WORDTheatre is a non-profit organization founded in 2003 that champions literature by staging live readings of contemporary short stories and curating original themed productions in Los Angeles, New York, and London.
Industry | Theatre |
---|---|
Founded | 2003 |
Headquarters | , |
Products | Productions |
Members | Cedering Fox - Founder & Artistic Director; Kirsty Peart Co-Founder of WORDTheatreUK |
Website | https://wordtheatre.org |
These performances, both live and recorded feature well-known authors, actors, and musicians.
WORDTheatreUK was recognized with charitable status by the UK Charity Commission in the fall of 2023.
History
editWORDTheatre was founded in 2003 by Cedering Fox, producer, theatre director, and voiceover artist who still serves as the organization's Artistic Director.[1] Fox is the daughter of the Swedish-American award-winning poet, writer, and artist Siv Cedering. In 1989, Fox was asked to partner with Darrell Larson, on The Great Writers Series: Literary Evenings at The Met in Los Angeles. The series featured authors Sam Shepard, Peter Matthiessen, James Ellroy and actors Ed Harris, Holly Hunter and Bill Pullman, among others, and ran for three years. It was broadcasting weekly on NPR’s KCRW. The station then hired Fox to direct seven and a half hours of Isak Dinesen stories performed by an all-star cast and scored by composer Jonathan Sacks. Realizing her passion for the form, Fox launched WORDTheatre in 2003 at the Canal Club in Venice, California. Later that year, WORDTheatreUK debuted in London[2] with co-founder and creative partner, Kirsty Peart, herself a writer of animation for film and television.[3] Their ongoing collaboration has resulted in hundreds of bespoke productions in the US and the UK.
From 2010 to 2016 WORDTheatre was associated with the UK’s Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Award, “the world’s richest short story prize,”[4] with performers reading the six shortlisted stories to live audiences annually in London, England.[5][6][7][8] WORDTheatre also headlined the Literary Arena at the Latitude Festival for seven consecutive years.[9][10] In 2013, WORDTheatre debuted its original space exploration-themed production, "In the Cosmos", with a 44-piece orchestra at Wilderness Festival,[11] UK, which was labeled by MTV as the “Most Dynamic And Extravagant Act.”[11] "In the Cosmos" was restaged to acclaim at The Ford Amphitheater in Los Angeles on August 26, 2017.[12] Beginning in 2015 WORDTheatre created a show centered around the history of Jazz with James Pearson on piano which was presented at the London Jazz Festival. The show has evolved and been presented most recently to great acclaim at The Ford Amphitheater[13] in July 2023 where it was titled Jazz Re-Evolution. In 2016 WORDTheatre performed H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine at the famous Southbank Centre in London with actors Christopher Eccleston, Emma Hamilton, and Nikki-Amuka Bird. In 2018 WORDTheatre debuted Emily Wilsons translation of The Odyssey at Southbank Centre with Danny Sapani as Odysseus and Marianne Jean-Baptiste as Penelope. This was the first female translation of The Odyssey translated by Emily Wilson and adapted by Claire Alfree. Beginning in 2020 and all throughout the pandemic WORDTheatre continued to hold events through virtual live streams, with events often being an author Q&A with a virtual performance, authors such as Richard Bausch, and Petina Gappah, Kamila Shamsie, Kit de Waal, and Guy Ware participated. Since 2021, in person events started up again in London, Los Angeles and New York to celebrate authors around the world. In 2023, WORDTheatre celebrated their 20-year anniversary with fundraisers for WORDTheatre Campus held in Los Angeles, London, and New York. Actors like Brenda Strong, Cassidy Freeman, Carla Gugino, James Cromwell, Juliet Stevenson, Ian Hart, Rhashan Stone, Michael Boatman, and Ron Perlman were among the performers with authors such as Lore Segal, David Means, Sidik Fofana, and Joyce Carol Oates in attendance.
