Fall Festival 2022

ANPF 2022 Fall Festival

Ashland New Plays Festival 2022 Fall Festival

The Playwrights

Clarence Coo Ashland New Plays Festival 2022

Clarence Coo

Chapters of a Floating Life

Lisa Langford Ashland New Plays Festival 2022

Lisa Langford

The Breakfast at the Bookstore

Victor Lesniewski Ashland New Plays Festival 2022

Victor Lesniewski

The Hunt for Benedetto Montone

Novid Parsi Ashland New Plays Festival 2022

Novid Parsi

Remains and Returns

Jonathan Spector Ashland New Plays Festival 2022

Jonathan Spector

Best Available

It’s the Second World War and two couples from China are trying to make ends meet in New York City. Their worlds, once separated by class and education, converge when the two women find each other and fall under the spell of the Chinese language.

Chapters of a Floating Life by Clarence Coo Ashland New Plays Festival

It’s 1973. Dot wants to be an activist and support the Black liberation movement by opening a revolutionary bookstore. Sharpe, Dot’s common-law husband and a former Black nationalist, wants anything but. And Spacemen. Yep.

night fairy, paper layears fairy woman profile on the night sky,night fairy dream concept,  vector

Amid the German occupation of Italy during World War II, Pietro struggles to provide for his family while caught between Fascist law and Catholic morality. A play about our susceptibility to government-sponsored fear and hatred.

A wooden backgammon board marked brown and red, with wooden game pieces.

In 2018, as an Iranian-American family talks about nothing and everything, the two middle-aged brothers confront their elderly parents about impending realities. In 1988, the parents confront their teen sons about adulthood and their hopes for their children’s futures.

Remains and Returns by Novid Parsi Ashland New Plays Festival

We’re not going to talk about the sudden departure of our previous Artistic Director, because we want to focus on the future, not the past. The one thing we’re all on the same page about it is: We Need Change. Change that builds on the remarkable legacy of our institution.

Best Available by Jonathan Spector Ashland New Plays Festival Get a Festival Pass

Get a Festival Pass and see all the plays! You can select all your shows in one fell swoop and get some savings: five shows for $100.

ANPF 2022 Festival Pass Graphic

We welcomed the playwrights to Ashland October 18 through 23, 2022, for a week of play readings, development, and community gatherings in Ashland at the Main Stage Theatre of Southern Oregon University’s Oregon Center for the Arts.

These five playwrights were selected as part of ANPF’s unique, long-standing reading process that brings together theatre lovers from Southern Oregon and beyond for a months-long process where hundreds of plays are read-without authorship being revealed-and discussed, moving forward toward the finalists. About 2% of the total plays submitted are given to the artistic director with authorship revealed. From there the final winners are selected by the artistic director with discussion and collaboration among our three associate artists.

The 2022 Festival Week was celebratory in more ways than usual. In addition to our excitement with the selection of the winning plays and the unveiling of their authors, we were also feeling immense gratitude for the return to in-person performances after two and a half years of Zoom theatre and virtual workshops. It was also our 30th anniversary season, a milestone year of supporting new works for the stage.

 

We also heartily congratulate the 2022 finalists!

 

Nightbird by R. Eric Thomas

AGATHE by Angela J. Davis

I Would Dance Naked in This Rain by Drew Katzman

Per Aspera by Quan Barry

Stoop Pigeons by Christin Eve Cato

In the Cervix of Others by Alice Eve Cohen

 

Continue scrolling to see further details about the winning playwrights and the 2022 Fall Festival.

Notes

BOX OFFICE: The box office opens one hour before showtime. The house opens for seating approximately 30 minutes before showtime.

PARKING: Free parking is available in the SOU lot. Signage will be posted.

SEATING: Seating is general. ANPF Members at the Benefactors level and above receive reserved seating. For patrons needing wheelchair assistance, email boxoffice@ashlandnewplays.org.

RUNTIMES: Each play’s runtime will be shared on the individual playbill pages midway through the new play development process the Festival Week.

The Workshop

ANPF 2022 Playwriting Workshop Banner Ashland New Plays Festival 2020 writing across the distance workshop

Playing with Words

Grab your pen and paper and join us for the annual ANPF writers’ workshop!

Led by our Host Playwright Beth Kander and this year’s winning playwrights, this writing-intensive workshop features insights, in-class writing time, and a few tips and tricks from the playwrights, helping you take the next steps in your own writing journey!

