Native Voices Presents Two Readings of THE FRYBREAD QUEEN 11/4, 11/7
Native Voices at the Autry continues its vital role as the country's only equity theatre company dedicated exclusively to developing the work of Native American Playwrights with two readings of esteemed playwright Carolyn Dunn's (Muskogee Creek, Cherokee*) The Frybread Queen, a haunting and poetic play described as "one of the most celebrated new Native American theatre pieces in the country," on Thursday, November 4, 7:00 p.m., and Sunday, November 7, 2010, 2:00 p.m., at the Wells Fargo Theater at The Autry National Center in Griffith Park. Directed by Jere Hodgin with dramaturgy by Robert Caisley, the readings provide an important next step in the play's development and are part of Native Voices' signature FIRST LOOK SERIES: Plays in Progress, which brings playwrights together with professional directors, dramaturgs, and actors for a workshop and public presentation at the Autry. The readings, staged in conjunction with the popular annual American Indian Arts Marketplace at the Autry, are followed by a chat with Dunn, Hodgin, Caisley and the actors.
Illustrating Native Voices' deep commitment to nurturing new works and seeing them fully realized, this spring Native Voices presents a fully staged mainstage Equity production of The Frybread Queen, the culmination of the play's pivotal, three-and-a-half-year development process shepherded by the company that has included long-term dramaturgical support, extensive workshop opportunities and invaluable collaboration with a team of theatre professionals. Earlier this fall Native Voices at the Autry co-produced a developmental production of it with Montana Rep and The University of Montana School of Theatre and Dance.In The Frybread Queen, three generations of Native women bound by marriage and family ties come together for the funeral of a beloved son, and in their grief confront long-simmering tensions and family secrets that threaten to tear them apart.Says Hodgin, who not only directs the reading but also directed the Montana Rep developmental production and was on the national reading panel that initially selected the play for Native Voices 2007 Playwrights Retreat, "It was ultimately the plot that intrigued me so much, because aside from a wonderful play featuring four Native women facing family and generational issues, it's also simply good mystery and storytelling. A lot of what's being addressed in this play at a deeper level are the same things facing Native people all over the country today - the erosion of traditional values, the loss of family and tribe and ownership of belonging. All of those things end up factoring into these relationships as the women struggle to deal with The Situation."
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