Collaborations with MacArthur 'Genius' grant recipient John Edgar Wideman have resulted in several notable productions including 2012's 'Storytales' at the John Anson Ford Theater featuring such notable actors as Sterling K. Brown, Lorraine Toussaint, Keith David, Marla Gibbs, Brent Jennings, Omar Dorsey, and Nicki Micheaux, to name a few; and the John Edgar Wideman Experience which was staged in two different incarnations at Pittsburgh's August Wilson Theater in 2017 and the Hall of Liberty in Los Angeles in 2018. In 2022 the work of Randall Kenan was celebrated at the Brooklyn Center for Fiction in New York. In 2024 Randall Kenan will be honored again at the event Black Folk Could Fly: On the Wings of Randall Kenan[14] held in Los Angeles.
Authors
editSince 2003, WORDTheatre has showcased the works of contemporary short story authors. It brings to life the works of authors such as Charles Baxter,[15] Brian Doyle, TC Boyle, Tobias Wolff, Tim O'Brien, Richard Bausch, John Edgar Wideman, Pamela Painter, Percival Everett, Pam Houston, Hanif Kureishi, Hilary Mantel, Manuel Munoz, Ben Loory, Dana Johnson, Julie Orringer, Joyce Carol Oates, Ha Jin, Edith Pearlman, and Anthony Doerr to mainstream live audiences.
Venues
editWORDTheatre has performed in venues including the Royal Festival Hall[16] and Queen Elizabeth Hall[17] on South Bank, the St James Theatre,[18][19] The Arts Club[20][21][22] in London and Chatsworth House[23] in Derbyshire; Soho House,[24] The Geffen Playhouse,[25] The Broad,[26] the Grammy Museum,[27] the Microsoft Lounge[28] the Ford Amphitheatre[13][29][30] in Los Angeles, The Center for Fiction in Brooklyn, The Players in Manhattan, and the East Hampton's Guild Hall.[31][32][33]
WORDTheatre has also participated in festivals such as The London Literature Festival[34] in London, the Wilderness Festival[35] in Oxfordshire (UK), the Words and Wickets Festival[36] at the Wormsley Cricket Grounds[37] in High Wycombe (UK), The Latitude Festival[38] in Suffolk (UK), and The LA Times Festival of Books[39] in Los Angeles.
Writer’s retreat
editAnnually WORDTheatre hosts a Writers Workshop & Retreat. For the first 10 years it was held in Edale, England (United Kingdom) and in 2022 it moved to Sommières France.
[28][40] Previous leaders of the workshops were:
- 2011 Ron Carlson
- 2012 Dan Chaon
- 2013 David Means
- 2014 Andre Dubus III[41]
- 2015 Richard Bausch
- 2016/2017 Pamela Painter
- 2018 Margaret McMullan
- 2019 Peter Orner
- 2021 Ron Carlson
- 2022 Dan Chaon
- 2023 Jill McCorkle
Talent
editWORDTheatre is known for performances by well-known stage, film, and television actors, including Alfred Molina, Alfre Woodard, Amanda Seyfried, Amber Tamblyn, Angela Bassett, Belinda Stewart-Wilson, Bellamy Young, Ben Miller, Bill Nighy, Bill Pullman, Brent Jennings, Brendan Fraser, CCH Pounder, Chris Cooper, Colman Domingo, Connie Britton, Craig T. Nelson, Christina Pickles, Damian Lewis, Damien Molony, Darren Criss, David Soul, Dohn Norwood, Ed Harris, Elisabeth Moss, Elizabeth McGovern, Emily Watson, Evanna Lynch, Forest Whitaker, Gary Dourdan, Gemma Chan, Gina Bellman, Hannah Waddingham, Harriet Walter, Ian Hart, James Franco, Jason George, Jeff Goldblum, Jessica Capshaw, Jackson Rathbone, JK Simmons, Julianna Margulies, Juliet Stevenson, Kevin McKidd, Linda Cardellini, Mark Ruffalo, Mayim Bialik, Minnie Driver, Maria Bello, Rhashan Stone, Robert Pine, Olivia Williams, Sarah Paulson, Sharon Stone, Sterling K. Brown, Tony Shalhoub, Tracee Ellis Ross, Tracie Thoms, Xander Berkeley, and Zachary Quinto.
