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Play Reading To Honor Late Smith Alumna

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  • Play Reading To Honor Late Smith Alumna

    PLAY READING TO HONOR LATE SMITH ALUMNA

    Smith College Grécourt Gat
    Dec 8 2008
    MA

    The late Leah Ryan AC'93, a playwright, essayist, and writer of
    post-modern greeting cards, was a woman of letters. She graduated with
    honors from Smith, winning the Denis Johnston prize for excellence in
    playwriting three times and the Jill Cummins MacLean Prize once. Ryan
    then earned her Artist Diploma in Playwriting at Julliard and her
    MFA from the University of Iowa Writer's Workshop, where she won the
    Distinguished Teaching award and was twice chosen to take part in
    the annual Iowa Playwrights Festival.

    Ryan died on June 12, 2008, of leukemia.

    On Thursday, Dec. 11, the Smith theatre department will present a
    staged reading of Ryan's play The Wire, in her memory. Directed by
    Holly Derr, a lecturer in theatre, the reading will take place at 7:30
    p.m. in Earle Recital Hall, Sage. It is free and open to the public.

    The Wire, which was first produced at Smith in 2002, was named a
    semi-finalist in PlayLabs in 2005. Ryan described her play this way:
    "You go to sleep, you have a nightmare about being up on the high
    wire in front of thousands of people. In the dream, you start to
    fall. Then everyone else starts to fall. And then you wake up. Or else,
    you don't. And if you manage to survive, perhaps even the simple act
    of setting foot on the floor will seem impossible."

    Ryan's plays are performed all over the United States. Her play Bleach,
    a dark comedy about the legacy of the Armenian genocide, received
    the Maibaum Award for plays dealing with issues of social justice.

    Ryan taught playwriting, English, and creative writing to a wide
    variety of students, including at the Laboratory Institute of
    Merchandising, where she was a professor in the Arts and Communications
    department and founder of their Writing Center. She also worked with
    groups of high school and college students at Vassar College and
    at New York Stage and Film's Powerhouse Theater Apprentice Training
    Program. She received a grant from the New York State Council on the
    Arts for her work with Epic Theatre Centre, creating modern adaptations
    of classic plays with groups of middle and high school students.

    Her publications include the literary anthology For Here or To Go,
    Even More Monologues by Women for Women, essays in The Best of Temp
    Slave, as well as work in many small magazines. Her play Pigeon was
    published by Playscripts, Inc. Her short work also appeared in 400
    Words, including the debut issue. She was Fiction Editor and a regular
    columnist at Punk Plant magazine.

    Holly Derr teaches acting, directing, theater history, and
    play analysis at Smith. She recently directed House of Gold,
    by Gregory Moss, at the PlayPenn New Play Development Festival in
    Philadelphia, and Common Decency, by Ann Marie Healy, with the Brown
    University/Trinity Repertory Consortium. Her New York productions
    include Anatomy of Isabelle: A Reconstructed Production, The Vagina
    Monologues, Monsieur X: Here Called Pierre Rabier, In the Penal Colony,
    When We Dead Awaken, Hollywoodland, Cymbeline, and Like It Is.

    --Boundary_(ID_9Mmzi6sAcw7PBgv3GUpeEw)--
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