Thursday, 12 March 2009

Missfit Hits Rome








^^ Pennie and Lennie went to Roma and spread the missfit word, 
We should really be doing the same around London but postcards don't stay up if you leave them places like they seem to in Rome.... 

The graffiti was not us... but I thought it was amazing!!!

Sunday, 21 December 2008

MISSFIT MONDAYS 2009 Festival Fundraiser for DYS(THE)LEXI 2009

missfit productions, the storytellers pedal stool, are at it again, producing high quality storytelling, at low cost prices. We are looking for stories in all formats: tellers, poets, visual makers, playwrights. players, directors, dreamers, idealists, rebels, and my favourite of all, missfits.

If you have a story or an idea for a story and you are looking to test it out or show it off, please get in contact asap. All submissions must be emailed to missfitmonday@googlemail.com by the 15th Jan 09.

We are offering the most developed work a maximum run of 4 performances and where necessary happy to support the writer with casting, as well as sourcing a Director.

There is no funding for this project yet, but it is an opportunity to invite industry professionals/ agents. We will be giving each writer/maker 2 comps per performance, Directors and Actors all get 1 comp per performance.

missfit mondays @ The Troy Bar, Hoxton

Performance Dates Available:
Feb: 09 - 2, 9, 16, 23,
Mar: 2, 9, 16, 23, 30,
Apr: 6,13,20,27,
May: 4,11,18,25 – Susanna - Russian Play (Calling for Dir/Cast)

Thursday, 27 November 2008

DYSSING MONADYS - The End Has Come

Two months have gone by so fast. Dyssing Monadys has now finished. So much has happend, we have met so many people, worked with so many writers, poets and filmakers, actors and directors.

The concept was to create an event designed for us - dyslexic storytellers, to tell our storys, our way. A place were there was no need to apologies for our erros or our weeknesses, becouse here - at the festival, we were the main stars. Our weekenesses were not important. We were seen as storytellers and for a while, people, the audenice, forgot we were dyslexic.

The audenice were often suprised and the work was so good, people even questioned if we were really dyslexic. This just show how little the genral public know about dyslexia.

We came out of the creative closet. Me included.

A dyslexic producer, writer and director, proving that her playground is better...

I dont belive in the mantra, if you can beat them join them, I belive in, "If you cant beat them, change the rules"

Sunday, 23 November 2008

Susanna, By Russian Writer, N.N. Rashkin


Monday 24th Nov 08

Play – 7.30pm

Susanna
By N.N. Rashkin

"I shall tell about myself something. I was born in 1964. I the writer, script writer, playwright. I have issued three books. All other my works in Russia are necessary to nobody. Oh yes, I live in Russia. I the man, not the woman. My name N. N."



Director

Vince Tycer recently moved to London from California, directing work includes Reefer Madness the Musical and Menotti's opera The Medium. He has an MA in Directing from the University of California at Irvine and studied acting at Drama Studio London.



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    Wednesday, 19 November 2008

    A Wonderful Surprise

    I purposely made sure that I didn’t look at the script prior to the performance. By doing this it will give me a fresh approach to the play. In a strange way I’ve never felt fully connected when I see my plays acted. It’s as if someone else had written it. On Oct. 6th when the lights went down and the play started I was totally connected. The night “LD” was performed was the best theatrical event of my playwriting career.
    Two amazingly talented actors and a very gifted talented director caught every nuance and every dramatic moment of my play. And that’s saying something because I’ve worked with the creative people in my other plays. They never reached height of perfection that Ms. Sorczuk and company had. Considering that I wasn’t present during the creative process made the event more exciting and a wonderful surprise.



    I was a little concern about the Q & A afterwards. I never done it before. The audience members made me feel at ease. The questions were challenging and their interest in dyslexia very moving. At the end of the evening a fella told me that he wasn’t diagnosed until he was in his mid thirties and that the could identify with the characters. In every performance of this play I’ve always had people approach me with stories about themselves or loved ones effect by this disability. With these conversations I feel that I’ve done my job as an artist. I’ve opened a dialog for audience to talk freely about living with dyslexia. That was always my goal for “LD” when I wrote it.

