MY CALAMITOUS AFFAIR WITH THE MINISTER OF CULTURE & CENSORSHIP...

World Premiere by Ari Roth
Directed by John Vreeke

Featuring

Anat Cogan, Ilasiea Gray, Lisa Hodsoll, Karl Kippola, and Hassan Nazari-Robati

Dramaturgy & Cultural Consultation: Adam Ashraf El-Sayigh

Additional Dramaturgy: Gillian Drake, Debbie Minter Jackson, and Becca Khalil

A close-to-the-bone, comic and cutting-edge roman à clef about how we collaborate, and the cost of riding-the-third-rail while making mission-driven theater.

Part II of Voices Festival Productions' 2022
Voices From a Changing Middle East Festival: Losing/Finding Home
the 2nd of 4 festival productions this year!


September 29 – October 23, 2022

LIVE, IN-PERSON PERFORMANCE
WITH COMMUNITY DISCUSSION

This theatrical chronicle of a cross-cultural crack-up begins with a brand new Executive Director and her former boss returning to the scene of a rehearsal room revolt that set the stage for an Artistic Director’s departure from the theater he launched with high purpose and blind spots.  Restorative Justice is on the agenda but hard to find, as the company re-unites and a fictionalized, right-wing Israeli Cabinet Minister materializes uninvited to spar with Eilat and Samad, Israeli and Palestinian theater artists/activists, while their American hosts, Virginia and the unnamed AD, get caught in the middle, navigating treacherous terrain. They try to mend the unmendable, in a journey of personal loss and learning, reckoning and renewal, push-back, contrition, boycotts and cancel culture – on both sides – all hanging in precarious balance.

PERFORMANCES - EVENTS

Theatre Performance Venue

*Photos by Stan Barouh

The Corner at Whitman-Walker
1701 14th St NW | Washington, DC

MORE INFO

 MY CALAMITOUS AFFAIR runs 2 hours & 35 minutes

(which includes a 15 minute intermission)

What The Critics ARE SAYING

From DC Theatre Arts:

“Fierce... Blistering... Scaldingly Self-Inquisitional

“a public forum for putting one’s own conscience on trial... an ambitious attempt at moral reckoning... something particular that is rare on stage and worthy: vivid and edifying evidence of what it might look like in retrospect to examine and own one’s flaws and errors along with one’s slings and arrows.

“Director John Vreeke shrewdly meets the challenge of how to stage this text fest with a polished production that is both provocative and dynamic... The cast is superb. Ilasiea Gray as Virginia B. Lawrence, Karl Kippola as AD, Lisa Hodsoll as Miri Rekev, Anat Cogan Eilat Herzog, and Hassan Nazari-Robati as Samad Hussein keep the playing area in diagrammatic motion as they fill the script’s fragmentary, staccato exchanges with sense and long speeches with passion.  Their impressively heightened acting style both intensifies and illuminates the knotty drama...

“The sleek, white-walled street-level space at the corner of 14th and R has see-through windows reflecting transparency as theatrical intent. Upon the wide upstage wall appear Projections Designer Devin Kinch’s scene-setting images and videos, a brilliant word cloud that punches up the fast-paced dialogue.”

-       John Stoltenberg, DCTA

From The Washington Post:

“Important themes, humor and dynamic performances... depicts a seismic clash between theater people who feel passionately about their artistic and political values. It’s a clash evidently based on events related to Roth’s 2020 departure from Mosaic Theater Company, an organization he founded after being fired from Theater J in 2014. He started Voices Festival Productions this year.

In “Calamitous Affair,” directed by John Vreeke and part of the Voices from a Changing Middle East Festival, the Roth stand-in is called AD (Founding Artistic Director Until Recently), and he’s channeled by Karl Kippola with an apt disheveled-professor air... His collaborators include an Israeli playwright, Eilat Herzog (the charismatic Anat Cogan), and a Palestinian actor, Samad Hussein (Hassan Nazari-Robati, exuding spot-on moodiness and fervor). AD’s colleague Virginia B. Lawrence (a magnetic Ilasiea Gray) strives to calm tempers, but that’s tough when AD has written into “Humiliation 2.0” a right-wing-firebrand based on a real Israeli minister of culture (a radiantly brash Lisa Hodsoll). As the minister character, Miri Rekev, stalks around in a blue pantsuit, haranguing exuberantly, the meta-theater can be sharp.

