Wendy Graf
Playwright
WGraf89132@aol.com
Biography
This year Wendy Graf has written and produced two new full length
plays, BEHIND THE GATES (ran May 14-July 9 2010 at Lee Strasberg
Institute, West Hollywood, Calif) and NO WORD IN GUYANESE FOR ME (opens May, 2011 in Burbank, Calif). (see synposes in Play Roster).
BETHANY/BAKOL, the first act of BEHIND THE GATES, won the 18th annual
Attic Theater One Act Festival and was produced 2009 Attic theatre,
Los Angeles. LEIPZIG was presented in April 2010 by Jewish Theatre of
Bloomington at Bloomington Playwrights Projects . ASHES TO ASHES, a
new one act, won first place in the 2010 FirstStage One Act Festival
(see synopsis below).
With Gordon Davidson, former Artistic Director of Center Theatre
Group, she has done a complete rewrite of 2007 LESSONS. The play is
retitled A NEW SONG, and there have been a number of readings with
Julie Dretzin and John Rubinstein; Jeffrey Tambor and Camryn Manheim.
Ms. Graf and Mr. Davidson look forward to a future production of A NEW
SONG.
An evening of her one act collection, ZENO'S PARADOX (July 2008 at
FirstStage Hollywood), was presented in Theatre West's 2009 Summer
Reading Series, directed by Deborah LaVine. The serio comic plays
about adult children and their aging parents include the multi award
winning LESTER AND SCHLOSS (2008 Ellen Idelson Award winner, 2008 Arts
and Letters Prize for Drama finalist, 2009 International Jewish Short
Play Competition winner) A fourth one had been added-IS THERE A DOCTOR
IN THE HOUSE? in November 2008 at the Road Theater Company. A fifth
one act-REPORTS OF MY DEATH HAVE BEEN GREATLY EXAGERRATED (Ensemble
Studio Theater's Winterfest 2009) was added as well to round out the
evening. A new 10 minute play, RED AND BLUE, was presented at
Winterfest 2010 by Ensemble Studio Theatre.
PLAY ROSTER
ASHES TO ASHES:
Awarded First Place and presented in 2010 FirstStage One Act Festival, ASHES TO ASHES tells the story of DEBRA , who is is approaching a milestone birthday. She just sent her last child off to college, faces an empty nest, feels disconnected and us questioning the meaning of life. Polish shtetel born Grandma Minnie's ashes have been stored in an exterior house paint can in her mother's basementfor 37 years. Debra wants to return Grandma Minnie to Poland/Russia/Lithuania, restoring her to her "native soil‚" while, at the same time, hopefully "connecting the dots of family history, getting a sense of who I am and where I came from." After opposition from her mother yet armed with a handful of Grandma Minnie's ashes tucked into her diaphragm case, Debra is off on a Jewish genealogy tour to what is now Belarus to search for her roots and restore Grandma Minnie to her native soil.
BEHIND THE GATES:
Behind the Gates deals with what happens when a seventeen year old American girl goes on a school trip to Israel and disappears into the haredi community. Her parents must journey to Israel to search for her. The play explores the status of women in the Orthodox world, the Babel of languages and lack of communication between parents and children, the yearning to be seen and heard and accepted, and the journey of self discovery.
BETHANY/BAKOL:
Bethany Leiberman is an angry, rebellious, disenfranchised American teenager searching for acceptance and identity. She has turned to drugs, sex, and cutting school in order to fill the hole in her soul and a terrible longing to be loved and understood. She has been an enormous challenge for her parents, Jerry and Susan, with whom she has an increasingly disintegrating relationship. They are at a complete loss as to how to deal with her, how to parent her. Finally, as a last resort, deferring to the parenting advice of the therapist and their friends, they ship Bethany off to a summer program in Israel. Resentful at first, Bethany finds herself drawn into the haredi world of the ultra Orthodox Jews in Jerusalem, as it appears to fill the hole by offering the community, identity and family she has been craving so intensely. Ripe and suggestive, longing for conviction and the relief of absolutes, she is approached one Friday afternoon by a zealous, charismatic rabbi, seeming to merely be extending hospitality to a stranger. Bethany becomes completely absorbed into this world, changing her name to a Hebrew name, adopting a new identity, cutting off all contact with her parents, and ultimately disappearing into the haredi community. We see her transform from Bethany to Bakol.
