The New School for Drama has announced that two
award-winning artists, playwright Jon Robin Baitz and director Jo Bonney, will be
joining the faculty for the Spring 2009 semester. Baitz will be teaching
Playwriting and Bonney will be instructing a course on Directing Short Plays.
Baitz will be teaching while faculty member Michael Weller is on leave. Weller
received the 2009 Carl Djerassi Distinguished Fellowship in Playwriting and will
be spending the spring semester at the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing
at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Bonney will be teaching directors in
their first year of study, building upon the work begun by Directing Chair
Elinor Renfield in the fall semester.
"Baitz and Bonney are examples of the high caliber
professionals that the New School for Drama is able to attract through its
strong ties to the New York theater world," said Robert LuPone, director of The
New School for Drama. “Their success proves that there is still room for
imaginative, risky, and, most important, original plays. For our students, this
is an outstanding opportunity to learn from shining lights in the field. We look
forward to having them join us this spring.”
The New School for Drama is a three-year intensive,
interrelated program dedicated to training artists in the fields of Playwriting,
Directing, and Acting. Students begin with a course of self-discovery, explore
technical craftsmanship in the second year, and finish by writing, directing,
and acting in full productions, as well as developing a business plan for the
transition from student to professional artist.
Jon Robin Baitz's plays include The Film Society, The Substance of
Fire, Three
Hotels, A Fair
Country, Ten
Unknowns, Mizlansky/ Zilinsky, a new version of Ibsen's
Hedda Gabler,
which was produced on Broadway in 2001, and The Paris Letter. He is the creator of the hit
ABC TV show Brothers
& Sisters, which he also produced for the first two seasons. He is
currently writing and executive producing a mini-series for HBO about the
selling of the Iraq war to the public titled, "Bush's War". His PBS film version
of Three Hotels
won a Humanitas Award. Other screenplays include The Substance of Fire based on his play, and People I know, which
starred Al Pacino. He has also written episodes of West Wing and Alias. He is a
Pulitzer finalist, a Guggenheim and NEA fellow, an American Academy of Arts
& Letters Award winner, and a founding member and a former artistic director
of New York's Naked Angels theatre company. His new play Love & Mercy will
be produced next season on Broadway. His work has been produced in New York by
Playwrights Horizons, the Roundabout Theatre, Lincoln Center Theatre, and Second
Stage.
Jo Bonney's plays include
On the Mountain,
Fat Pig, Living Out, Anna in the Tropics,
Slanguage, Fifth of July, Adoration of the Old
Woman, References
to Salvador Dali Make Me Hot, Humpty Dumpty, suburbia, Funhouse; Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll; Pounding Nails into the
Floor with My Forehead, and Wake Up and Smell the Coffee. Other credits
include, Philip Ridley’s The Fastest Clock in the Universe and Seth Zvi
Rosenfeld’s The
Flatted Fifth (The New Group), and Warren Leight’s Stray Cats (Naked
Angels). Bonney is the recipient of a 1998 Obie Award for Sustained Excellence
of Direction and is the editor of Extreme Exposure: An Anthology of Solo Performance
Texts from the Twentieth Century (TCG). Bonney's upcoming plays include:
Caryl Churchill's Top
Girls (Williamstown) and Charles Fuller's A Soldier's Play (Second Stage).
At The New School for
Drama, the instinct to create is revered. Through its interrelated, three-year
MFA program in acting, directing, or playwriting, the school is forging the next
generation of dramatic artists. A faculty of working professionals brings to the
fore each student’s unique and original voice, and helps them establish a rooted
sense of who they are as individuals and as artists. The New School’s history in
the dramatic arts began in the 1940s, when the Dramatic Workshop, led by founder
Erwin Piscator and a faculty including Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg, fostered
artistic voices as distinctive as Tennessee Williams and Marlon Brando. For more
information, visit www.drama.newschool.edu.