“Calamitous Affair” also asks significant questions related to art, politics and inclusion. Among them: Is bearing forceful political witness incompatible with good theater, which arguably has at its core a push-and-pull between wills and viewpoints? Eye-catching at the back of the largely bare stage, Devin Kinch’s projections — words like “restorative justice” and “protected speech” and video seemingly of protests and security forces in Israel — add philosophical and geopolitical context... Anger, disappointment and, yes, humiliation do figure in the story, judging by scenes of narration and heated debate... The most moving moment sees Virginia suddenly losing her cool, showing us the anguish that evidently underlies her generally upbeat manner. “When you don’t see another’s suffering, and see only your own, it is violence,” she cries. “…. Stop the violence!”

-       Celia Wren, The Washington Post

From Broadway World:

My Calamitous Affair... is quite the event ...Hodsoll's Rekev is as charismatically entrancing as the colonial power she represents, speaking for and through AD as a character he has written into his adaptation and a figment of his imagination.

“tensions boil as the projected background fills with buzzwords until Samad 'takes over' the production and dramatically posits the first and only revolutionary idea just before intermission." My Calamitous Affair... is at times funny but it is mentally exhausting, especially for someone less interested in scandal than in the art of theatre.”

-       Martrese Meachum, Broadway World

From DC Theatre Arts (Feature):
My lunch with Ari Roth, Who Appears Barely Disguised in His Own New Play

A conversation with playwright Ari Roth and dramaturg Debbie Minter Jackson previews 'My Calamitous Affair with the Minister of Culture and Censorship.'

From Washington Jewish Week (Interview):
Ari Roth’s Third Act

“There’s a lot to do in order to be kosher in this business,” the theater producer and playwright says as he launches his newest venture.

Response from Audience
& Theatre Professionals

From Philip Arnoult, founder & director
Center for International Theatre Development

“I found Ari Roth’s My Calamitous Affair with the Minister of Culture and Censorship or Death of Dialogic in the American Theater a breathtakingly ambitious admixture of personal frailty, insider theatre power struggles, and thorny Middle Eastern conflicts.  I felt like the taut  performances I saw last week dealt with more substantial issues in 2 1/2 hours than any stage in America that night.   Controversial: yes.  Ambitious: yes.  Perfect: no.  Worth your time and attention:  absolutely.”

From Adele Robie, Theatre Producer
Founder of Anacosita Playhouse & H Street Playhouse

“I had vowed never to post on Facebook again (with the exception of photos of Julia and Chloe) but I’m breaking the vow for one quick minute. Last Sunday Ari Roth invited me to see his new show, in a new space with his new production company. Written by Ari and performed by a powerful cast, the piece kind of astonished me. You see Ari and I share a dubious distinction, arrived at by very different routes, but with the same end result. Both of us ended up on the outside of something we had founded and nourished and something, ultimately, we were locked out of.

So bravo Ari. This is his story. And while its underpinnings are middle east conflict, the clash of opinions and values, and very insider-theater action, I kept being drawn by a bigger more global message, that of losing voice. It’s a theme woven throughout, as characters argue, stomp, yell, leave and return as they try to stay true to their own voices. I know the theater part was important and true, yet I kept coming back to voice, both silenced and appropriated. And shouted down. And how a person can attempt to honor many voices without success, ending up exactly where he started. Some folks will watch this and come away with a very literal interpretation and that’s good. The story is important. For me it was also about loss and ultimate new beginnings. And the work of finding and staying true to your own voice.

