FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MARCH 31,
2007
Contacts:
Dominic
Papatola, ATCA Chairman, St. Paul (MN) Pioneer Press,
612-781-0138 or
email: dpapatola@pioneerpress.com
Bill Hirschman,
ATCA New Plays Chairman, South Florida Sun-Sentinel,
954-356-4513 or
muckrayk@aol.com
U.S. THEATER CRITICS HONOR
PETER SINN NACHTRIEBÕS
ÔHUNTER GATHERERSÕ
Playwright
receives prestigious $25,000 Steinberg/ATCA New Play Award; $7,500 Citations
for Michael Hollinger and Jeff Daniels
The American Theatre Critics Association (ATCA) has selected Peter Sinn
Nachtrieb's Hunter Gatherers to receive
the 2006 Harold and Mimi Steinberg /American Theatre Critics Association New
Play Award.
The presentation occurs March 31 at Actors Theatre of Louisville during
the Humana Festival of New American Plays. The award includes a cash prize of
$25,000 – the largest monetary prize for a national playwriting award
– and a commemorative plaque. Two others, Michael Hollinger and Jeff
Daniels, will receive citations and $7,500 each. All are first-time recipients
of these prizes.
ÒThe long-standing partnership between the Harold & Mimi Steinberg
Charitable Trust and the American Theatre Critics Association has recognized
some of today's greatest writers, and helped identify the great playwrights of
tomorrow,Ó said trustee Jim Steinberg. ÒWe're delighted to help support the
unique telling of tales on the American stage.Ó
Hunter Gatherers is an inky dark
comedy portraying two seemingly civilized couples descending into the chaos of
primal urges. It was first produced in June 2006 at Killing My Lobster in San
Francisco.
Reviewing the Killing My Lobster production in The Mercury News of San Jose, CA, ATCA member Karen D'Souza wrote:
"Peter Sinn NachtriebÕs new uber-black comedy of bougie manners has
been described as a Gen-X WhoÕs Afraid of Virginia Woolf. But dudes, this Killing My Lobster world premiere
actually makes AlbeeÕs The Goat
feel quite subtle. Restrained even. This here is theater that squirts in your
eye."
Other plays by the San Francisco-based Nachtrieb include Colorado,
Meaningless, Multiplex, Self Help and The
Amorphous Blob.
Hollinger's Opus premiered in
January 2006 at the Arden Theatre Company in Philadelphia in association with
City Theatre in Pittsburgh. The drama portrays the fractious members of a
string quartet as they deal with the vicissitudes of creating art and
maintaining human relationships.
Reviewing the Arden Theater Company production in the Reading (PA) Eagle, ATCA member George Hatza wrote:
"Opus finds a solution to one
of the play's underlying motifs – the future of a string quartet
struggling to find the right balance of skill and personality. Nevertheless,
its fragile emotional strands and impending plot elements dangle tantalizingly
in the distance, making for an evening that is at once entertaining,
psychologically gripping and structurally bold."
Hollinger is an Assistant Professor of Theatre at Villanova University.
His plays include Red Herring, Incorruptible, An Empty Plate in the CafŽ Du Grand BÏuf, Tiny Island, and Tooth and Claw.
Daniels' Guest Artist was first
produced in March 2006 at the Purple Rose Theatre in Chelsea, MI. It explores
the glory of theater, hero worship and the nature of artistic risk in a gentle
and poignant comedy about a burned-out playwright who visits a small town
theater company that has commissioned what may be his last play.
Reviewing the Purple Rose Theatre production in the Detroit (MI) Free
Press, ATCA member Martin F. Kohn wrote:
"Paramount is the idea that an artist best serves art and audience
by serving himselfÉA play full of ideas can be deadly, and Guest Artist is anything but. There's a significant
what's-going-to-happen factor, and a few well-placed outcroppings of physical
comedy."
Daniels,
well-known for his acting roles in such films as Terms of Endearment, The
Purple Rose of Cairo and The Squid and the Whale, is the
executive director and founder of the Purple Rose Theatre. He was a finalist
for Steinberg/ATCA honors in 2002 for Across the Way. Other plays by
Daniels include Shoe Man, The Tropical Pickle, Thy
Kingdom's Coming, Norma & Wanda, The Vast Difference,
and Escanaba in da Moonlight.
This yearÕs winners were among six finalists selected from 25 eligible
scripts submitted by ATCA members. All are plays that premiered outside New York
City in 2006. Chairman Bill Hirschman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and Vice-Chair George Hatza of the Reading (PA) Eagle headed a play-reading committee of 12 theater critics from around the
U.S. that evaluated the scripts.
"The amazing range of work – dramas, fantasies, musicals,
farces, melodramas – was uplifting confirmation that theater remains a
vital and evolving art form that can speak to every generation,Ó Hirschman
said.
Other finalists for this yearÕs Steinberg/ATCA New Play Awards included
Catherine Bush for Just a Kiss, Theresa
Rebeck for The Scene and Ken
LaZebnik for Vestibular Sense.
Since the inception of ATCA's New Play Award in 1977, the list of
honorees has included August Wilson, Craig Lucas, Lanford Wilson, Marsha
Norman, Jane Martin, Arthur Miller, Mac Wellman, Adrienne Kennedy, Donald
Margulies, Lynn Nottage and Horton Foote. Last year's winner was Lee Blessing
for A Body of Water with citations to
the late August Wilson for Radio Golf and Adam Rapp for Red Light Winter.
The awards are funded by a generous annual grant of $40,000 from the
Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust. Created in 1986 by Harold Steinberg
on behalf of himself and his late wife, the primary mission of the Steinberg
Charitable Trust is to support the American theater. The trust has provided
numerous grants totaling millions of dollars to support new productions of
American plays and educational programs for those who may not ordinarily get to
experience live theater in this country.
The American Theatre Critics Association, founded in 1974, works to raise
critical standards and public awareness of a critic's duties and
responsibilities. It is the only national association of professional theater
critics and has several hundred members working for newspapers, magazines,
radio and television stations across the United States. ATCA is a national
section of the International Association of Theatre Critics (IATC), a
UNESCO-affiliated organization that sponsors seminars and congresses worldwide.
For more information, visit www.americantheatrecritics.org.
###