Monday 17 October 2011

Next showcase is 7 December...

and we will be accepting submissions on the theme of a meal until 11 November.

Your play should be no longer than 6 minutes please with a maximum of 4 roles. Let us know if you think it fits into Starter / Main or Dessert category. Email us your plays in Word or PDF.

Look forwards to reading them!

The showcase is at the Cafe in The Horsebridge Centre, Whitstable.
Doors open at 7pm, and the show starts at 7.30pm prompt. As it's nearly Christmas we might have some festive shenanigans for you too!

Poets - we are also doing an open mic on the theme of coffee and/or cheese. You have a 5 minute max slot for up to 3 poems. Thanks!

Thursday 13 October 2011

She Writes – 12 October 2011

12 October was the first night of 17Percent’s new showcase of plays by female playwrights. One question we received before the night was – why do you need a showcase of plays by women, why not men as well?

Currently only 17 % of the plays which get onto UK stages are written by women. This means that for 83 % of the time, plays by men are already having their own showcase. There has been much research about the gender discrimination faced by female playwrights in the theatre (some of it discussed by 17Percent). Women are simply less likely to have their work performed, especially if they don’t have a track record. So how is a (maybe new) female playwright ever to get her work on?

She Writes is a place where this can happen. Writers with little or no experience are as likely to be chosen for the showcase as those with more experience. We are simply looking for writers whose words sing to us.  

The theme for 12 October – the first night – was a meal. We gorged on two Starters, four Mains and two Desserts.

And why was this theme chosen? One of the reasons often given by the people who commission work (on TV as well as in the theatre) as to why they won’t commission a female writer is that ‘women only write about the domestic’ – as if that is somehow wrong, and that the domestic can’t be funny, touching or entertaining. So the theme for the first two She Writes nights is a meal, you can’t get more domestic than a meal.
We hope that the range of styles and stories shown last night prove that women should be allowed to write about the domestic, and that they can write about it in funny, touching, dark, unexpected and lyrical ways.
Starters:

Amy Flight in 'Starter'
‘Starter’ by Tracy Harris told the story of 46 year old Peggy’s train journey to something new. The play was acted by Amy Flight in a kind of multiple personality conversation with herself where Amy played all the characters in this monologue. Peggy gets on a train to a conference, encounters various characters, then meets Gerald, who she bunks off the conference with to her possible new future.
Sadie Hurley in 'The Magic Ingredient'
‘The Magic Ingredient’ by Sam Hall was about a former teenage mum whose children have flown the nest. Set at the end of the 1980s, the play wove in larger historical events to focus in on the ‘unbearable lightness of being’ felt by Edie. Sadie Hurley bought a kind of lyrical wistfulness to Edie, as she mixed ingredients and plotted her future.

Mains:

Amy Flight, Joshua Devine, Sue Blakesley in 'Enjoy'
‘Enjoy’ by Maggie Drury was a very funny piece turning the idea of restaurant snobbery on its head. Two women in a restaurant discuss the menu. It is only when the waiter appears with a frying pan, do we learn that in this restaurant it’s all about the celebrity chefs’ ranges of cookwares, and that you bring your own dinner – in this case sausages, beans and egg!
Chyna Graham, Kate Ferrett, Samantha Pearson, Sadie Hurley in 'Harriet is Hungry'
‘Harriet is Hungry’ by Claire Booker was one of the darker pieces of the evening, also one of the more non-naturalistic plays. Tam, Sam and Pam are young mothers, playing with their children. Harriet is an older woman who has been unable to have children. She is portrayed as a monster, preying on other peoples’ babies - reflecting the way that childless women can be portrayed in the media and drama. This powerful piece was both lyrical and sinister with Harriet played by Sadie Hurley, in a complete contrast to her role in ‘The Magic Ingredient’ as the benign and wistful mother, Edie.  
Joshua Devine and Sue Blakesley in 'At the restaurant'
‘At the Restaurant’ by CS Flint took us back to a restaurant, this time with an ancient mother and her elderly son at a meal. Another light and funny piece, the story revolved around two revelations; who was the son’s real father, and who was his new partner? Sue Blakesley played the 100 year old mum, who reveals her affair with a dictator much to the shock of her son, played by Joshua Devine, who then promptly reveals that he is gay, much to the shock of his mum.
Sadie Hurley, Kate Ferrett, Samantha Pearson, in 'Chef's Special'
‘Chef’s Special’ by Lynne Taylor once more changed the tone to something darker. Set in a near future when oil has become the most precious of commodities, a women takes her mother-in-law to a restaurant where it turns out she’s going to be the main course.    

Desserts:
Amy Flight, eaten by 'The Fridge'
‘The Fridge’ by Lucy Lucy was another non-naturalistic play, about a woman cleaning out a fridge. But there are things alive in the fridge... Another strong turn from Amy Flight as the Fridge’s hapless victim.

Amy Flight, Kate Ferrett, Joshua Devine in 'Bitter Chocolate'
‘Bitter Chocolate’ by Sarah Davies finished off the meal with a lot of laughter. Focussing on a date between a mismatched couple who have met on Match.com, Raymond’s over-protective mother has stalked him to the restaurant, where he meets Wendy. A woman very unsuited to his tastes, Wendy wants scampi in a basket, Raymond wants her to admire his bow-tie. He is left at the end going home with mother. Very funny.  

We also had an open mic slot for poets – on the theme of coffee and cheese, to keep the meal going – and heard work from two very different poets. Ros Palmer gave us her hilarious cautionary tale about the love of cheese, and Sarah Jenkin read us three lyrical and moving short poems.
Our next showcase night is on 7 December, the deadline to submit plays for this is 11 November. Poets wishing to come to the open mic should bring up to 3 poems (5 mins in total) on the theme of Cheese and/or Coffee!

Monday 10 October 2011

Our first night is this Wednesday!

The first She Writes night will be this Wednesday at the Horsebridge Centre in Whitstable.

We have a final line up of 8 short plays. Doors open at 7.15pm, and the plays start at 7.30pm.

Hope to see you there!