News
'A Thousand Words' speaks volumes about art, realism
Sunday, February 19, 2012
by Mike Fischer, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; A picture may be worth 1,000 words, but can it ever do justice to the ghosts caught in the frame? Should we even care, as long as the resulting images entertain - and sell?
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Journey to 'A Thousand Words' starts with homegrown steps
Friday, February 17, 2012
by Jim Higgins, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; "A Thousand Words," Gwendolyn Rice's new play inspired by the great photographer Walker Evans, takes place in Kansas and New York, and involves Cuba. But the Madison playwright's Wisconsin work experiences raised crucial questions she pursues in the play.
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Lake Effect interview with playwright Gwendolyn Rice
Thursday, February 16, 2012
WUWM's Bonnie North interviews A THOUSAND WORDS playwright Gwendolyn Rice!
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Footlights minute A THOUSAND WORDS
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Watch John McGivern's "Footlights Minute" interview with actress Molly Rhode!
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(A Picture is Worth) A Thousand Words
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
by Jenna Kashou, Inside Milwaukee.com;
Just as life can be unexpected, inspiration can also happen at serendipitous or seemingly irrelevant moments. Like reading a newspaper, for example. An article about a set of old photographs by a Depression-era photographer, propelled Madison-based playwright Gwen Rice into a research frenzy back in 2004.
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Realities Behind the Fiction
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
“There is no single work of art or literature that summarizes the deep concern with poverty in the 1930s. The work of documentary photographers like Walker Evans may come the closest, in part because the unvarnished humanity of their subjects seemed to transcend its historical moment.” ~Dancing in the Dark: A Cultural History of the Great Depression, by Morris Dickstein
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From First Inspiration to a Life on the Stage: A Timeline
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
2004: Playwright Gwendolyn Rice stumbles upon “a newspaper account of when the photos were found amongst (Ernest) Hemingway’s possessions. I had never heard of Walker Evans, but the story really intrigued me.”
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‘A Thousand Words’ considers the power of pictures
Thursday, January 26, 2012
by Lindsay Christians, 77 Square; For Madison writer Gwendolyn Rice, there’s always one character in each of her plays with whom she’s a little infatuated. In “A Thousand Words,” that character is Walker Evans.
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Picturing the Past
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
by Kate Vaughn, Madison Magazine; Juxtaposing the present day with the 1930s, stories unfold to pose the question: How much is a photograph truly worth?
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Gwendolyn Rice's 'A Thousand Words' exposes work of photographer who met Hemingway
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Wisconsin State Journal; How "A Thousand Words" came about: The play was conceived after I read a small newspaper article about the owner of a bar in Key West, Fla. He stumbled upon a treasure trove of books, fishing gear, and personal effects from one of the bar's most famous patrons — Ernest Hemingway. Among these items were a collection of black and white photos taken by Walker Evans.
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MCT's Commitment to New Works
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
An interview with C. Michael Wright & Jacque Troy;
Michael & Jacque were recently interviewed about MCT's involvement in the development of A THOUSAND WORDS and our mission to support emerging playwrights.
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