All writers are welcome, whether you usually write plays, poetry, non-fiction, or fiction; are a seasoned writer or are just starting out. There’s room for everyone at our writers’ table.

The workshop is free for ANPF members and students or $10 for non-members. For those who need access to lower pricing, email boxoffice@ashlandnewplays.org.

Click below to register.

When: Saturday, October 22, 10 am to 12 pm
Where: Catalyst Ashland, 357 E. Main Street
Note: Masks are required + Vaccinated/Boosted OR Negative Covid Test (see details on registration page) Register Here IMG 5377 Edit Ashland New Plays Festival writing workshop 2021 IMG 7886

The Plays

Chapters of a Floating Life by Clarence Coo Ashland New Plays Festival Chapters of a Floating Life Chapters of a Floating Life

It’s the Second World War and two couples from China are trying to make ends meet in New York City. One husband and wife live uptown, obsessed with a past of poetry, painting, and gardens. The other two face the day-to-day reality of keeping a Chinatown restaurant in business. Their worlds, once separated by class and education, converge when the two women find each other in Central Park and fall under the spell of the Chinese language.

From Clarence: “When I lived in Beijing, I came upon a translation of a book written in the early 19th century called Six Chapters of a Floating Life. This collection of autobiographical essays was written by a government official who was obsessed with poetry and gardening, and who lost his wife after she fell in love with a woman.

The English translation was created by another Chinese scholar, one who lived in the 20th century and who himself had an interesting life-he had tried (and failed) to design a mass-producible Chinese typewriter after he moved to the US. The stories of these two literary men fascinated me and I ended up with this play, which is a strange combination of their two lives.

It’s a look at a Chinese culture that people outside of China might not be familiar with: one that is sensual, romantic, and endlessly inventive.”

Clarence Coo

Clarence Coo is the recipient of a Whiting Award and the Yale Drama Series Prize. His plays include The Birds of Empathy; Beautiful Province (Belle Province); People Sitting in DarknessChapters of a Floating Life; and On That Day in Amsterdam. His work has been developed at the Atlantic Theater Company, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, New York Theatre Workshop, and the Bay Area Playwrights Festival. He has received fellowships from the Dramatists Guild of America, the Rita Goldberg Playwrights’ Workshop at the Lark, the New York Foundation for the Arts, and the Playwrights Realm. He received his MFA in playwriting at Columbia University. He is a member of the Ma-Yi Writers Lab and an alumnus of New Dramatists.

night fairy, paper layears fairy woman profile on the night sky,night fairy dream concept,  vector The Breakfast at the Bookstore The Breakfast at the Bookstore

 

It’s 1973, five years after the 1968 Glenville Uprising, started by a shootout between police and Black nationalists. Dot wants to be an activist and support the Black liberation movement by opening a revolutionary bookstore. Sharpe, Dot’s common-law husband and a former Black nationalist, wants anything but. And Spacemen. Yep.

From Lisa: “This play was inspired by a history podcast, Backstory. There was an episode of the show, hosted by University of Virginia professors, that explored UFOs in American history. In one segment, Stephen C. Finley, professor of Africana Studies and Religion at Louisiana State University, discussed African American close encounters and how they differ from White close encounters. White stories of alien contact tend to follow a narrative of being kidnapped, terrified, and exploited-a narrative that sounds a lot like the experience of being colonized. Black close encounter narratives tend to be positive and revelatory, with added elements of Africanist spirituality and the idea of a greater justice than earthly justice.

I was fascinated by Professor Finley’s observations and thought it would be an interesting way of interrogating race theatrically. I was also reading James Robenalt’s book, Ballets and Bullets, which chronicled Carl Stokes’ bid to become the first Black mayor of a major city and how Cleveland Black nationalists affected his term in office. The Glenville Riot/Uprising negatively affected Stokes’ political capital with White Clevelanders. The riot was started by a shootout between the police and a Black nationalist bookstore owner who believed he had seen a UFO and was amassing weapons for a race war. I like the idea of setting the piece in 1973 because that was a liminal time between the progress of the 60s and the failures of the 70s, not unlike today, when we look back at the time between the buoyant hope of 2008 and the despair of 2020.

I love history. It was my major in college. I’m terrible at remembering dates and battles, but I’ve always been interested in cultural history-the way normal people live their lives while History is going on around them. By focusing on what characters want or who they love, I feel like I learn more about the historical significance of an event than if I’d just read a synopsis of an event. Writing plays about history is my way of making sense of things.”