    Playwright Wendy Wasserstein

    Through her plays and other writings, Pulitzer prize-winning playwright Wendy Wasserstein provided a voice for so many women paving their way on one or more of the multiple paths that the 1960’s and 70’s and modern-day feminism opened up to them. In fact, Wendy, herself, opened doors for women with her plays. Uncommon Women and Others, one of her early successful plays, featured a group of young undergrads at a prestigious women’s college striving to be “great before 30.” It gave now well-known actresses Glenn Close and Meryl Streep a chance to shine in their early years of acting. And, a little later on in her career, when women over a certain age were not getting roles, Wendy, again, wrote roles specifically for them in her 1993 critically-acclaimed play, The Sisters Rosenweig.

    "She was known for being a popular, funny playwright, but she was also a woman and a writer of deep conviction and political activism," AndrĂ© Bishop, artistic director of Lincoln Center told Charles Isherwood of the New York Times (January 30, 2006. Link to article). "In Wendy's plays women saw themselves portrayed in a way they hadn't been onstage before — wittily, intelligently and seriously at the same time. We take that for granted now, but it was not the case 25 years ago. She was a real pioneer." Like the roles in her plays, Wendy created her own path as she went through her early years of school, her career, and her late-in-life and single motherhood. Perhaps this attitude began as a necessity, when early on dyslexia made reading, spelling—and writing—incredibly challenging.

    “I won a Pulitzer Prize for playwriting, and I grew up having trouble reading,” Wasserstein commented in an interview with Dr. Sally Shaywitz (Overcoming Dyslexia). Reading continued to be a slow process for Wendy, but when she found an outlet in the arts, especially in theater, she began to flourish in school—yet she was not “cured.” Spelling continually proved difficult for her, and brought down her grades. But things did get better, and better, as she was able to concentrate on things that she could do—the arts, in particular plays and playwriting. “I figured out that they’re short, they’re also printed large, and there’s a lot of white space on the page. And you can go (as I used to do) to the Library of Performing Arts and read and listen to them at the same time. And later, reading the plays again, you can hear the voices of those people. (Overcoming Dyslexia, p. 351)

    Despite her difficulties with reading, typing, and spelling, Wendy pushed on with her passion for writing, graduating from Mount Holyoke college with a BA in history, and then from CUNY’s City College with a MA in creative writing. She then earned her MFA a The Yale School of Drama, and continued on to playwriting’s pinnacle—Broadway. “Just because you are not a skilled reader doesn’t mean that you can’t be a writer,” Wendy pointed out, and demonstrated right from the beginning of her successful career. She further proved her point by authoring several non-fiction books, and a novel, Elements of Style, in addition to many successful and popular plays. Her 1988 play, the Heidi Chronicles earned her, among other awards, a Pulitzer Prize for Drama and a Tony Award for Best Play—she was the first female playwright to win one solo.

    “In some ways being dyslexic is a gift, because you think less linearly. And you have to know it’s okay to think out of the box,” Wendy remarked to Dr. Shaywitz. Indeed, her ability to think outside the box, brought her audiences and her actors pioneering plays and witty, intelligent, and strong women characters tackling all aspects of life, love, and politics.

    Tony Kushner, the award-winning playwright of “Angels in America,” commented on her “tremendous vitality, optimism and determination” to Hartford Courant Staff Writer Frank Rizzo (Jan 31, 2006. pg. A.1). Her faith in humanity, her genuine kindness, wit, and honesty earned her a place in the hearts of her colleagues and critics; and her prize-winning plays placed her among the greatest drama writers of all time—Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller, Rogers & Hammerstein.

    Her legacy and works continue to touch and inspire others, and beg answers to important questions, despite her shortened life and career. When she died of Lymphoma at the age of 55 in 2006, the lights on Broadway were dimmed in her honor.

    *****

    Read more:

    Wendy Wasserstein writes about her characters and diversity in her plays for Alliance for Inclusion in the Arts.

    Playbill's memorial tribute to Wendy Wasserstein by Robert Simonson.

    A Wendy Wasserstein Retrospective by Morgan Allen. (Playbill)

    DYS(the)LEXI

    DYS(the)LEXI
    Celebrating Dyslexics