LEIPZIG:
Leipzig is a multi award winning play which explores the journey of a three-member Irish Catholic Boston family when the mother descends into Alzheimer's and begins praying in Hebrew, unwittingly revealing her long-held secret that she is Jewish, a child refugee of the Holocaust. Past and present collide in a psychological homecoming that raises deep and ultimately moving questions about identity. The play is a beautiful exploration of religious identity, loyalty, parental bonds and attendant feelings of safety or threat. It is a plea for inclusion at a time of fear and religious polarization. Leipzig was both a critical and audience success in its first production that ran from October 20-December 10 2006 at the Marilyn Monroe Theater at The Group at Strasberg in Los Angeles. It played to sold out audiences and starred veteran actors Salome Jens, Mimi Kennedy, and Mitchell Ryan. It was directed by Deborah Lavine, head of the film directing program at Cal Arts, who has directed over 200 theater productions. Leipzig is a play that generated much thought and discussion and received great press attention. Two of the actors, Salome and Mimi Kennedy, did a lengthy interview with Backstage West (www.Backstagewest.com) titled "Politics and Art". We had many interesting groups come to see it with talkbacks after. We hosted evenings with the Interfaith Council (ICUJP), a Progressive Democrats of America fundraiser, and we even had a group from the Muslim Public Affairs Council, including Samer Hathout, who recently won the Los Angeles Humanitarian Award, causing so much controversy in the Jewish Community, Anthony Saidy, and Salamal-Marayati. We had a wonderful and stimulating talkback that afternoon between them and a group of Jewish senior citizens.
LESSONS:
Warmly received by Los Angeles critics, Lessons unites an older man and younger woman who teach each other a thing or two, in an entirely platonic way. Ben is a retired sneakers manufacturer, recovering from his wife's death and guilt associated with her final passage. A Jew in name only, having no faith, no roots, and no family, he starts studying Hebrew before a trip to Israel and ends up training for the Bar Mitzvah he never had. His teacher is a divorced, disillusioned rabbi, Ruth, who has given up her faith and retreated from the community. The process of instructing Ben finally gives Ruth a new lease on life, too. LESSONS is a touching, funny, and "affecting and uplifting" two person drama that asks whether healing and forgiveness can be found when one's beliefs are questioned.
THE BOOK OF ESTHER:
An award winning play that is a comedic look at Jewish assimilation in America. Wendy Graf's comedy focuses on a central character named Mindy, who, like Queen Esther, bravely declares her Jewishness in the face of opposition. Unlike Esther, Mindy doesn't save the Jewish people, but confronts her ardently secular family and friends when she discovers her religion. Young Mindy and Adult Mindy are portrayed by two different actors, who sometimes share the stage. Young Mindy was raised by somewhat self-hating Jewish parents - they sent her to a Christian Science Sunday school. The spiritual void of her childhood follows young Mindy into adulthood. After a '70s-era fling with guru-style enlightenment, Adult Mindy settles down, marries and has children. When an acquaintance dies, the rabbi's comforting words and in-depth knowledge of the departed has Mindy questioning, "Who's going to know me when I die?" What follows is a rapid engagement with Orthodox Judaism, plunging her Christmas tree-decorating family into chaos. Torn between her mother's distaste for "those real Jew-y Jews on Fairfax Ave." and her Chasidic mentor's "Ya wanna do it right, or ya wanna do it all facockta?" Mindy searches for a balance of tradition and contemporary life.Throw in a fashion-conscious friend who disapproves of Mindy's tzniut-conscious style, a daughter who expects presents for the holiday of Shabbat, and a brief argument with Santa Claus, then "The Book of Esther" becomes at once an introspective quest and a whimsical contemporary tale.
NO WORD IN GUYANESE FOR ME:
No Word in Guyanese for Me tells the journey of Anna, who is made to choose between her identity and the support and love of her family and her precious faith. From her childhood in Guyana to her adolescence in pre and post 9/11 New York City, from a disastrous arranged marriage to her sexual awakening and discovery that there can be someone for whom she is enough, Anna struggles to come to terms with her sexual identity, her devotion to her faith, and the right to be accepted for who she is while adhering to her family and her faith. Her faith and family test her, and finally Anna must give them the choice: accept who she is-a gay Muslim-or lose her forever.
Poetic and lyrical, the play is a beautiful exploration of religious and sexual identity, clashing cultures, loyalty, hopes and dreams, parental bonds and attendant feelings of safety or threat. It is a plea for understanding and tolerance at a time of fear and religious, moral, and political polarization. But mostly “No Word in Guyanese for Me” is about communication and unconditional love: the difficulties of it, the search for it, and the desperate need to be heard.
THE CROSS AND THE SABER:
The Cross and the Saber, which takes place in a mythical neo-fascist country fighting an unpopular and unjust war, explores themes of theocracy and Christian fundamentalism.
L.A. TALES:
Based loosely on fairy tales, L.A. Tales is a comedic collection of tales of La La Land.
Biography
Wendy Graf has been very busy on a number of projects. With Gordon Davidson, former Artistic Director of Center Theatre Group, she has done a complete rewrite of 2007 LESSONS. The play is retitled A NEW SONG, and there have been a number of readings with Julie Dretzin and John Rubinstein. Ms. Graf and Mr. Davidson look forward to a future production of A NEW SONG.