Lisa Langford

Lisa Langford is a Cleveland-based playwright and actor. She received her B.A. in History from Harvard University and her M.F.A. in playwriting from Cleveland State University. Her play Rastus and Hattie was a Joyce Award winner (w/ Cleveland Public Theatre); a Eugene O’Neill Theatre Center National Playwrights Conference finalist; and a The Kilroy’s List honorable mention. The play was published by New Stage Press.

Lisa’s other plays include How Blood Go, an August Wilson New Play Initiative reading series selection at Chicago’s Congo Square Theatre and part of Global Black Voices at the Roundhouse Theatre in London UK; The Art of Longing, a Leslie Scalapino Award finalist for Innovative Women Playwrights; and several short plays, including The Bomb, published in the anthology Black Lives/Black Words.

A wooden backgammon board marked brown and red, with wooden game pieces. The Hunt for Benedetto Montone The Hunt for Benedetto Montone

Amid the German occupation of Italy during World War II, Pietro struggles to provide for his family while caught between Fascist law and Catholic morality. A play about our susceptibility to government-sponsored fear and hatred.

From Victor: “As a playwright, I am interested in telling stories that address large societal issues. I write plays where the world is much bigger than the characters of the play. This is not to say that nuance of character development is lost, but that I am more attracted to plays where the characters are forced to deal with their positions in the world and their relationships with other people in that world, as opposed to solely dealing with smaller interpersonal relationships. Even when tackling a play set in the past (or future), my goal is always to be reflecting on the present. I want our conversations as a theatre community to help enlighten our current socio-political moment and spur further discussion beyond the walls of the theatre itself.”

Victor Lesniewski

Victor Lesniewski‘s plays include The Fifth Domain (World Premiere at Contemporary American Theater Festival); Couriers and Contrabands (World Premiere at TBG Theatre in NYC, Critic Howard Miller’s Best of Off & Off-Off Broadway List); Cloven Tongues (World Premiere at The Wild Project in NYC); Where Bison Run (Ars Nova Out Loud Reading Series, NY Times Profile); Pipistrellus (The Dramatists Guild Fellowship); Khardal (Berkeley Rep’s The Ground Floor); Cold Spring (Ashland New Plays Festival); and Tentative City (SF Playhouse Play Reading Series).

Victor was the only American to be shortlisted for the inaugural Theatre503 Playwriting Award, which included six writers culled from over 1,600 applicants. He is a former Uncharted Artist in Residence at Ars Nova. In recent years he has also developed work at Roundabout Theatre Company, New York Theatre Workshop, Geva Theatre Center (NY), Pioneer Theatre Company (UT), Northern Stage (VT), Palm Beach Dramaworks (FL), Benchmark Theatre (CO), Playwrights’ Arena (CA), and La Mama Umbria.

He is proud to sit on The Dramatists Guild’s Diversity, Equity, Inclusion & Access Committee

Remains and Returns by Novid Parsi Ashland New Plays Festival Remains and Returns Remains and Returns

In 2018, as an Iranian-American family talks about nothing and everything at once, the two middle-aged brothers-one who has remained near their childhood home, the other who returns-confront their elderly immigrant parents about the impending realities of old age. Thirty years earlier, in 1988, the parents confront their teen sons about the impending realities of adulthood and their own hopes for their children’s futures-until the family dynamic takes a sudden shift. Returning to 2018, Remains and Returns considers how we deny our familial, societal, and political pasts, and how our pasts endure.

From Novid: “I was inspired to write Remains and Returns as I noticed our culture’s collective amnesia around the intense trauma and violence that gay Americans have experienced when coming out. I felt an emotional whiplash seeing a culture that had been hostile to gay people now expressing support of sexual and gender difference-even if an ambivalent support. This indicated progress, of course, but also our penchant for denying our history. Americans are adept at this, and so are families.

In Remains and Returns, we come to see how one Iranian-American family elides its own traumatic past. And we come to see how the past persists, even in silence. The play explores how we do and don’t speak about who we are and what we’ve lived.”

Novid Parsi

Novid Parsi (NOH-veed PAHR-see, he/him) is a playwright whose work has been produced or developed by Golden Thread Productions (San Francisco), The New Group (New York), Paines Plough (London), Playwrights Foundation (San Francisco), Queens Theatre (New York), and Silk Road Rising (Chicago), among others. Most recently, the St. Louis Shakespeare Festival has selected him for its Confluence Writers Project, which will culminate in a staged reading of a new play in spring 2023.

