Tag Archives: writing

Write like an Elissa

Last weekend I caught up with my friend Elissa.

Three fun facts about Elissa:

1. When I was a senior in college I co-directed The Vagina Monologues. Elissa performed a monologue that required her to spend several minutes naming and then demonstrating different types of moans, culminating— er, climaxing—with a “surprise triple orgasm moan” (emphasis mine). Elissa was very brave and committed to this piece. It was a show-stealer. My favorite memory of the entire weekend is the moment I approached my octogenarian grandma after the first performance. “What did you think, Grandma?” I asked a little nervously. Without missing a beat or so much as nodding in Elissa’s direction, she declared, “Well. That was more than three!”

2. Elissa once wrote a letter that said, “I write like a girl…How does a woman get up and become the writer she wishes she’d be?” In reply, the columnist Dear Sugar published Write Like a Motherfucker. People were so thirsty for this advice that they now purchase a mug with the slogan.

3. Elissa obeyed. Now she is almost finished with her first book. She is also out to make sure that other women write like motherfuckers and get recognized for it. She edits a column called Funny Women (read the submission guidelines) and co-edited The Rumpus Women, Vol. 1.

It’s important to have Elissas in our lives, don’t you think?

Photo: Elissa Bassist reads at Greenlight Bookstore (2011/cell phone pic). 

November post count: 8. 

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Stick Fly

When it comes to family…you’re STUCK.

That’s the tagline of the new play Stick Fly, which premieres on Broadway in a few weeks. On Wednesday, my friends and I went to The Greene Space to see Terrance McKnight interview playwright Lydia Diamond, director Kenny Leon, and the cast. You can see a video of the event here. (You won’t be breathing the same air as Dule Hill and Tracie Thoms—what was that I said earlier about this being National BRAG Posting Month?—but you can do that if you buy tickets to the show!)

As Colorlines and the New York Times noted, this season marks the first time Broadway will simultaneously mount three shows by black women playwrights (and five Broadway plays total this fall will be penned by women, according to Women and Hollywood). Hearing Lydia Diamond speak about how it feels to revise her work and to see the revisions come alive in the hands of actors “at the top of their game” was a highlight of the evening – and the actors and director gushed about the material in return. They couldn’t give away plot secrets, which meant they used words like “universal” and “complicated” and “funny” over and over. But somehow no one seemed to mind – we all just left wanting to hustle and buy our tickets.

So who else is going? Let’s debrief after.

art direction


Photo: some of the family I’m “stuck” with (July 2011).

November post count: 2.

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This Friday: CHAPTERS readings begin!

Everyone’s favorite reading series, CHAPTERS, kicks off again this month!

This will be my second year photographing events for Girls Write Now, which “combines mentoring and writing instruction within the context of all-girl programming.”

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jcsupersmith/4524406480/in/set-72157622882567234/

CHAPTERS readings are fun because they feature professional published authors (last year’s lineup included Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Nami Mun, and others) and readings by mentor-mentee pairs. It’s so much fun to see them support one another.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jcsupersmith/4523577511/in/set-72157622882567234/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jcsupersmith/4524431534/in/set-72157622882567234/

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Over the course of a year, each mentee attends genre workshops and builds a portfolio full of writing samples. While half of NYC’s students don’t graduate from high school, 100% of Girls Write Now’s seniors do – and they all go on to college.

The idea behind CHAPTERS is that each participant should experience a reading in front of an audience. If you’re in New York on March 25, April 29, May 20, or June 17, you should come.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jcsupersmith/4523723313/in/set-72157622882567234/

 

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