02 November 2008
Why Playwrights Shouldn't Get MFA's
Friday, November 2008
I think a strong case can be made that MFA programs
have done considerable harm to theater. Essentially
they take talented writers out of the real world and
put them in an environment where they have to please
a group of professors who tastes run to the abstract
and esoteric. The disconnect between what an academic
wants from a play and what an audience does is
profound. And it becomes a hard habit to shake once
you leave the academy, which is why I think we have
too many plays today that seem written by playwrights
to please other members of the theater community, the
audience be damned.
For me at least it’s comes down to this–a play has to have an emotional impact. I don’t care if it comes from laughing uproariously because of the jugglers or weeping because of the death of a character, it’s got to be there. This doesn’t have to take the form of catharsis–wonder and awe are also legitimate as far as I’m concerned. I just need to feel something, that’s all.
How did theater become seen as such a cerebral art form? I began writing plays because going to the theater was for me a visceral experience. That’s the huge advantage you get from it being live–you can go for and get to the jugular.
For me at least it’s comes down to this–a play has to have an emotional impact. I don’t care if it comes from laughing uproariously because of the jugglers or weeping because of the death of a character, it’s got to be there. This doesn’t have to take the form of catharsis–wonder and awe are also legitimate as far as I’m concerned. I just need to feel something, that’s all.
How did theater become seen as such a cerebral art form? I began writing plays because going to the theater was for me a visceral experience. That’s the huge advantage you get from it being live–you can go for and get to the jugular.
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