“Few Thy Voice” at Vintage

I’m very, very pleased to say that my Hitchcockian thriller “Few Thy Voice” is being performed as part of a new play festival sponsored by Vintage Theatre Company of Aurora, Colorado!

Vintage Theatre Logo

Founded in 2002 over martinis (hence, the logo), Vintage Theatre Company “proudly presents classics and cutting edge theatre, classes, improv, and staged readings that challenge, entertain, and grow our audience and artistic family alike.” The company is now an established part of the theatrical scene in the city of Aurora, with three performance spaces – the Jeffrey Nickelson Auditorium (145 seats), the Bond Trimble Theatre (67 Seats), and the Berg-Young Cabaret Stage (60 seats). Vintage has also “received several Henry Award nominations, Post Ovation Awards, Flombies, and Marlowe Awards in the last decade.”

Over the past few years, Vintage Theatre Company has been producing annual new play festivals, typically asking for plays with certain themes. This year, they were looking for mystery/thriller plays and I thought that “Few Thy Voice” would be an excellent fit. I wrote the play some six years ago – and, while it received a little notice at the time, I generally put the play on my back burner while other plays garnered more attention. It’s particularly thrilling for me now to see the play get some recognition (and, after six years, some revision!).

“Few Thy Voice” will be performed on Thursday, August 22 at 7:30pm.

More details to come!

Great article on Best Medicine Rep

I had to share this great article by Erick Trickey from “Experience” magazine – “The New Life of a Dying Mall.”

"The New Life of a Dying Mall"

In his article, Mr. Trickey wrote about various attempts to resurrect failing malls across America. He highlights Best Medicine Rep Theater Company as a creative example of a company that is finding new ways to inject life into the (staid) mall scene through the introduction of live theater.

Best Medicine Rep is a Maryland-based theater company that recently produced my historical farce “Philosophus” at their storefront venue in Lakeforest Mall in Gaithersburg, Maryland (February, 2019). Mr. Trickey happened to be researching his piece while “Philosophus” was being performed by Best Medicine and he mentions the show a few times in his article.

Below are some excerpts from the article that mention “Philosophus”:

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John Morogiello has seen his plays staged off-Broadway in New York, in Los Angeles, in Louisville, even in Vienna. But he rarely got to debut his own work in his home state of Maryland, until he opened a theater space in an ailing shopping mall.

Now, Morogiello’s all-comedy theater company, Best Medicine Rep, stages several productions and readings a year — his own plays and many others’ — at Lakeforest Mall in Gaithersburg, Maryland, 16 miles northwest of Washington, D.C. Best Medicine’s storefront is on Lakeforest’s second floor, next to the Sears. “Performance in Progress: Please be quiet,” reads a sign on a stand — meant to warn the driver of the kiddie train, which carries children and parents past the theater, not to blow the whistle.

One Saturday afternoon, beyond a flame-retardant curtain that absorbs some of the mall noise, 45 people fill the seats around a small stage. A blue-eyed actor with impish comic timing is playing the French philosopher Voltaire, in an historical play that one audience member later calls a “Voltairean sex farce.”

….

Since it started staging plays at Lakeforest Mall, Best Medicine Rep’s audience has grown from Gaithersburg locals to new fans from around the Washington, D.C. region. Newcomers often cite a D.C. theater critic’s favorable review of Morogiello’s play “Engaging Shaw” this past fall. The play about Voltaire, “Philosophus,” by Connecticut writer Colin Speer Crowley, has likewise been well-reviewed. Best Medicine is a professional theater company — it pays its actors, directors, and playwrights — and attracts talent from around the region. The lead actor in “Philosophus,” Terence Aselford, is a 30-year veteran of the D.C. theater scene.

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Meanwhile, Best Medicine is bringing new traffic to Lakeforest. Ruby Tuesday, the last remaining restaurant at the mall, does great business on theater nights, Morogiello says. Actors not only drink at the mall; they shop before and after rehearsals. “A lot of shopping centers would do well to add something like this,” Morogiello says. He’s happy to bring traffic, and a new gathering place, to his hometown mall.

“What I love about malls is that they always were community centers,” says Morogiello. “It was always a place where you would see your friends, in the old days. You would see your parents and other people from the community hanging out and shopping.” It’s a good fit for Best Medicine Rep, he says, since it aims to build a community through shared laughter. “I feel that we feed into that old-school mall mentality of bringing joy to people,” he says. “It’s just a matter of getting other people to buy into the joy.”

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You can read the full article here – it’s a great read!

“Fifteen Men” a finalist

I’m happy to announce that my historical drama “Fifteen Men in a Smoke-Filled Room” was a finalist in a new play contest sponsored by HRC Showcase Theatre of Hudson Valley, New York.

“Fifteen Men” was among 13 plays chosen as a finalist out of 200+ plays submitted, putting the play in the top 7% or so of all scripts – a great honor of which I’m very proud!

HRC Showcase Theatre

Many thanks to HRC Showcase Theatre, and best of luck to them in their new play festival!