Charitable works
editWORDTheatre Campus, formerly known as WITS is a non-profit organization. In addition to championing contemporary literature through live and recorded performances, it has its own education outreach program WORDTheatre in the Schools (WITS).[42][43] Since its inception in 2011 the WORDTheatre Campus program has served many Los Angeles Title 1 Schools.[44] Many of the same actors and authors who perform at WordTheatre's main events volunteer their time to participate in the WTIS program, including JK Simmons, Bellamy Young, Toni Trucks, Jason Isaacs, Sterling K Brown, and Ryan Michelle Bathe.[45][46] In 2015 WordTheatre expanded the WTIS program internationally to also include under-resourced schools in the United Kingdom.[47]
WORDTheatre is also known for their benefit work, curating and performing original themed productions for charities such as Autism Speaks,[48] NARSAD,[49] the One Billion Rising movement dedicated to ending rape and violence against women,[50] Anaphylaxis[51] and The Parkinsons Appeal[52] for Parkinsons disease in the UK.[53]
WORDTheatre began staging bi-annual benefits for the Pushcart Prize,[54] honoring literary excellence, in East Hampton, New York, in 2006.[55][31]
References
edit- ^ "Cedering Fox: Word Up". Laweekly.com. 20 November 2003.
- ^ Shattuck, Kathryn (3 March 2011). "WordTheatre, Selected Shorts and Other Story Salons". The New York Times.
- ^ "Live performances to light up poetry prizes". Standard.co.uk. 20 September 2013.
- ^ "OMG: Text speak short story in running for £30,000 prize". Telegraph.co.uk. 19 February 2012.
- ^ WordTheatre: Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award, Volume 1 – via Audible.com.
- ^ "The Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award Readings 2016". Foyles.co.uk.
- ^ "Our 2016 Winner: Jonathan Tel - The Sunday Times Short Story Awards". Shortstoryaward.co.uk.
- ^ Times, The Sunday (29 July 2012). "Calling all short story writers". Thetimes.co.uk.
- ^ "The latest from Latitude". Independent.co.uk. 6 June 2012.
- ^ admin (24 March 2014). "Latitude Festival 2007". Latitudefestival.com.
- ^ a b "MTV Review: Sam Smith And London Grammar Enchant Crowds At Wilderness Festival". Mtv.co.uk.
- ^ Gelt, Jessica (22 August 2017). "Stars reading about our stars: Sterling K. Brown, Darren Criss and others to perform 'In the Cosmos'". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ a b "How WordTheatre came to host big-name Hollywood actors reading little-known literature onstage". Los Angeles Times. 2023-11-01. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
- ^ "Black Folk Could Fly: On the Wings of Randall Kenan · WORDTheatre". wordtheatre.org. Retrieved 2024-02-22.
- ^ Salter Reynolds, Susan (2003-09-30). "Watching as lives unfold". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2021-08-17.
- ^ BWW News Desk. "Photo Flash: Christopher Eccleston, Emma Hamilton and Nikki-Amuka Bird Present The Time Machine". Broadwayworld.com.
- ^ @BBCNewsnight (October 17, 2018). "Finishing the programme tonight,..." (Tweet). Retrieved 2023-03-22 – via Twitter.
- ^ Flynn, Mike. "James Pearson and WordTheatre presents 'And All That Jazz'". Jazzwisemagazine.com.
- ^ BWW News Desk. "St. James Studio to Host EFG London Jazz Festival Once Again in November 2016". Broadwayworld.com.
- ^ "WordTheatre®: Hannah Waddingham reading Dorothy Parker's "But - Lovreka". Bilibun.com.
- ^ "Damien Molony to Perform with WordTheatre 30 September, The Arts Club London". Damienmolony.org. 6 September 2013.
- ^ "David Soul Fans - April 27, 2015: Revenge". Davidsoulfans.com.
- ^ "World-famous actors in "stories to make your heart beat faster"". Web.sheffieldlive.org.
