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INTERACT THEATRE COMPANY ANNOUNCES FOUR PLAYWRIGHTS AS RECIPIENTS OF 20/20 NEW PLAY COMMISSIONS

For Immediate Release: March 19, 2009
Media Contact: David Golston, InterAct Theatre Company, 215.568.8077

InterAct Theatre Company is pleased to announce the four 2009 recipients of its 20/20 New Play Commissions, a program established last season to explore the issues society will face over the next twenty years through the eyes of both established and up-and-coming playwrights.

THE 20/20 NEW PLAY COMMISSION PROGRAM
Now in its second year, InterAct Theatre Company's 20/20 New Play Commission program is an ambitious initiative that was established with the goal of awarding twenty new play commissions over a period of six seasons to playwrights who are addressing the issues society will face over the next twenty years. The program was developed with the goal of supporting the creation of new work that fits into InterAct's mission of producing plays that explore the social, political, and cultural issues of our time. Awards range from $2,500 developmental grants, which are given to works already in progress, to $5,000 - $10,000 new play commissions, which go to new, previously (or substantially) unwritten plays.

"In just one year, the 20/20 New Play Commission program has become a great success," explains Seth Rozin, InterAct Theatre Company's Producing Artistic Director. "We've already scheduled LITTLE LAMB, one of our 2008 commissioned plays, in our current season and are looking at several others for next year. We developed the program to encourage playwrights to consider tackling important, interesting and controversial themes, which may not guarantee them productions at mainstream theatres, but will begin discussions about issues the playwrights see as priority and present stories that need to be told. That is what InterAct is all about."

Including the three World Premieres slated for this season, InterAct has presented 64 main stage productions in its 21 year history, including 28 world premieres, 2 U.S. premieres, and more than 30 Philadelphia premieres. Of the 28 world premieres, 12 have gone on to over 80 subsequent productions around the world. Long established as one of the country's most devoted producers of challenging, forward-thinking new scripts, InterAct has introduced a canon of plays exploring the most relevant issues of the past two decades, written by some of the U.S., Canada, and Europe's most provocative playwrights. The 2008 recipients of the 20/20 New Play Commission program included Lee Blessing for WHEN WE GO UPON THE SEA; Tom Coash for VEILS; an untitled new work by Eric Pfeffinger; Elaine Romero for THE DALAI LAMA ISN'T WELCOME HERE; and Philadelphia playwright Michael Whistler for LITTLE LAMB, which will receive its World Premiere as part of InterAct Theatre Company's 2008/2009 main stage season this coming May.

InterAct is now accepting donations in support its 20/20 New Play Commission program. Questions and donations should be directed to Managing Director, Dave Brown, who can be contacted at dbrown@interattheatre.org or 215.568.8077. More information is available on InterAct's website at www.interacttheatre.org.

2009 RECIPIENTS OF THE 20/20 NEW PLAY COMMISSIONS
Selected from a total of 122 submissions, InterAct is pleased to announce four recipients of 20/20 New Play Commissions for the 2008/2009 season:

An Untitled New Play
Written by Kara Lee Corthron

In Kara Lee Corthron's new untitled work, a black American ex-patriate living in Iceland with her Icelandic husband and bi-racial daughter, becomes entranced by Barack Obama and begins to feel cutoff from her native land. That is, until a mysterious stranger appears in her art studio and her husband gives their daughter a commemorative reprinting of the Icelandic children's classic Tiu Litlir Negrastrakar (Ten Little Niggers) for her fourth birthday.

About Kara Lee Corthron
Kara Lee Corthron's plays have been produced or developed at CenterStage (Baltimore), New Georges, ACT Seattle (Hansberry Project), HERE, ManhattanTheatreSource, EST, Electric Pear, Shalimar Productions, Horizon Theatre (Atlanta), Page 73, African Continuum Theatre (D.C.), and Voice & Vision. Her play HOLLY DOWN IN HEAVEN won the 2008 Princess Grace Award and will be workshopped at the Vineyard Theatre in the spring. Kara plans to spend a month in 2009 as playwright-in-residence at Skriduklaustur Arts Center in Egilsstašir, Iceland. She is currently a staff writer for the NBC drama, KINGS. Kara's honors include the Helen Merrill Award, the Lecomte du Nouy Foundation Award (three-time recipient), an EST/Sloan Commission, the Theodore Ward Prize, and residencies at MacDowell, the Millay Colony for the Arts and Ledig House. Kara is an alumna of the Juilliard School and Interstate 73 (P73's inaugural writers group), member of the BMI/Lehman Engel Librettist Workshop, the Dramatists Guild, 'Wright On (co-founder), Blue Roses, the Writers Guild of America, and is a New Georges Affiliated Artist.

LIDLESS
Written by Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig

In LIDLESS, a former Guantanamo detainee dying of cirrhosis of the liver journeys to the flower shop owned by his U.S. Army Interrogator to demand half her liver for the damage she wreaked on his body and soul during her interrogations.

About Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig
For her commissioned play, LIDLESS, Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig is the winner of the 2009 Yale Drama Series award in playwriting. As part of the award, LIDLESS will be performed in a staged reading at the Yale Repertory Theater later this year and will be published by Yale University Press. Frances is a graduate of Brown University, the Dell'Arte School of Physical Theatre, and the International School of Beijing. She is in her final semester of a three year fellowship at the Michener Center for Writers at the University of Texas at Austin, and was recently awarded the Glimmer Train New Writers Award for her short story "Monkeys of the Sea." She has been a finalist for the Jerome and Julliard fellowships, the O'Neill Institute, the Bay Area Playwright's Festival, and the Yale Emerging Playwright's Award.

RITU COMES HOME
Written by Peter Gil-Sheridan

In RITU COMES HOME, Zane and Kevin - a 30-something gay couple - proudly sponsor a child from Bangladesh through a program of monthly payments and occasional correspondence. One day, in the midst of their comfortable middle-class American life, the now 15 year-old child (Ritu) appears in their living room. Zane and Kevin are forced to confront the reality of their do-gooder values and reframe their lives as they try to form a new kind of family in this globalized world.

About Peter Gil-Sheridan
Peter Gil-Sheridan is a multi-disciplinary artist whose play TOPSY TURVY MOUSE was named the winner of the Smith Prize, awarded by the National New Play Network for an outstanding political play. The same play, written at the Sundance Institute's Writer's Retreat at Ucross, was been developed by the New York Theatre Workshop and performed by The Cherry Lane Theatre, Borderlands in Tucson, and Gustavus Adolphus College in Minnesota. The play will be published Spring 2009 by Playscripts. Peter was the recipient of a Jerome Fellowship and spent a year-in-residence at the Playwright's Center in Minneapolis. He also held month-long residencies at the Ucross Foundation in Clearmont, Wyoming, the Millay Colony in Austerlitz, NY, and has an annual residency with A Theatre Group in Silverton, Colorado. His work has also been seen at and developed by The Lark, The Kennedy Center, the New York International Fringe Festival, and The University of Colorado at Boulder. His play WHAT MAY FALL, written on commission for the Guthrie Theatre, will be performed there in April 2009. Peter received his B.A. from Fordham and his M.F.A. from Iowa State.

THE ROAD TO EDEN
Written by Sean Christopher Lewis

In THE ROAD TO EDEN, a woman fresh from South America is herded from her work place in Iowa one afternoon. Unable to speak English or get in touch with her son, she is sent to a holding cell in Nebraska. Her son returns home that afternoon to an empty house, with no knowledge of her whereabouts, and no way to find her through "official" channels. So, he sets out on his own, eventually landing on a patch of land in Eden, Utah, where unidentified "illegals" are buried.

About Sean Christopher Lewis
Sean Christopher Lewis is the inaugural recipient of the Rosa Parks Award for Social Justice in Playwriting from the Kennedy Center. A former NNPN Emerging Playwright in Residence at InterAct Theatre Company, he has toured his critically lauded solo shows I WILL MAKE YOU ORPHANS (Uno Festival of Solo Performance, Intrepid Theatre, Available Light 01 Festival, Equinox Theatre, Riverside Theatre, Center for Independent Artists, Galapagos Art Space, Hyde Park Theatre, TIXE Arts Center, Bowery Poetry Club), THE GONE CHAIR (Penn State University's Cultural Conversations Festival, Openstage Harrisburg's Flying Solo Festival, Riverside Theatre) and CITY OF NUMBERS (Baltimore Centerstage First Look, Interact Theatre, Lawrence Arts Center/KCACTF, Penn State University Cultural Conversations Festival, Gerald W. Lynch Theatre, CSPS/Legion Arts and Hollins University/Studio Roanoke). His other plays include MILITANT LANGUAGE (National Premiere at Know Theatre of Cincinnati, Halcyon Theatre of Chicago, Bang and Clatter in Cleveland and Theater for the New City in NY) and THE APERTURE (Cleveland Public Theatre). He has been a playwriting fellow at the O'Neill Playwrights Conference and has had his work developed at the PlayPenn New Play Conference, The Lark New Play Development Center, Orlando Shakespeare Festival's Harriet Lake Festival of New Work and at the National Center for New Plays at Stanford University.

ABOUT INTERACT THEATRE COMPANY
Founded in 1988, InterAct is a theatre for today's world, producing new and contemporary plays that explore the social, political, and cultural issues of our time.
InterAct's aim is to educate, as well as entertain, its audiences, by producing world-class, thought-provoking productions, and by using theatre as a tool to foster positive social change. Through its artistic and educational programs, InterAct seeks to make a significant contribution to the cultural life of Philadelphia and to the American theatre. To date, InterAct has presented 64 main stage productions, including 25 world premieres, 2 U.S. premieres, and more than 30 Philadelphia premieres. The company has received 37 Barrymore Award nominations and 13 Awards. InterAct's main stage productions have provided work for over 500 local artists.

In addition to the 4-play mainstage season, InterAct Theatre's major programming includes InterAction, an award-winning program of experiential workshops and residencies in area schools that utilize theatre as a tool to illuminate pressing social problems in the community; New Play Development, working closely with playwrights to develop plays that adhere to the company's mission; Writing Aloud, an award-winning series of Monday evening events in which short fiction by the region's best writers is read aloud by professional actors; and the Kaki Marshall Arts and Community Award, an annual fundraising event that recognizes individuals who have made significant contributions to the lively arts in Philadelphia.

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