Novid’s plays have been recognized by the Bay Area Playwrights Festival (two-time finalist and three-time semifinalist), the Jeff Awards (Best New Work nominee), the New American Voices Playwriting Festival (semifinalist), and the O’Neill National Playwrights Conference (four-time semifinalist).

A son of Iranian immigrants, Novid grew up mostly in East Texas, earned degrees in literature from Swarthmore College and Duke University, and then spent years in England and Chicago. Novid and his husband live in St. Louis.

Best Available by Jonathan Spector Ashland New Plays Festival Best Available Best Available

We’re not going to talk about the sudden departure of our previous Artistic Director, because we want to focus on the future, not the past. The one thing we’re all on the same page about it is: We Need Change. Change that builds on the remarkable legacy of our institution.

It’s just like the Ancient Blessing, May You Live In Interesting Times.

From Jonathan: “A few years ago, a mid-size theater in my region was searching for a new artistic director. They invited me and a few other local artists to be in the room as the final candidates came through and made their pitches. It was a profoundly strange experience, but also a wildly theatrical one.

Having a hunch there might be a play in there, I then spent several months interviewing artistic directors from around the country about their hiring and transition experiences. I also spoke to some board members and managing directors who have been on the other side of the table. I was not surprised to hear how disrespectfully people felt they were treated in these processes but I was still sometimes shocked by the details.

I was mid-way through a first draft when the pandemic hit, and I abandoned the play. I simply didn’t have the heart to continue writing a play critical of institutional theater while there was no theater. Then last summer, I was reading yet another story of an awful leader being forced out of a troubled organization and found myself being drawn back in. More than anything, I felt a need to honor all the stories and experiences people had shared with me during the interviews. I still have no idea what the regular audience will make of the play, and I am thrilled to have this opportunity to begin to share it with the public.”

Jonathan Spector

Jonathan Spector is a playwright based in Oakland, California. His plays include Eureka Day (New York Times Critics’ Pick, upcoming at London’s Old Vic Theater starring Helen Hunt, published by DPS); This Much I Know (upcoming at Aurora Theater); Best Available (South Coast Rep’s Elizabeth George Commission); and, Siesta Key (Bay Area Playwrights Festival).

His work has been produced at theaters around the country and abroad, including Asolo Rep, Aurora Theatre, Colt Coeur, Custom Made Theatre, InterAct Theatre, Mugwumpin, Syracuse Stage, Spreckles Theatre, The State Theatre of South Australia, and Just Theater, where he was the long-time co-Artistic Director. Jonathan has developed works with Berkeley Rep’s Ground Floor, Crowded Fire, New Harmony Project, Manhattan Theatre Club, PlayPenn, Roundabout, and South Coast Rep, among others.

Honors include the Edgerton Award, Glickman Award, Bay Area Theater Critics Circle Award, Theater Bay Area Award, Global Age Prize and Rella Lossy Award. He is a Core Writer at Playwrights Center, and has been a MacDowell Fellow and a Resident Playwright at Playwrights Foundation. He is currently under commission from Roundabout Theatre Company, La Jolla Playhouse, and Manhattan Theatre Club.

The Directors

Jennifer Chang

Jennifer Chang

Chapters of a Floating Life

Donya K. Washington

Donya K. Washington

The Breakfast at the Bookstore

Minita Gandhi

Minita Gandhi

The Hunt for Benedetto Montone

Jackie Apodaca ANPF artistic director

Jackie Apodaca

Remains and Returns

Marissa Wolf

Marissa Wolf

Best Available

Learn more about Jennifer.

Learn more about Donya.

Learn more about Minita.

Learn more about Jackie.

Learn more about Marissa.

The Host Playwright

2018 Beth Kander Sm Learn More

Beth Kander

Beth Kander is an award-winning author and playwright with tangled roots in the Midwest and Deep South. The granddaughter of immigrants, she loves exploring how worlds old and new intertwine-or collide. Beth earned a Master of Social Work degree from the University of Michigan and an MFA in Creative Writing from Mississippi University for Women.

Playwriting honors include the T. Jefferson Carey Memorial Playwriting Award (2022); Henry Award for Best New Play or Musical (2019-2020); Headwaters New Play Award (2018); Equity Library Theatre-Chicago Award (2017); Ashland New Plays Festival (2015, 2016); Eudora Welty New Play Awards (2008, 2010, 2012); and the Charles M. Getchell New Play Award (2012), among others.

Current projects include a commissioned play for Creede Repertory Theatre, a children’s picture-and-recipes book called DO NOT EAT THIS BOOK (Sleeping Bear Press, 2023), and a dark and twisty novel.