It’s called “My Calamitous Affair with the Minister of Culture and Censorship or Death of the Dialogue in the American Theater” See it if you can. It goes through October 23.

From Michael Bloom, Director/Playwright 

★★★★

“I attended MY CALAMITOUS AFFAIR at the Voices Festival and was very glad I did.  This is a brave, heartfelt, and funny play that uses the authors own experience as a lever to dissect the tumultuous cultural world we now live in. Roth presents a cacophony of voices from three different countries in exciting and utterly revealing ways. Few other writers have had the courage and the honesty to dramatize the convulsions we are now experiencing—and to do so with empathy and humor.”

From Dana Scott Galloway, Actor/Writer

“Do not miss this show. Funny, provocative, entertaining, very challenging, a sometimes flawed, confusing maelstrom... It's big, noisy, messy, powerful theatre, and left me thinking and rethinking a few things, and laughing...yea, it's funny, (and yes, long, 2.5 hours and they fly by. No joke.) A stellar and truly diverse cast, written by Ari Roth. Not for those who desire being spoon fed the current politically correct soup of the day. It's an exhilarating, ass-kicking show.”

From Carl Randolph, Artistic Director of Transformation Theatre

“What a play! The performance was fantastic and the play very powerful.  It needs to be seen by every AD, ED, PM and theatre Board! Even directors and dramaturgs need to see this. So much resonated with me as I'm sure you guessed. It was interesting to watch this play sitting directly across from you. It was especially moving (and a little difficult) to see you during the passing of your father. Still very fresh for you. I lost my father 10 years ago on Oct 25 and it still moves me.  I'd love to chat with you sometime and talk more about the play and your experience. As you said last night, every Artistic Director has or will experience much of this. Thank you for sharing this.  FABULOUS performances of a very powerful and thought provoking play.”

A text to House Management From Susan (and Ronald) Shapiro

“We left right after the play because we were absolutely starving but we wanted to stay so please tell Ari is was unbelievable, fabulous and just transformative....”

[and then on email]

 “We were spellbound after the play, by the sense of authenticity and vulnerability –presenting a self-critique during a time of intense political polarization. There’s a fine line between exposing – and moving on – accepting and changing – forgiving oneself so that lessons can be learned.  You had courage and were vulnerable and you opened your art – and you made new art.  You were authentic and it was felt. You had to be stripped – you had to suffer – and that suffering led to a new self. 

I have been talking about it to colleagues and friends, trying to tackle some of the ideas. I would love to brainstorm ways you might use this material.  I can imagine using it to explore the political polarization in our world today and to gain inner awareness.  I might advocate using it in schools in some ways.  Maybe universities?   I am working with a nonprofit consisting of educators, artists, a maze designer, and students to improve our educational systems, globally, and have teachers transform their thinking.  This is similar to the intent you expressed in your play.  I will do whatever I can to spread word about the play.” 

From Laura Zam, Author/Performer

“Just a note to say Kurt and I are still thinking about, and talking about, your terrific play. There was so much bravery and heart on that stage. The play raised such important questions about our biases, and where they might come from. Too many people believe we can easily get rid of them, but the play showed us the reality, with deep empathy for all concerned.  I hope it has a rich life beyond this production.”

From Antoinette Dougherty

“The production is passionate and thought-provoking. I highly recommend it!”

From Minna Scherlinder Morse
[to her Book Club and a Listserve - used with permission]


Hi everyone! Ari Roth's new company is called Voices Festival Productions, and it is the new container for both his Voices of a Changing Middle East Festival (the one he started at Theater J and continued at Mosaic Theater company) and Voices from a Changing Nation Festival (next spring, I think), which he started at Mosaic. His performance space is a bare-bones black-box (where matinees will be an interesting lighting challenge) on the north-east corner of 14th and R Streets, NW (1701 14th St, NW--The Corner at Whitman Walker). There's a link for tickets at the bottom of this performance details page, if you feel able to purchase, please do, but contact me if you'd like one of the vouchers I have (I bought 8 tickets for first preview and then first preview got pushed back).

