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Writing Workshop: Old Stories, New Voices

Writing Workshop: Old Stories, New Voices

WORKSHOP
OLD STORIES, NEW VOICES
Saturday, April 20th | 1:00pm - 4:00pm

$35 guests | registration required
$25 sustaining members | registration required
partial scholarships available: email info@surelsplace.org

Why does a fellow want a girl like her
a girl who's merely lovely?
Why can't a fellow ever once prefer
a girl who's merely me?

-Rogers and Hammerstein Stepsister's Lament from CINDERELLA

Bored with always centering too-good-to-be-true Cinderella and her prince? Let's tell the story from the point of view of a wicked stepsister, the magic coach, or even the glass slipper. In this writing workshop with poet and playwright Monica Raymond, we'll begin with some exercises in inner listening, then allow the voices of objects and minor characters from well-worn tales to reveal secrets, destabilize and re-enchant those stories. While Raymond will provide suggestions, please feel free to bring your own favorite fairy tale, Bible story, myth, or canonical narrative (Macbeth? A Christmas Carol?) to work with. We'll be creating new work, not workshopping previously written pieces. Sharing what you write during the workshop will be optional, though welcome.

This workshop is for fiction writers, poets, playwrights and screenwriters, visual artists, anyone who's interested. Partial scholarships available by request to info@surelsplace.org. This programming is supported in part by the Western States Arts Federation (WESTAF), the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Idaho Commission on the Arts.

Biography:
Monica Raymond (Massachusetts) is a poet, playwright, lyricist and librettist. Primarily a poet for the first half of her life, she began auditing courses in performance art while teaching writing and interdisciplinary arts at the Boston Museum School. While she still makes the occasional solo performance piece for herself, she soon realized that she prefers to write scripts for other people. Her first full-length script, FASTER, about the death of a teenage anorexic, got her admitted to Smith College's under-the-radar MFA program, from which she graduated in 2000. Since then she's had close to ninety performances or staged readings of her work in the US and Canada. This is her first residency.

"My work, particularly in theater, usually addresses some thorny knot of a world problem for which I do not have a solution, only many questions and a whorl of feelings and sensations," Monica elaborates. "Creating strong, complex women characters is central." Her multiple prize-winning full-length The Owl Girl was an extended meditation on the situation in Israel/Palestine. Another play, A to Z, looks at the 1968 murder of a Black male activist through the stories of his girlfriend, sister and first grade teacher. Monica's work often has a magical, spiritual aspect, stretching from the mundane into mystery.

Surel's Place
$35
01:00 PM - 04:00 PM on Sat, 20 Apr 2024

Event Supported By

Surel's Place
info@surelsplace.org
Surel's Place
212 E 33rd Street
Garden City, Idaho 83714
(208) 996-0761
info@surelsplace.org