Lark Play Development Center's Grand Opening Live-Streamed Tonight

By: Apr. 26, 2012
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The Live-Stream of Lark Play Development Center's grand opening begins tonight, April 26 @ 6:30pm (EST). Go to www.larktheatre.org/GO.html to follow along with the festivies, or follow Lark on Twitter with the hashtag #LarkGO.

The Lark Play Development Center is located at 311 West 43rd Street.

To celebrate the addition of this new artistic center to the theater district, a Grand Opening event, organized by award-winning producer Bruce Cohen (American Beauty, Milk), will take place tonight beginning at 7:00 p.m. The evening will include a ribbon-cutting ceremony and presentations by New York City Officials, including a proclamation of “Playwrights’ Day in New York City.” There will also be presentations of 3-minute plays, written specifically for the occasion by Lark-affiliated playwrights, including Marcus Gardley (award-winning writer of The Levee and Every Tongue Confess), Tina Howe (Painting Churches, Coastal Disturbances), Samuel D. Hunter (A Bright New Boise), David Henry Hwang (Chinglish, M Butterfly, Golden Child), Rajiv Joseph (Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo), Arthur Kopit (Nine, Wings), Theresa Rebeck (Seminar, NBC-TV’s “Smash”), Chisa Hutchinson (She Like Girls) and Andrea Thome; as well as a musical by Doug Cohen and Zoe Samuels. An interactive live-stream of the event, produced by VirtualOvationTV, can be seen that evening at www.larktheatre.org.

The Lark has provided playwrights with indispensable resources to develop their work since 1994. Striving to reinvigorate the theater's ancient and enduring role as a public forum for discussion, debate and community engagement, the Lark reaches into untapped local populations and across international and cultural boundaries, seeking out unheard voices with diverse perspectives. The Lark Play Development Center is a place for such new voices and ideas, where American and international playwrights are empowered to develop groundbreaking new works of theater. The Lark gives writers at all stages in their careers free access to a working theatrical lab with essential resources such as actors, directors, mentors, performance space, and critical feedback. As each new work develops, the Lark works to secure future development and productions through its network of educational institutions and producing theaters. Within this supportive and rigorous environment of free expression, plays and ideas that might otherwise have remained unheard find their way to the stage. Four Lark-developed plays have had Broadway productions in the past year: Rajiv Joseph’s Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, David Henry Hwang’s Chinglish, Katori Hall’s The Mountaintop, and Theresa Rebeck’s Seminar.

The Grand Opening of the 9,300 square-foot Lark Play Development Center marks the first time in its 18-year history that the Lark will have a long-term lease on a space that has been customized for the company’s unique purpose. Designed by architect Stephen Furnstahl (NELSON), based on the input of Lark-affiliated playwrights, actors and directors, the center includes a fully-equipped and flexible studio, designed to act like an erector set where artists can rearrange the room, creating a number of configurations for both rehearsals and performances; a second smaller rehearsal and reading space, a writing room that gives writers a quite space to work; as well as a community gathering space.

The Lark is led by John Clinton Eisner, a founder and Artistic Director, and Michael Robertson, Managing Director.

VirtualOvationTV turns the performing arts into an interactive global event. Specializing in multi-camera productions that translate live performance into live-streaming experiences which are compelling, dynamic, and tailored specifically to the online video environment, VirtualOvationTV is reinventing and re-conceiving the performing arts for a wired twenty-first century audience.

The Lark Play Development Center’s Grand Opening on April 26th will also include the unveilings of the Mission Wall, which lists Board members and sustaining donors; the Community Column, which honors its artist community; and an interactive Lark History Project in their gallery, which tells the story of almost two decades of supporting new voices in the theater.

 



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