My Brief Calamitous Affair With The Minister Of Culture And Censorship, Or The Death Of The Dialogic In The American Theater is a breathtakingly honest, provocative, and inventive play by Roth about his own reckoning with history, his own culpability as an artist/colonizer in cross-cultural/cross-power-differential collaborations, including the one that ended with his ouster from the "cultural fusion" theater company he founded. ...The play is told in retrospect, from the perch of having wrestled over two years with what happened, with flashbacks and forwards, recreations and elements of magical realism (including the appearance of a fictionalized, hilarious love-to-hate version of 'Bibi in heels,' MK Miri Regev). The basis for one main character – the anti-Zionist Israeli playwright with whom he fought and at least partially reconciled, Einat Weizman – will [was scheduled to be] performing her own one-woman show, I, Dareen T on alternate nights with Affair toward the end of this run and then continuing for a week thereafter.

A great new play with themes of 'teshuvah' (or repentance, just right for holiday!), racism/anti-racism, Palestinian oppression/liberation, artistry and allyship. Incredibly moved and impressed, and also laughed a LOT (in all the right places).”

From J. Michael Kirchberg

“I still feel ripped open by it. All my own righteous attachments, challenged to the core. Each domain was exquisitely articulated and righteously angry. Apart from the AD's Deputy (who becomes the new Executive Director]: perhaps her relative capitulation gives us something of what four hundred years of this stuff can do. I wished for Stokely Carmichael in her too. I came away feeling wrung out, exhausted by my reeling sympathies, spent, but not quite beaten. The clarification implicit in the evolving presentations-of-viewpoint was daunting but not damning: they registered. In the AD and in us. The movement was painful, but it happened…. The acting was superb, everyone. I wish Congress would see it…

“The play remains haunting: each character articulated the passionate version of a representative stance...the Israeli government, the Palestinian vulnerability, the Israeli artistic/theatrical yearning, Ari's complex dilemma in engaging all of this in dialogue that might ultimately lead to a play that might demonstrate the potential for accommodation /resolution/attention from the various viewpoints. The Artistic Director's Deputy, a younger-middle-aged Black woman, offered a complex viewpoint that reflected her cultural stance but also a commitment to the AD's vision. She was less passionate than the others, apart from one singular challenge. She eventually demanded that the group "Stop the violence" in their assaults on another; she remained a more muted representative of Black artistic concerns. I suggested to Ari that her more muted representative response might well have reflected four hundred years of oppression in comparison to the 75 years of Arab/Israeli tension. The others were righteously angry and very compelling articulators of their group's concerns. The AD was made to cave to compelling arguments from all sides, and ultimately seemed to take in what he had heard. His experience was notably qualified by the death of a family member right in the middle of it all. Eventually the AD takes in the broad implications of what has been offered, and by the end seems sobered but not wholly deterred from his vision that some sort of dialogue and accommodation would be possible. The play moved, as the AD took in what was emerging, even as he expressed deep frustration at the accusations of insensitivity, disrespect and so on. The play makes clear how difficult listening can be, how intense the stakes are, how willing the participants are to risking anything to make their points. The review in The Post is disappointing to me in that she did not acknowledge what he was challenging all of us to consider about the larger issues of engaging on matters of intense and different stances. She focused too much, I think, on what had been developing for Ari in the local theater world and not enough on what he was challenging us to consider in a larger sense.”

