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Big Ten Theatre Consortium Supports Female Playwrights

January 15, 2014

Big Ten Theatre Consortium Supports Female Playwrights

The Big Ten Theatre Consortium, made up of theatre department heads at Big Ten Conference universities, has established a commission program to support female playwrights and provide female theatre students and professional actors with strong roles. The program is the first of its kind, and represents the first time the Big Ten Consortium schools have collaborated on a theatre project, according to a report from the University of Iowa.

Starting this spring, the Constortium's New Play Initiative will commission, produce, and publicize a series of new plays by female playwrights, each of which will include several significant roles for college-aged women. The group plans to commission one play each year for three years, and beyond. Each commission will include an artist payment (shared among the schools) and the provision that any Big Ten university can perform the play royalty-free for up to three years.

The first commission goes to Naomi Iizuka, head of playwrighting at the University of California-San Diego. Her widely produced plays include 36 Views, Strike-Slip, and Anon(ymous). For the commission, she is working on a provocative play, Good Kids, which will explore, in her words "a casual sexual encounter gone wrong and its very public aftermath." The play is set in a Midwestern high school. Several Big Ten theatre departments are likely to perform the play during 2014-15.

Said Dan Gray, chair of the Department of Theatre at Ohio State, "We are delighted to be part of the New Play Initiative and look forward to producing Naomi Iizuka's Good Kids in 2015. This is an innovative and important project for the cultivation of plays by female playwrights with strong roles for women. My Big Ten theatre colleagues and I hope this commission will be a platform for a strong and overdue response to the issue of gender inequity in theatre."