A proud parent-artist, her favorite characters are her two brave, hilarious kids, and she cheers for parent-artists everywhere.

Beth is represented by Allison Hellegers at Stimola Literary Studio.

The Actors

Chapters of a Floating Life by Clarence Coo

Joe Ngo

Joe Ngo

Shen

Barbie Wu

Barbie Wu

Yun

Jessica Ko

Jessica Ko

Elsie

James Ryen Play4Keeps

James Ryen

Tom

Thilini Dissanayake

Thilini Dissanayake

Stage directions

The Breakfast at the Bookstore by Lisa Langford

Cyndii Johnson

Cyndii Johnson

Dot

Steven Anthony Jones

Steven Anthony Jones

Sharpe

Preston Butler III

Preston Butler III

Haywood

Caroline Shaffer

Caroline Shaffer

Fran

Tim Turner

Tim Turner

Stage directions

The Hunt for Benedetto Montone by Victor Lesniewski

Michael J. Hume

Michael J. Hume

Pietro Bonatti

Eileen DeSandre

Eileen DeSandre

Grazia Bonatti

Nathaniel C. Walker

Nathaniel C. Walker

Nevio Bonatti

U. Jonathan Toppo

U. Jonathan Toppo

Marco Sala

Walker Allison Headshot 1web

Allison Walker

Lucia Sala

Wyatt Fisher

Wyatt Fisher

Remains and Returns by Novid Parsi

Adrianne Cury

Adrianne Cury

Zarah

Alan Clark

Alan Clark

Ramin

Amin El Gamal By David Gabe Photography

Amin El Gamal

Ash

Wiley Naman Strasser

Wiley Naman Strasser

Ben

Alexandra Szabo

Alexandra Szabo

Stage directions and TV Voices

Best Available by Jonathan Spector

Linda Alper

Linda Alper

Helen

Dee Maaske As Dolores

Dee Maaske

Dolores

Magdalena del Castillo

Magdalena del Castillo

Carolina/Itzel/Veronica

Rebby Yuer Foster

Rebby Yuer Foster

Bex/Brad/Claudia

Aleeyah Enriquez

Aleeyah Enriquez

Ariana/Jacqueline/Simone

Rafael Untalan

Rafael Untalan

Dan/Bill

Barrett O Brien

Barret O’Brien

Dave/Gary/The Romanian

Nicole Villavicencio Gonzalez Ashland New Plays Festival stains Sarah Cho

Nicole Villavicencio Gonzalez

Stage directions

Press

Winning Playwrights Announcement Tickets On Sale + Directors Announced

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Testimonials

Joshua Rebell ANPF 2019

Joshua Rebell

It’s hard to know where to begin when talking about how amazing an experience ANPF is. I’m tempted to start with the moment I arrived in Ashland, but the months leading up to ANPF – the preparations and the conversations with Kyle and Jackie
are almost as exciting – as you see how much time, thought and care go into the festival. Once you’re in Ashland, the ride really begins as you’re welcomed into a large and supportive ANPF community already familiar with your play, and wanting to talk to you about it. I chose to do a lot of work on my play during the week, and was met
with an incredible amount of support and encouragement from a top notch director and cast who all gave 24/7 – really allowing me to take the play where I wanted it to go. The week is, of course, topped off by the readings and the talkbacks, led by a
terrific host playwright – who is all about helping the playwrights get as much feedback as they need. Oh, and it’s also pretty cool getting coffee and drinks all week with three other playwrights whose work you find so inspiring. I can’t say enough about ANPF. If there is such a thing as playwright heaven, this is
it!

Joshua Rebell

The Night Climber, ANPF 2019
Omission, ANPF 2012Michael Gotch ANPF 2019

Michael Gotch

ANPF was a wonderful experience.  Setting aside for a moment the honor of being chosen as a winner, the entire artistic and support staff of the festival was top notch from notification through our week together in beautiful Ashland, Oregon. New plays need ears to hear them, and the ANPF audience-made up of passionate readers, committed board members, industry professionals and a host of savvy theatre goers-were enthusiastic, insightful, and supportive listeners. It’s not every day as a playwright you encounter such an energized and smart group of people who have dedicated themselves to giving new works the best possible debut. Their contribution to my own work and the work we all do in keeping theatre vital and relevant cannot be overstated.

