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After A Dry Spell, A New Play About Love, Scarce Resources

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  • After A Dry Spell, A New Play About Love, Scarce Resources

    AFTER A DRY SPELL, A NEW PLAY ABOUT LOVE, SCARCE RESOURCES
    By Megan Tench

    Boston Globe
    Nov 7 2008
    MA

    After a dry spell, a new play about love, scarce resources

    Joyce Van Dyke's new play, "The Oil Thief," is opening at Boston
    Playwrights' Theatre. (John Bohn/Globe Staff)

    Seven years after the local success of "A Girl's War," playwright Joyce
    Van Dyke has emerged with her new drama "The Oil Thief," exploring
    the geological rift between lovers amid an unexpected crisis, now
    in previews at the Boston Playwrights' Theatre. She recently spoke
    about her work.

    Q. What is "The Oil Thief" about?

    A. It's about a love triangle with a woman at the center of it who
    is a petroleum geologist. [It's in] this world of scarce resources
    . . . and oil is certainly a part of that. Amy, the geologist, is
    accustomed to thinking in terms of geological time. She has a very
    acute sense of the passage of time, the waning of time in her own
    life, so it's partly about scarce resources in terms of time, too,
    mortality and aging. The play is about all three characters going
    through a transformation, but Amy most prominently. I think of her
    struggle in terms of trying to break through an internal glass ceiling.

    Q. What helped inspire it?

    A. I have had a romantic feeling about geology since I was in college
    and took a geology class. I went on a field trip with a group of
    geologists to the Grand Canyon for a week and walked down from the
    ridge to the bottom, spent a week and went back up. And that felt
    like some kind of incredible rite of passage. It was astounding to me.

    Q. How is it working with Melinda Lopez and Will Lyman in the lead
    roles?

    A. I have done it before so I knew it would be great. They were in
    the production of "A Girl's War" at Boston Playwrights' Theatre in
    2001. They are wonderful actors to work with; they are very smart and
    pay a lot of attention to how the language and action move from second
    to second, moment to moment. . . . It feels like I have collaborators
    working with me on the play, and it's wonderful.

    Q. What has life been like for you after the local success of "A
    Girl's War"?

    A. It went from Boston Playwrights' Theatre to New Rep pretty quickly,
    and then there was actually a big silence after that. Things got
    very quiet. I started sending it out everywhere, but I got nice
    rejection letters: "We love your play but.. . ." It took me a long
    time to realize that just because it had done well here didn't mean
    big things were going to go on happening. I was so involved in that
    play, it was hard to switch gears for a while. I just sort of came
    back and worked in seclusion for a while.

    Q. Was it disappointing being on the cusp of something great without
    a big follow-up for all these years?

    A. It's like you're catching a wave - and oops, it didn't arrive. There
    was a disappointment to that. All of a sudden now, within the last
    few months, I've had a flurry of interest in "A Girl's War," which is
    so weird because for years I hadn't heard anything. There is supposed
    to be a production in San Francisco in the spring, and I am talking
    to people at a couple of other places. Who knows? There may be more
    to come.

    Q. Whatever became of the screenplay you were planning to write?

    A. I did write a screenplay; I was working with a local producer. It's
    an Armenian story. It's not going anywhere. But for me it was
    interesting writing a screenplay, which I had never done before, and
    to learn about those conventions. I started developing another play
    about Armenian genocide. That's just kind of waiting to go after "The
    Oil Thief." Right now we are just calling it the "Armenian Project."

    Q. How important is Rick Lombardo, the departing producing artistic
    director of New Repertory Theatre, to you?

    A. Rick was a great presence here and I am very sad he's leaving. It's
    not just because he's helped me, but I think he's helped to create
    a whole wave of interest and commitment to new work, doing world
    premieres and supporting local writers. Rick was a great director
    for me. It was a happy experience.

    "The Oil Thief" runs through Nov. 23. Tickets and information:
    866-811-4111; www.bu.edu/bpt
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