Under the supervision of artistic director Philip Himberg and producing director Christopher Hibma, the Lab is the centerpiece of the Institute’s year-round work with the theatre community.
The Theatre Lab supports both emerging and established theatre-makers developing new work for the stage, with a focus on "assuring that the playwright’s deepest impulses and visions can be realized," according to press notes.
For the three-week Lab, the Institute provides rehearsal space, dramaturgical support and an acting company, creating "an immersive environment where artists can experiment, see their work take shape and collaborate with creative advisors, dramaturgs and actors." The Lab culminates in a closed presentation of each project for Lab participants, followed by a feedback session.
More than 85 percent of Sundance-supported plays and musicals find production, including this year’s Tony Award winner for Best Musical, Lisa Kron and Jeanine Tesori’s Fun Home, and last year’s winner, Robert L. Freedman and Steven Lutvak’s A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder.
This year's participating artists include: Acting Company
David Abeles (Once, Million Dollar Quartet), Jonathan Brooks (The Addict, Neil Young’s Greendale, Once Around the Sun), Cornelius Davidson, Tesiana Elie (June Moon, Kinship), America Ferrera (Ugly Betty, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants), Alex Hurt (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof), Tenaj Jackson (American Horror Story: Coven), Jenny Jules (Father Comes Home From the Wars), Emily Kuroda (Gilmore Girls, Drop Dead Diva), Crystal Lucas-Perry (Little Children Dream of God), Nadine Malouf (May in the Summer, Shame), Piter Marek (Disgraced, Cyrano De Bergerac), Forrest McClendon (The Scottsboro Boys), Tony Plana (The Boys of Winter, Zoot Suit), Will Pullen (Punk Rock, The Wayside Motor Inn), Andy Robinson (Dirty Harry, Hellraiser), Stacey Sargeant (Big Love, Our Lady of Kibeho), Andrew Schneider (Youarenowhere, Field), Margo Seibert (Rocky), Ching Valdes-Aran (Across the Universe, Macbeth)
Creative Advisors
Ayad Ahktar (Recipient of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Drama), Indhu Rubasingham (Artistic Director, Tricycle Theatre, London)
Dramaturgs
Janice Paran (Senior Program Advisor), Jocelyn Clarke, Christian Parker, Lisa Timmel
Kennedy Center Playwright Observer
Kristin Idaszak
Artists-In-Residence
Jaouad Essounani (Morocco), Sondos Shabayeh (Egypt)
Stage Management
Catherine Bloch, Amy Ehrenberg, Melanie Lisby, Nicole Marconi
Production Assistants
Estey DeMerchant, Sierra Ducharme-Hanson, Keri Hale, Toran Moore
Special Guests
Jumana Al-Yasiri (MENA Manager), Roberta Levitow (Senior Program Associate-International)
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The previously announced projects for the Lab, featuring descriptions by the Institute, follow:
abominable
By Phillip Howze
Directed by Mark Brokaw
Memory and myth collide in this tragicomic story of a family who embark on an affordable vacation days before the husband must depart to war. Their good-natured adventure soon descends and as the countdown to deployment tests their principles and allegiances, who and what will get tossed into the void?
Annie Salem: An American Tale
Adapted from the novel by Mac Wellman
Written & directed by Rachel Chavkin
Composer and co-lyricist Heather Christian
Performer/Designer/Co-creator Andrew Schneider
Set in both the ruined rustbelt and ancient Martian plains, Annie Salem is part social commentary, part love story, part sci-fi yarn. A howling, surreal new musical adapted from experimental grandaddy Mac Wellman's novel, it tells the story of teenage misfit Jack who loves a girl named Annie. Annie Salem is also being developed at the Royal Court and Ars Nova’s Uncharted Program.
awe/struck
by christopher oscar peña
Directed by Lileana Blain-Cruz
Denia arrives in Chicago, looking to create a place for herself in this unfamiliar land. Monique’s never left Chicago but feels more and more like a stranger in her own home. A chance encounter between them transforms their lives forever in this new play about identity and perception. awe/struck is a commission of the Goodman Theatre.
Catch The Wall
By Gabrielle Reisman
Directed by Colette Robert
Choreography by Ro Tyler
After a New Orleans bounce MC dies, middle-schoolers Cleo and Justice plot a music video so their mentor’s memory can live on. As the MC’s ghost tangles with the girls’ young teachers, students and educators push back against a button-down charter school climate, working to get their own stories heard.
Jonah
By Len Jenkin
Directed by Katherine Owens
Jonah is a contemporary re-telling of the story of the unfaithful servant. A bar band, a lounge singer, a biblical scholar, blind Mr. Bones, a storm at sea, three or four love stories, the evil city of Nineveh, a Dairy Queen, the reluctant prophet, and of course, the whale.
Sell/Buy/Date
By Sarah Jones
Directed by Carolyn Cantor
Sell/Buy/Date is a multi-character, one-person play inspired by stories of people, especially women and girls, directly impacted by sex-trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation. Through monologues the piece explores the perspectives of diverse characters and illuminates the universal challenges of life in an increasingly complex global world.
TAHA
By Amer Hlehel
English translation by Amir Nizar Zuabi
Directed by Chay Yew
TAHA is based on the story of the celebrated Palestinian poet Taha Muhammad Ali. His poetry tells of the experience of Palestinian refugees. His story parallels the story of a million and a half Palestinians who remained in their home land after 1948.
Taylor Mac’s A 24-Decade History of Popular Music: Featuring TAYLOR MAC
Music Director/Arranger Matt Ray
Costume Design by Machine Dazzle
Co-Directed by Niegel Smith
Taylor Mac's A 24-Decade History of Popular Music is a unique durational music theatre project and a subjective history of the past 240 years in America. This highly anticipated project incorporates over 30 different performance art concerts and will culminate in a one-time only 24-hour event.
Today Is My Birthday
By Susan Soon He Stanton
Directed by Kip Fagan
Sound design by Palmer Hefferan
After Emily’s bubble life in NYC pops, she retreats home to Hawai’i, where she creates an alter ego on live radio. Told through a playful mixture of radio and phone calls, Today is My Birthday is a comedy about life with a thousand friends on Facebook and no one to have dinner with on Saturday night.