Michael Gotch

Starter Pistol, ANPF 2019

Thomas Brandon

Thomas Brandon

Being an Ashland New Play Festival winning writer was surreal in the best possible way. Writers are used to working solo, suffering alone through the agonies of the creative process. But being a part of ANPF meant that I suddenly was surrounded by a team – all brilliant, all subsuming their considerable talents to our common task: helping me make the play better today than it was yesterday. And far from feeling like I was a cog in a large machine that manufactured readings, I felt like the entire process of ANFP was designed to curate itself to my needs and the needs of my play. It was an altogether too rare, completely charming experience. And one the kind of communal joy that I hope every writer, typing alone in a quiet room, gets to experience one day.

Thomas Brandon

Pocket Universe, ANPF 2021

Tylie Shider HollisKing

TyLie Shider

My friends in the theater at ANPF generously supported the development of Certain Aspects of Conflict in the Negro Family from rehearsals to the virtual stage. Theirs is a singular kind of advocacy any playwright would be blessed to experience. Thank you for thinking of me and my work.

TyLie Shider

Certain Aspects of Conflict in the Negro Family, ANPF 2021

Meghan Brown

Meghan Brown

I had a blast as an Ashland New Play Festival playwright. The care and consideration put into the festival was consistently clear – this is a group of people who truly put the play (and playwright!) first, and are committed to crafting an environment where artistry can thrive. I couldn’t have been happier with my creative team, or with the communicative, accommodating, administrative staff. ANPF is a special organization doing incredible work, and I cannot speak highly enough of its process of new play development.

Meghan Brown

What Happened While Hero Was Dead, ANPF 2021

Blake Hackler Ashland New Plays Festival

Blake Hackler

What a gift what a gift what a gift! Ashland New Play Festival is a true oasis for playwrights, and an experience to cherish. From first contact, I felt taken care of, respected, and encouraged to do my best work. My fellow playwrights were inspirational, kind, and generous with their insights and feedback. The artistic team assembled to work on my play could not have been bettered.

But the real prize of the festival was the community. The depth and breadth of their engagement with the process from beginning to end was truly astonishing – to have a talkback with a hundred people who have read your play MULTIPLE TIMES!!!!!!!!  What?!!?!?!?!?!  If my punctuation is a little hysterical, so be it.  The people of the Ashland New Play Festival – all of them – every one – deserve all the exclamation points I can throw at them. It was an honor to be in their presence.

Blake Hackler

What We Were, ANPF 2017

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David Johnston

The experience was rejuvenating, artistically satisfying and fun. The actors, directors and collaborating artists are top shelf. I had twelve hours of rehearsal to dig into the play and try to figure out what I had written! The community that has built up around the festival is extraordinary. I have rarely come across a theater-going community as passionate and engaged as the members, audiences and volunteer readers of Ashland.  This was particularly meaningful to me, as this play had been sent out to numerous festivals and conferences in the past three years, with no luck. That a volunteer panel of readers picked it blind means a great deal to me.

David Johnston

Pelicans, ANPF 2019

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Emily Feldman

I enjoyed getting to see Ashland for the first time, meeting some lovely actors and directors from all over the country and feeling the love and support of the whole community at both of my readings. I left the week with my spirits bolstered and with warm feelings about the vibrant Ashland theater community. I also must mention the beautiful and bountiful gift bags we received upon arrival! Thank you to everyone who makes this week possible and hope to see you all again soon!

Emily Feldman

Go. Please. Go., ANPF 2017

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Callie Kimball

My time in Ashland was meaningful and productive, as well as a ton of fun! It was great to be in the room with such generous theater artists, who all worked hard to bring my play to gorgeous life. A huge part of what made the week so worthwhile was connecting with my fellow playwrights and spending time with my director talking about process and our respective experiences. I felt thoroughly supported through the entire week and am so grateful for the many resources I was given. I hope I can return one day!

Callie Kimball

Sofonisba, ANPF 2017

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Michael Gotch

New plays need ears to hear them, and the ANPF audience-made up of passionate readers, committed board members, industry professionals and a host of savvy theatre goers-were enthusiastic, insightful, and supportive listeners.

It’s not every day as a playwright you encounter such an energized and smart group of people who have dedicated themselves to giving new works the best possible debut. Their contribution to my own work and the work we all do in keeping theatre vital and relevant cannot be overstated.

Michael Gotch

Starter Pistol, ANPF 2019

Read More Testimonials Here

Thank You to Our Grantors

City Of Ashland Oregon Cultural Trust OAC Logo JcccLogo Miller Foundation The Carpenter Foundation