welsh legend holds that his shade still walks the hills, waiting to return. That’s the premise that animates “Spirits From The Vasty Deep,” as the ghost of a poet and musician who had been in his service take a modern-day newsboy back in time to introduce him to Glendower.
Cast: 12 — 5 male, 3 female, 4 gender-flexible.
Review: Shakespeare Oz likes “This Rose Has Thorns”
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Reviews, Uncategorized on May 2, 2018
The website Shakespeare Oz has a nice review of “This Rose Has Thorns,” which ran April 5-7 in Melbourne, Australia.
There’s also a Q&A with actor Sam Corr, who plays Toby.
More on THIS ROSE HAS THORNS:
* Photos from first read-through
* New poster for THIS ROSE HAS THORNS
* First international production of a full-length script announced
Photos from “This Rose Has Thorns” in Australia
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Uncategorized on May 2, 2018
My full-length script THIS ROSE HAS THORNS had its world premiere April 5-7 in Melbourne, Australia, produced by Burwood Student Theatre Company at Deakin University. It’s the eighth full-length script I’ve had produced, and the first produced outside the United States. It was also a sell-out for all four shows.
More photos here.
And more links below: Read the rest of this entry »
Meet the cast and crew of “This Rose Has Thorns”
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Uncategorized on May 2, 2018
Here’s who’s who in the world premiere of THIS ROSE HAS THORNS, April 5-7, 2018 in Melbourne, Australia. Photos by Joka Photography.
More below!
First read-through for “This Rose Has Thorns” in Australia
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Uncategorized on May 2, 2018
Finally catching up with all the photos from the world premiere of THIS ROSE HAS THORNS, my first full-length script produced outside the United States. Here are photos from the first read-through back on December 17, 2017 — by students from Deakin University in Melbourne, Australia. Director John Jennings provides this description: “The first read through/ picnic with the cast of Dwayne Yancey’s ‘This Rose Has Thorns’ was held last Sunday, where the talented group collaborated together for the first time with the script while fighting over picnic food at the Tim Neville Arboretum.”
More photos here.
More on THIS ROSE HAS THORNS:
* New poster for THIS ROSE HAS THORNS
* First international production of a full-length script announced
Photo from “The Cellphones of The Dead”
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Uncategorized on April 23, 2018
My five-piece play inspired by the mass shooting at Virginia Tech in 2007 — which killed 32 people plus the shooter and stood as the nation’s worst mass shooting until the Pulse nightclub shooting in 2016 — has been performed numerous places in 2018 as part of the “Code Red” program of short plays about mass shootings.
Here is a photo from the April 20 staged reading in Roanoke, Virginia, which was held at Virginia Western Community College.
MORE:
* Press coverage for “Code Red” reading in Roanoke.
* “The Cellphones of the Dead” included in collection of short plays about mass shootings.
Posters for “This Rose Has Thorns” in Australia
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Uncategorized on February 22, 2018
Here are some posters from my upcoming show in Melbourne, Australia: THIS ROSE HAS THORNS will be produced by the Burwood Student Theatre Company at Deakin University.
Photos from “Death by Poinsettia” in Roanoke
Posted by Dwayne Yancey in News, Photos, Productions, Uncategorized on December 21, 2017
Not only did my Christmas one-act DEATH BY POINSETTIA get produced in Hollywood this Christmas season, it also had a staged reading Roanoke at Mill Mountain Theatre, through the Hollins Playwright’s Lab. Sadly, I missed the show because I was in Orlando for the staged reading of MISS MITCHELL’S COMET. Michael and Amanda Mansfield were the actors; Lauren Brooke Ellis directed.
MORE ABOUT DEATH BY POINSETTIA:
* Photos from Actors Workout Studio in Hollywood, 2017.
* Show poster in Hollywood, 2017
* Show poster for staged reading in Roanoke
* “Death By Poinsettia” wins awards in Maryland
* Photos from “Death by Poinsettia” in Maryland
* Photos from “Death by Poinsettia” at Studio C in Hollywood, 2015.
* After-party photos from Hollywood, 2015.
* Rehearsal photos from Hollywood, 2015.

