MEET THE CAST

Anat Cogan (playing Eilat Herzog, an Israeli TV and theater actress, political activist and documentary-based playwright) is a NYC based, Israeli-Egyptian-American actress and writer. She has been on stage since the age of 5 and has been acting ever since. After finishing her service in the Israeli Defense Force and graduating from Nissan Nativ Acting Studio in Tel Aviv/Israel and the Lee Strasberg Film & Theatre Institute in NY, Anat continued her journey in acting- working in the Israeli theater and participating in theater performances in New York as well as shooting a variety of films around the US. Select credits include: Ocean In A Teacup (Theater Row), Handle With Care (Florida Studio Theatre & Shadowland Stages), David (St. Marks), Ajax In Iraq (Flux), What’s In Alaska? (MITF), A Thousand Words (Manhattan Rep), Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare Co.), Hamlet (Shakespeare Co.), Tartuffe (TLV), Mother Courage (TLV), Donia Rosita The Spinster (TLV), The Sound Of Music (TLV). TV: “Prisoners of War” and “Wish House.” For more info: www.anatcogan.com

Ilasiea Gray (playing Virginia B. Lawrence, Executive Director for External Affairs at a mid-size theater company)  is a multi-hyphenate social practice artist (actress, educator, writer, director, creator) and proud recipient of a True West Award for her impactful work in the arts and arts education.  Ilasiea is passionate about socially engaged projects ranging from on-camera work, stage, educational theatre, and theatre for young audiences, and has been featured in several media publications (including Colorado Public Radio, Denver Westword, Voyage Magazine), discussing the intersection of artistry, equity, social justice, and youth advocacy. Ilasiea made history in Colorado playing the title role of Sleeping Beauty (Denver Children’s Theatre) as a Black actress and currently tours the social justice show Black with a Capital B. (Curious Theatre Company). Additional credits include co-creating and performing in the verbatim theatre documentary CO2020 with BETC (featured in American Theatre Magazine); Detroit ’67 (Curious Theatre Company), Second City’s Twist Your Dickens (Aurora Fox); and world premieres including American Prom (THEATREWORKS) and Black Odyssey (DCPA Theatre Company). Her original piece Acting While Black was a featured finalist in The Breath Project national festival, with another version appearing in the award-winning Amplify series (Arvada Center). Ilasiea has been speaking at conferences nationwide (including South by Southwest Education Conference) about her internationally published essay Why Are There No “Great” Kids of Color in the Performing Arts? which examines inequity in the arts for young people of color and she was recently named the Arvada Center’s first ever Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Access Coordinator. Ilasiea has a BFA in Theatre, Film & Television, and recently graduated from an inaugural MFA in Social & Environmental Arts Practice program, created/led by Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors. For more info: www.ilasiea.com

Lisa Hodsoll (playing Miri Rekev, Right-Wing Minister of Culture & Sport for the State of Israel - until recently) was born in Brussels, Belgium and is a graduate of the University of Virginia. Lisa’s theater credits include: Laura Bush Killed A Guy (Helen Hayes Nominated for its DC production by The Klunch, and subsequent New York Transfer), Medea’s Got Some Issues (D.C. and Chicago Production), The Wonderful World of Dissocia (Helen Hayes Nominated), A Fool’s Paradise at The Edinburgh Fringe and Tony Kushner’s The Intelligent Homosexuals Guide To Capitalism and Socialism With a Key to the Scriptures by Tony Kushner and directed by John Vreeke at Theater J. Selected writing credits: Buffurducken (writer and director, winner of Royal Reel Award), co-writer on Kosmopolites (winner of Best International Feature Columbia Gorges International Film Festival) and a play adaptation of Company K by William March. Lisa is a Founder of Open Road and member of the Klunch, and Factory 449. For more info: https://lisamhodsoll.com/

