CMU School of Drama


Friday, September 14, 2007

Enter laughing

Time Out New York: "On a steamy summer afternoon at a West Village eatery, TONY paired the duo; just before they begin, the luminous Mary-Louise Parker, in the middle of her own interview, darts over to say hi, then glides back to her table. The dramatists order lunch and immediately start gabbing about—what else?—television."

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The end of this article is really so true. Theater is a process of collaborations. Of working with a piece night and day, making it uniquly your own, and then handing it off to a different person and seeing what they do with it next. Sometimes the endless opinions and different 'artistic visions' can split a show apart at the seams and sometimes the multitude of ideas and experiments can make something so wonderful that no one person could have created alone. I really think the interpersonal experience each show goes through really separates drama from, say, a painting that is personal to the artist and they audience.