Review: Shakespeare Oz likes “This Rose Has Thorns”

The con men con the constable. Photo by Duane Wheare.

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 the show

* Meet the cast and crew

* Rehearsal photos

* Photos from first read-through

* New poster for THIS ROSE HAS THORNS

* First round of posters

* Cast list for the show

* Amazing audition poster

* First international production of a full-length script announced

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Photos from “This Rose Has Thorns” in Australia

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.

Curtain call. Photo by Duane Wheare


Photo by Duane Wheare.

More photos here.

And more links below: Read the rest of this entry »

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Meet the cast and crew of “This Rose Has Thorns”

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.

Ashlee Lambton as Rose, who sets off to rescue her boyfriend from the Tower of Lond.

Bianca Heard as Lily, the sister who reluctantly goes along to rescue her boyfriend, as well.

More below!

Read the rest of this entry »

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Rehearsal photos from “This Rose Has Thorns”

Yes, stage combat roles for women.

Director John Jennings provides these rehearsal photos from THIS ROSE HAS THORNS in Melbourne, Australia.

The show was produced April 5-7 by Burwood Student Theatre Company at Deakin University.

More on THIS ROSE HAS THORNS:

* Photos from first read-through

* New poster for THIS ROSE HAS THORNS

* First round of posters

* Cast list for the show

* Amazing audition poster

* First international production of a full-length script announced

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First read-through for “This Rose Has Thorns” in Australia

Photography by Katie Karandais of Joka Photography.

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 round of posters

* Cast list for the show

* Amazing audition poster

* First international production of a full-length script announced

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Photo from “The Cellphones of The Dead”

James Honaker as a police officer at the scene of a mass shooting. Photo by Carole Tarrant.

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.

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Video of “Just Another Day At The Office” in Virginia

Shakespeare in the Burg in Middleburg, Virginia held a festival of staged readings of short plays on April 8. One of those was my play JUST ANOTHER DAY AT THE OFFICE. Here’s the video.

JUST ANOTHER DAY AT THE OFFICE
A young woman is sent on a mission to raid another department for supplies. She comes back as the CEO. A play about sexism in the workplace. Cast: 18 — 12 male, 6 female.

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Poster for festival in London that includes one of my shows

My 10-minute play THE FACE ON MARS will be included in a festival of short science fiction plays in London in May. Here’s the poster.

This includes my short play THE FACE ON MARS.

The same script was produced in Connecticut in 2014; here’s a photo from that show.

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Press coverage for “Code Red” reading

My short play THE CELLPHONES OF THE DEAD is included the collection of short plays about school shootings that is being performed across the country.

I like a clean work space.

Here’s a story in The Roanoke Times in advance of the April 20 reading in Roanoke, Virginia.

More on THE CELLPHONES OF THE DEAD and the background of this project here.

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“The Cellphones of the Dead” included in collection of short plays

My short play THE CELLPHONES OF THE DEAD has been included in a collection of 20 short plays about school shootings in the United States. Oregon playwright Rachael Carnes put out a call recently for short plays memorializing the victims of specific shootings; I contributed THE CELLPHONES OF THE DEAD, which was written in the aftermath of the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007 that killed 32 people plus the shooter. Rachael pulled all the pieces together and organized them so they can be presented in a single reading — or organizers can pick and choose the pieces.

So far, PLAYWRIGHTS SAY NEVER AGAIN TO SCHOOL SHOOTINGS has had readings in Eugene, Oregon; Chattanooga, Tennessee; and Montclair, New Jersey.

You can find stories on the New Jersey program here and here.

For more information about how to put on a royalty-free reading of PLAYWRIGHTS SAY NEVER AGAIN TO SCHOOL SHOOTINGS, email coderedplaywrights@gmail.com.

Meanwhile, THE CELLPHONES OF THE DEAD has been included in a separate program — a staged reading in Washington, D.C. on March 24 to coincide with “March for Our Lives.” That reading, organized by Nu Sass Productions, featured 17 short plays to coincide with the number of victims in the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Nu Sass found my play listed through Protest Plays and the New Play Exchange.

Here’s some of what people have said about THE CELLPHONES OF THE DEAD:

“Your piece is stunning.” – producer

“I had multiple people approach me after and say how moved they were by your play.” – producer

It’s one of the more moving pieces for me” — actor.

 

About the piece:

THE CELLPHONES OF THE DEAD
A police officer’s somber monologue: He was at the scene of a mass shooting, and could literally hear the awful news start to spread — as the cellphones of the victims started to ring with desperate messages from their frantic friends.

Cast:
Police officer (M)
Multiple bodies on the floor

Running time: Five minutes.

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