Karl Kippola (playing AD, or Founding Artistic Director Until Recently) is a full-time faculty member at American University since 2003, and program director since 2016. Karl holds a BA in Drama (University of Montana), an MFA in Acting (Wayne State University), and a PhD in Theatre (University of Maryland). As an actor, director, choreographer, adapter, and dialect coach, Kippola has been involved in well over a hundred productions throughout the country. Locally, he has worked with Everyman Theatre, Rep Stage, Olney Theatre, Theatre J, Baltimore Shakespeare, Virginia Shakespeare, Bay Theatre, Imagination Stage, Metro Stage, Round House, Center Company, Firebelly, Ford's Theatre, and the Shakespeare Theatre. At AU, he has directed Kiss Me, Kate; Of Thee I Sing; The Mystery of Edwin Drood; Hamlet; Urinetown; The Country Wife; Tartuffe; Oklahoma; Company; The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee (2012, 2021); Guys and Dolls; The Alchemist; The Lower Depths; No, No, Nanette; Allegro; The Crucible; How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; and The Women . He has delivered papers at several conferences and has published articles in the Journal of American Drama and Theatre, Theatre Symposium, Theatre Journal, Theatre Survey, and Theatre History Studies. His research focuses on nineteenth-century American theatre. His book, “Acts of Manhood: The Performance of Masculinity on the American Stage, 1828-1865”, was published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2012.  For more info: https://www.american.edu/cas/faculty/kippola.cfm

Hassan Nazari-Robati (playing Samad Hussein, a Palestinian-Muslim actor of stage & screen) is a recent transplant to LA, by way of New York, where he performed in shows and readings with The Public, Atlantic Theatre Company, The Flea, and 5th Floor Theatre Company. Hassan has been featured in the national and international tours of Beauty and the Beast (as Lumiere for NETworks Presentations). Regional credits include The Corpse Washer for Actors Theatre of Louisville (Humana Festival, directed by Mark Brokaw); Oklahoma! (Ali Hakim) for Theatre Under the Stars; Abraham’s Land for Theater of Possibility in Seattle; Oliver! (Fagin) at the Palace Theatre, and Merchant of Venice (Solanio) for Oklahoma Shakes. Hassan Nazari-Robati is a graduate of Oklahoma City University in Music Theatre.

Nessa Amherst (understudying Virginia B. Lawrence) is an actress and writer in the Washington, DC area. She has had the pleasure of performing with theatre organizations and companies from across the country - in-person and virtually - including South Carolina, Massachusetts, Illinois, and New York. Some of Nessa’s favorite credits include The Survival (National Queer Theater & Lincoln Center), #ENOUGH: Plays to End Gun Violence (1st Stage), As You Like It (Theatre Lab School of Dramatic Arts), This Profound Abyss (Rorschach Theatre), Julia Caesar (Barefoot Shakespeare Company), Runtime Error (Transformation Theatre), Henry VIII (Quarantine Queens Theatre Company), Lotto & Raffles & Sweepstakes, Oh My! (PlayZoomers), District Merchants (Theatre CBT & Globe Openstage), and These Violent Delights (Letter of Marque Theater Company). Nessa also took part in the audio workshop and play, A Murder in the Court of Xanadu, with Chicago’s A Theater in the Dark, which is scheduled to be released this fall.
Her original monologue, Define “Black,” is featured in the anthology, 08:46: Fresh Perspectives, published by New World Theatre, and is available to purchase online. Originally from Chicago (actually, it’s Northwest Indiana, but it’s close enough, right?), Nessa holds a Bachelor of General Studies degree, emphases in theatre, music performance, and media studies, from the University of Missouri-Columbia. For more information: www.nessaamherst.com

the CREATIVE TEAM

Ari Roth (playwrightsee VFP Founding Producing Partner bio for fuller credits) Additionally: Roth has collaborated with director John Vreeke on Roth’s play Born Guilty, based on the book by Peter Sichrovsky (nominated for 2002 Helen Hayes Awards for Outstanding Play and Outstanding Direction); The Seagull on 16th Street (based on the original by Anton Chekhov), and an un-produced version of the American-Israeli-Palestinian collaboration, Shame 2.0 (With Comments From The Populace). As producer, Roth has worked with Mr. Vreeke of the world premieres of Richard Greenberg’s Balle Masque, Joyce Carole Oates’ The Tattooed Girl, David Zellnik’s Ariel Sharon Hovers Between Life and Death and Dreams of Theodore Herzl, Hanna Eady & Edward Mast’s The Return (first produced in Israel as Sabbath Worker), as well as acclaimed productions of Ariel Dorfman’s Death and the Maiden, Tony Kushner’s The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Capitalism and Socialism With a Key To The Scriptures, and Kushner’s Homebody/Kabul (co-production with Woolly Mammoth Theatre). My Calamitous Affair…has been workshopped by VFP in-person at the Arts Club of Washington in September of 2021, and virtually in a 29-hour workshop in February, and received a stage reading in Philadelphia this past April at InterAct Theatre.