- ^ "Book calendar events for the week of May 22, 2011". Articles.latimes.com. 22 May 2011. Archived from the original on May 31, 2011.
- ^ ""Acts of Love: Dreams" Stages a Record-Breaking Event". Autism Speaks. 25 July 2012.
- ^ "Days of our Lives Guests: Autism Speaks Hosts Celebration!". Soaps.sheknows.com. 4 November 2008.
- ^ "A Tribute To Langston Hughes: Stories, Poems, Jazz & The Blues - Grammy Museum". Grammymuseum.org. Grammy Museum.
- ^ a b Kellogg, Carolyn (11 September 2014). "Cedering Fox's WordTheatre gives voice to authors' works". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Weekend Roundup: Top LA Weekend Events for August 24–27". Socalpulse.com. 23 August 2017.
- ^ "Theater - Jessica Koslow". Jessicakoslow.com.
- ^ a b "A Grand Ol' 40th for Pushcart - The East Hampton Star". Easthamptonstar.com.
- ^ "Stars Will Shine at Guild Hall | the East Hampton Star".
- ^ "'Hearts Aflame': Love Letters from WordTheatre | the East Hampton Star".
- ^ "London Literature Festival". www.londonlitfest.com. Retrieved 2024-02-22.
- ^ "Home". www.wildernessfestival.com. Retrieved 2024-02-22.
- ^ "Words and Wickets". First Story. 2013-09-07. Retrieved 2024-02-22.
- ^ "Wormsley - Beautiful Private Estate, Film & Event Location in Buckinghamshire". Wormsley. Retrieved 2024-02-22.
- ^ "Henham Park, Suffolk, 25 - 28 July 2024". Latitude Festival. 2024-02-18. Retrieved 2024-02-22.
- ^ "Festival of Books 2024 » L.A. Times". Festival of Books. Retrieved 2024-02-22.
- ^ Sheridan, Paula (12 February 2014). "WordTheatre Writers Workshop & Retreat". Mygloryride.com.
- ^ Mark Taper Auditorium-Central Library (2014-06-23). "Denis Johnson and The Starlight on Idaho | Library Foundation of Los Angeles". Lfla.org. Retrieved 2018-04-23.
- ^ "Stars and Star Stuff - The Ford Theatres". Fordthetres.org. 9 August 2017.
- ^ "Darren Criss, Bellamy Young, and More Tapped for In the Cosmos - Playbill". Playbill.
- ^ "Tier I Schools - Persistently Lowest-Achieving Schools (CA Dept of Education)". Cde.ca.gov.
- ^ "Darren Criss, Bellamy Young Headline 'In the Cosmos' Performance". Hollywoodreporter.com. 28 August 2017.
- ^ "Word Theatre Returns To The Hamptons - The Arts - Performing Arts". Hamptons.com. 9 August 2013.
- ^ "First Story Trustees' Annual Report : Year ending 30th June 2015" (PDF). Firststory.org.uk. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
- ^ "New San Francisco Event Raises $500,000". Autism Speaks. 25 July 2012.
- ^ Havers (3 January 2011). "Lovely Kathryn: Kathryn reading for WordTheatre®". Lovelykathryn.blogspot.com.
- ^ "Stories. Bourbon. Music & Macaroons: A Benefit Performance for One Billion Rising - One Billion Rising Revolution". Onebillionrising.org.
- ^ "WordTheatre in aid of The Anaphylaxis Campaign". Whatallergy.com. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
- ^ "The Parkinson's Appeal for Deep Brain Stimulation". Parkinsonsappeal.com.
- ^ "Love, Hate and Race in the UK on Monday the 12th March at the Cafe de Paris, London W1 in association with Prospect magazine & in support of The Parkinson's Appeal for Deep Brain Stimulation" (PDF). Parkinsonsappeal.com. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
- ^ "Welcome to Pushcart Press: Publishers of The Pushcart Prize". www.pushcartprize.com. Retrieved 2024-02-22.
- ^ "Where Words Survive and Thrive: A WordTheatre Benefit Celebrating 40 Years of The Pushcart Prize". Patch.com. 28 June 2015.