WHAT WEEKLY

Talking To Kate Mckenna

10 August 2011

★ Peter Davis & Philip Laubner

 

Kate Mckenna is the Fells Point Corner Theater Producer for Asking Questions by Nancy Murray. We had a conversation about the production. It opens tonight. Here’s some of it.

 

KM – How did you get involved with the production?

 

PD – Nancy (the playwright) asked me to direct. Nancy has considerable skills as a writer, director and actress. She understands the relationship between story, production strategy and performance. And she’s a lovely and dynamic person.

 

KM – What has been interesting/challenging aspect about your role as Director in this production?

 

PD – Creating a coherent belief system for new work the actors can take and run with.

 

KM – What is it like working with a new play?

 

PD – I learned theater working on new plays in New Mexico many years ago. The first lesson is to surround your self with smart, invested and talented people. The second is to trust them. The third is to challenge the actors (as their characters) to want more.

 

KM – What is your favorite part of the rehearsal/production process and why?

 

PD – Making time to really play with the text and the staging, and coming at both from different perspectives. Allow for the clash of opposites and see what happens.

 

KM – What do you think you’re strong suit as a director is?

 

PD – Getting actors ready, feeling confident they know the story, their role in it and believing in each other. Come show time they are the final authority of what the story means, not me or Nancy.

 

KM – What are some favorite projects you’ve been involved in and what made them special?

 

PD – Nice Things by Ken Greller for last year’s Baltimore Playwrights Festival was satisfying. I worked with a great cast then, too. I miss them.

 

PD – Girdle Bound a play of mine that Mobtown work shopped last year received great feedback. I got a dynamic rewrite out of the process that was directed by Brent Englar.

 

KM – What keeps you coming back to the stage?

 

PD – Finding a script with something to say and working with smart, fun actors.

 

KM – What is on the horizon?

 

PD – Keep working with friends on new plays, including mine, one day.

 

KM – Break a leg!

 

PD – Then we turned the table and I lead the conversation…

 

PD -What was it about Nancy’s play, Asking Questions that made it worthy of a FPCT production?

 

KM – Asking Questions has it all … a powerful, meaningful story filled with humor, great characters, and interesting dialogue.  Then, when it was workshopped this fall in Barry Feinstein’s class, it really started to come to life for me.  It got a team of people behind it. Two of your actors were in that workshop.  When actors get excited about a play for the BPF, there is really something there.

 

PD – How did you come to be the producer of this show and what makes that role satisfying to you?

 

KM – I am on the board at FPCT, and we take turns producing playsI was also very involved in the BPF selection for our theater this year, so I was pretty invested in both of our summer plays.

 

KM – It is very satisfying to watch a new play come to life.  As producer, I am watching this process from the start.  It is magical watching talented people do what they do best, and that has certainly been the case with this show.

 

PD – What makes FPCT different from other Baltimore Community Theaters?

 

KM – FPCT constantly tries to do plays that don’t get done in Baltimore.  Some of these are new plays and Baltimore premiers, some are just different.  We don’t pick plays based on popularity.  I love that about FPCT.  When we see how a very well-known, overdone show sells out at another theater, it’s hard not to be tempted, but there is always someone from our board who helps us stick with our mission and who we are.

 

PD – Tell me a bit about the upcoming season.

 

KM – We start with Three Tall Women by Edward Albee.  This is a show that was on our schedule two years ago and then the rights got pulled from us weeks before it opened.  This was highly unusual and actually quite mysterious.  We couldn’t figure out why it happened.  We have wanted to do an Albee show since and couldn’t agree on which one last year… finally we realized it was because we all just love Three Tall Women, so we decided to give it another shot.  It is in production now, and we are optimistic it will open in September!  😉

 

KM – The rest of the season is a good mix of new plays and a couple of classics that haven’t been done in Baltimore in a while.  We are also repeating our ten minute play competition, 10X10 that was a lot of fun last year.

 

PD – Which play is the riskiest endeavor and what makes it so?

 

KM – Iceman Cometh by Eugene O’Neil is very risky for the two reasons I mentioned above.  Then, it’s a classic, which is both good and bad.  Some people will be familiar with it, but you still have to discover what makes it relevant and worthy to go on stage today.  Ruined by Lynn Nottage is definitely the riskiest.  It is undoubtedly one of the most powerful plays I have ever read.  But it’s heavy.  Acting wise, it is very challenging.

 

PD – Why do we make plays?

KM – Short answer, I do theater because I like to play.  I go to theater because I like a good story!

 

PD – What’s in it for you, personally?

KM – I am an actor at heart, but with three children at home, I don’t get to do that very often.  Producing and being on the board at FPCT is a way that I can be involved without the intense commitment of the run of a show.  I am also a big believer in how important community theater is.  The number of people involved with FPCT throughout the course of a season, all volunteer, is unbelievable.  Some are theater majors and have ton of experience, and some are just discovering theater.  When I first became involved in a workshop at FPCT, this is what grabbed me immediately… people rehearsing everywhere in the theater — upstairs, downstairs, in the lobby.  It was so alive with people and creativity.  I love being around that!

 



fashion

Saint Harridan in Baltimore :: The Suits You’ve Been Waiting For

  Last month, clothing company Saint Harridan arrived at the Embassy Suites in the Inner Harbor on the Baltimore leg of…

Fighting Rape in Underwear

The Littlest Fashion Truck Ever

Giordano’s Giant Nudes

Behind the Fence

FashionEASTa 2015

nightlife

Infernoland

Each year millions of families travel by planes, trains and automobiles to amusement parks all over the world. Upon arrival…

Boite: Show and Tell

Comedy Noir

Bent Ear

The Death Set: Slap Slap…

Nina Simone: Baltimore set to scenes from The Wire

social innovation

Living my Dream in Cherry Hill

Habari Gana! My name is Keshawna. I am 12 years old and I live in Cherry Hill. Cherry Hill is a…

Building Genuine Diversity

The Exchange Revamps Itself for 2014 & Beyond

Elf Night

Baltimore Hackathon

Feedback

artist profiles

Soldiers Find Healing Through Art

From music therapy and acupuncture to therapy dogs and yoga, there are alternative ways to cope with trauma that are…

Brady Starr

Kaveh Haerian :: Poster Child

Artist Heather Joi

Shawn Theron

Ian Hesford :: Dead and Back Again

sustainability

Baltimore Free Farm

All photos by David London Nestled just blocks from The Avenue in Hanpden is a leafy utopia known as the…

Farmageddon

Fixing The Future

An Ambitious New Charter School Comes to West Baltimore

Big Green Pirate Party

Small Time

technology

Real Science Fiction

Welcome to the future. In case you haven’t noticed, much of yesterday’s science fiction is rapidly becoming today’s reality. In…

The Secret World of Sugaring

Meet the Kids at Digital Harbor Foundation

Get Pixilated

What Are Bitcoins?

Intuitive Insight: The Hot Spot