DG Regional Report: Minneapolis/St. Paul by Laurie Flanigan Hegge
@dramatistsguild
This past June, Barbara Brooks, Producing Artistic Director of the Minnesota Jewish Theatre Company (MJT), played host to the Association for Jewish Theatre’s annual conference in the Twin Cities. MJT is an award-winning theatre company in Saint Paul, MN that strives to “ignite the hearts and minds of people in all cultural backgrounds” with work rooted in Jewish content, “exploring differences, illuminating commonalities, and fostering greater understanding among all people.” The 2013 AJT Conference, “Imagining Jewish Theatre in the 21st Century,” featured a keynote discussion with DG Council member Emily Mann, led by renowned Holocaust theatre scholar Robert Skloot from the Theater Department and Center of Jewish Studies at the University of Wisconsin, and a special event honoring Theodore Bikel, who charmed conference attendees with his engaging presence. Mr. Bikel was given an award for his contributions to Jewish Culture; he assured those present the award would be placed in a special area of his home, “plaq-astan.”
The Twin Cities community was well represented throughout the conference. A session titled “What If?” featured four women who have brought about change in the Twin Cities – Michelle Hensley from Ten Thousand Things, a Minneapolis company that brings “lively, intelligent theatre to people who have little or no access to the arts,” (such as homeless shelters and correctional facilities), Adrienne Diercks from Project Success, an organization that “uses the arts as a springboard for inspiration, confidence, creativity and discussion in the classroom and at home,” Laura Zabel from Springboard for the Arts, a nationally recognized not-for-profit arts service organization in St. Paul, and Barbara Brooks of MJT. A conversation on culturally specific theatre featured Lew Bellamy, Founder and Artistic Director of Penumbra Theatre, who described his work as “art with intent,” and Randy Reyes, incoming Artistic Director for Mu Performing Arts, who struck a chord when he stated that Mu strives to create work that allows the audience “to see us as three-dimensional human beings, not as the inscrutable Asian character who serves as the backdrop for someone else’s catharsis.”
Other sessions featured conversations on Jewish Theatre Models, building relationships with audiences, and funding streams – a revelatory session for non-Minnesotans present, who were shocked and awed by State Senator Richard Cohen, author of Minnesota’s Clean Water, Land and Legacy Amendment – groundbreaking legislation which created the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, a new (as of 2008) funding stream for the arts guaranteed by the Minnesota Constitution until 2034. Peter Brosious of the Children’s Theatre Company led a panel on new theatre for young people with Director of New Play Development Elissa Adams and playwrights Rosanna Staffa and (DG member) Jenna Zark – an interesting discussion which delved into thematic material for young people, and how children crave truth on stage, for as Rosanna pointed out, “in truth, there is hope.” A solo performers’ showcase included a performance from DG member Laura Zam (Married Sex) and the Playwrights’ Center hosted several performances, including works by DG members Phil Johnson and my colleague and fellow DG rep for Ohio, Faye Sholiton, who is the founder of Interplay Jewish Theatre, a company that produces staged readings of Jewish themed works and whose company name was inspired by Emily Mann’s earlier description of good theatre as “the interplay of head and heart.”
And this was just the tip of the iceberg for this three-and-a half-day conference. In the words of Association for Jewish Theatre President David Chack (shpieltheatre.com), “The wonderful thing about the AJT Conference is that it brought theatremakers doing Jewish theatre from all over the world to Minneapolis/St Paul, one of the great theatre communities today, and it enriched both.” When I spoke with Faye Sholiton at the DG conference this past August, she was still glowing from the June AJT conference. “I’m not the only one who left the AJT conference with a renewed sense of purpose,” says Sholiton. “It was clear that we are all meant to dream bigger and think more creatively. As one speaker reminded us, Martin Luther King did not say ‘I have a strategic plan.’”
lflaniganhegge@dramatistsguild.com

Above: David Chack, Theodore Bikel, Robert Skloot & Emily Mann. Photo by Elaine Seigel.

Above: Robert Skloot & Emily Mann. Photo by Elaine Seigel.