John Vreeke (director) John is perhaps best known for his directorial and development work on second productions of plays that have gone on to become staples in the regional theater circuit - plays like Boom by Peter Nachtrieb, A Bright New Boise by Sam Hunter and Guards at the Taj by Rajiv Joseph as well as Joseph’s epic drama Describe the Night, all directed for Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company. He directed the west coast premiere of the 2018 Pulitzer Prize winner Cost of Living by Martyna Majok; the play will be coming to Broadway later this season. He has worked in DC area Theater for the past 22 years including at Round House, Theater J, Metro Stage, Olney Theater, Forum, the former Washington Shakespeare Company, Theater Alliance, Everyman, the Kennedy Center and the Helen Hayes Awards Ceremony. He co-conceived and directed a theatrical adaptation of the DH Lawrence novel “Lady Chatterley's Lover” with multiple, successful productions in Seattle, LA and DC. He has six Helen Hayes Award nomination for Outstanding Director. He began his career at the famous Alley Theater in Houston where he worked as the staff director for seven years before moving to Seattle where he worked as a casting associate and associate producer on the hit CBS TV series Northern Exposure. For a full list of his prodigious directing credits, click here.

Adam Ashraf el-Sayigh (dramaturg/cultural consultant) is an Egyptian writer, theater maker, and dramaturg who writes and develops plays that interrogate the intersections of queerness, immigration, and colonialism. Adam’s plays (including Drowning in Cairo, Revelation, Memorial, and Jamestown/ Williamsburg) have been developed and seen at New York Theater Workshop, The Lark, The Tisch School of the Arts, The LaGuardia Performing Arts Center, and Golden Thread Productions. Adam holds a BA in Theater with an emphasis in Playwriting and Dramaturgy from NYU Abu Dhabi and is completing MFA in Playwriting at Brooklyn College. For a full list and description of his plays on the NNPN New Play Exchange, click here.

Gillian Drake (dramaturg) served as Literary Associate at Arena Stage for five years and dramaturg at New York Theatre Workshop for four years. She has been a free-lance director in Washington, DC for the past 30 years. Ms. Drake has served as a Helen Hayes judge for eight years. She managed Spooky Action’s New Works in Action program until recently; her last production that she directed there was Will Eno’s The Realistic Joneses. In 2016, she co-directed Happy Hour, a co-production with the Goethe Institut, where she has introduced DC audiences to countless German and European plays in workshop presentations. She is President of On Trial Associates, Inc, a national consulting firm specializing in trial consulting, witness preparation, "Acting for Lawyers" and other applied theater skills.

Debbie Minter Jackson (dramaturg) is a native Chicagoan having performed in community and cabaret musical theater over thirty years throughout the Midwest and the South. In addition to having scripts commissioned and produced, Debbie’s reviews are archived as a founding writer of D.C. Theatre Scene (closed in 2020), is a member of the Black Women Playwrights’ Group and on the Board of Footlights, a play reading and discussion group as well as the Lincoln Group of D.C.

Becca Khalil (cross-cultural consultant and dramaturg) is an Egyptian-American and native Philadelphia actor, poet, director, and collaborator working in LA, New York, and Philly. While currently represented in Film and TV with Take 3 Talent and Commercially with Across the Board, Becca is also interested in self-producing and collaborating with like-minded artists and young people to create work that moves us and moves us forward.  Humbly working to be a "Socially minded maker," their work has been crafted by the Yale School of Drama Summer Session, CAPA Highschool, PYPM, UPenn Young Scholars Program, the University of the Arts, and more.  For a full list of acting credits, click here.