An evening of her one act collection, ZENO'S PARADOX, was presented in a staged reading in July 2008 at FirstStage Hollywood and was directed by Deborah LaVine. One of the plays, LESTER AND SCHLOSS, has been named a 2008 Ellen Idelson Award winner and a 2008 Arts and Letters Prize for Drama finalist. A fourth one act has been added-IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE?-and another reading, directed again by Ms. LaVine, is set for November 2008 at the Road Theater Company, with an eye toward production. The four comedic plays deal with children and their aging parents.
Finally, most exciting, is the birth of a new play, BEHIND THE GATES. This play deals with what happens when a seventeen year old American girl goes on a school trip to Israel and disappears into the haredi community. Her parents must journey to Israel to search for her. The play explores the status of women in the Orthodox world, the Babel of languages and lack of communication between parents and children, the yearning to be seen and heard, and the journey of self discovery.
Play Roster
LEIPZIG:
LEIPZIG is a multi award winning play which explores the journey of a three-member Irish Catholic Boston family when the mother descends into Alzheimer's and begins praying in Hebrew, unwittingly revealing her long-held secret that she is Jewish, a child refugee of the Holocaust. Past and present collide in a psychological homecoming that raises deep and ultimately moving questions about identity. The play is a beautiful exploration of religious identity, loyalty, parental bonds and attendant feelings of safety or threat. It is a plea for inclusion at a time of fear and religious polarization.
LEIPZIG was both a critical and audience success in its first production that ran from October 20-December 10 2006 at the Marilyn Monroe Theater at The Group at Strasberg in Los Angeles. It played to sold out audiences and starred veteran actors Salome Jens, Mimi Kennedy, and Mitchell Ryan. It was directed by Deborah Lavine, head of the film directing program at Cal Arts, who has directed over 200 theater productions. LEIPZIG is a play that generated much thought and discussion and received great press attention. Two of the actors, Salome and Mimi Kennedy, did a lengthy interview with Backstage West (www.Backstagewest.com) titled "Politics and Art". We had many interesting groups come to see it with talkbacks after. We hosted evenings with the Interfaith Council (ICUJP), a Progressive Democrats of America fundraiser, and we even had a group from the Muslim Public Affairs Council, including Samer Hathout, who recently won the Los Angeles Humanitarian Award, causing so much controversy in the Jewish Community, Anthony Saidy, and Salamal-Marayati. We had a wonderful and stimulating talkback that afternoon between them and a group of Jewish senior citizens.
LESSONS:
Warmly received by Los Angeles critics, LESSONS unites an older man and younger woman who teach each other a thing or two, in an entirely platonic way. Ben is a retired sneakers manufacturer, recovering from his wife's death and guilt associated with her final passage. A Jew in name only, having no faith, no roots, and no family, he starts studying Hebrew before a trip to Israel and ends up training for the Bar Mitzvah he never had. His teacher is a divorced, disillusioned rabbi, Ruth, who has given up her faith and retreated from the community. The process of instructing Ben finally gives Ruth a new lease on life, too. LESSONS is a touching, funny, and "affecting and uplifting" two person drama that asks whether healing and forgiveness can be found when one's beliefs are questioned.
THE BOOK OF ESTHER:
An award winning play that is a comedic look at Jewish assimilation in America. Wendy Graf's comedy focuses on a central character named Mindy, who, like Queen Esther, bravely declares her Jewishness in the face of opposition. Unlike Esther, Mindy doesn't save the Jewish people, but confronts her ardently secular family and friends when she discovers her religion. Young Mindy and Adult Mindy are portrayed by two different actors, who sometimes share the stage. Young Mindy was raised by somewhat self-hating Jewish parents - they sent her to a Christian Science Sunday school. The spiritual void of her childhood follows young Mindy into adulthood. After a '70s-era fling with guru-style enlightenment, Adult Mindy settles down, marries and has children. When an acquaintance dies, the rabbi's comforting words and in-depth knowledge of the departed has Mindy questioning, "Who's going to know me when I die?" What follows is a rapid engagement with Orthodox Judaism, plunging her Christmas tree-decorating family into chaos. Torn between her mother's distaste for "those real Jew-y Jews on Fairfax Ave." and her Chasidic mentor's "Ya wanna do it right, or ya wanna do it all facockta?" Mindy searches for a balance of tradition and contemporary life.Throw in a fashion-conscious friend who disapproves of Mindy's tzniut-conscious style, a daughter who expects presents for the holiday of Shabbat, and a brief argument with Santa Claus, then "The Book of Esther" becomes at once an introspective quest and a whimsical contemporary tale.
THE CROSS AND THE SABER:
THE CROSS AND THE SABER, which takes place in a mythical neo-fascist country fighting an unpopular and unjust war, explores themes of theocracy and Christian fundamentalism.
L.A. TALES:
Based loosely on fairy tales, L.A. Tales is a comedic collection of tales of La La Land.
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