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FUCKPLAYS
A voyeuristic journey through eight playwrights' most
private places and a sincere examination of our most basic carnal
desires.
At the Ohio Theatre, New York, NY
and Galapagos Art Space, Brooklyn, NY
March 28 - April 27, 2007
From American Apparel ads to Sex and the City, we live in a world where consumer marketing runs by the dictum: Sex sells!
But in a society where explicit sex and pornography have veered ever
closer to the mainstream, do we have a more unrealistic view of sex
than ever before? How do we really do it? Talk about
it? Fight about it? Ultimately, what does sex mean to
you? Over sixty playwrights from across the country submitted
plays in response to that question, which were painstakingly narrowed
down to the eight best—a provocative cross-section encompassing fantasy, fetishism, humor, myth, submission, voyeurism, violence, and love.
PRESS:
"Enjoyable and clever…
In the evening’s best two works, the theme of mutual erotic
satisfaction is a surprisingly biting commonality... A smiling, clueless couple in Eric Sanders’s 1.1–1.7 explore the dirtier sides of sex with partners who use (and perhaps abuse) them."
- Amanda Cooper, Time Out New York
"Do not be put off by the overtly provocative title. fuckplays is real theater and serious business - seriously funny, for one thing.
The eight short plays that comprise it are all about sex, but unlike
the real thing may do, they neither disappoint nor try too hard. It's
an evening of real excitement, putting one in mind of headier eras in
picturesque countries where live theater had the power to make
audiences go nuts... Its played-sort-of-for-laughs gore brings us to
the evening's closer: Eric Sanders's gross, lunatic 1.1-1.7.
Directed by Stephen Brackett... this crazily inventive two-character
play is a miniature epic of nauseating foulness - and true love. Told
in a stutter of short scenes, with nothing but plain words, between
Richie (Cole Wimpee) and Donna (Nell Mooney) - two heroic performers -
the play gives new meaning to the phrase 'disgustingly sweet.'
Cathartic, nay, emetic, it's simply brilliant."
- Jon Sobel, Blogcritics.org
"Marvelously produced and acted... The presentation of the plays is gorgeous;
there is no awkward waiting around between scenes, as many things are
done in front of the audience (including actors changing, lounging
about in underwear during intermission)...
1.1-1.7: Written by Eric Sanders, directed by Stephen Brackett:
A funny piece about a
young couple who are completely honest with each other about their
bizarre extra-relationship affairs. Cole Wimpee and Nell Mooney
are adorable and amusingly deadpan as they describe to each other their
progressively more degenerate liaisons. The play goes very far
with graphically descriptive language; it's played for comedy, but I
was afraid some of the audience members behind me were going to vomit
at one point."
- Duncan
Pflaster, Broadway World
"The fuckplays is a series of eight short plays featuring
everything from the sublime to the ridiculous to the disgusting to the
religiously philosophical. Though the program ranges in
interest-grabbing content and execution, overall the event is a
laugh-a-minute journey through the sexual oddities and curiosities of 8
sets of characters... closes with the outrageous and hilarious 1.1-1.7, a short study in a couple’s lewd and crude extra-relationship behavior... I had a great time at fuckplays.
It is edgy, outrageous and fun, but it is also professionally executed.
A team of skilled writers, directors and actors has come together,
created a synergy, and delivers a program that unapologetically pushes
boundaries. Bravo to that!"
- Kessa De Santis, ELJ All Arts Annex
"Eric Sanders' 1.1-1.7 works best because of its tight writing and direction and the flawless timing of actors Cole Wimpee and Nell Mooney."
- Tom Penketh, Backstage
"A great showcase for a variety of budding acting and writing talents... Eric Sanders's 1.1 - 1.7
closes the show, and is good choice of send-off: though its "can you
top that?" gross-outs benefit from a very taut production (Stephen
Brackett directed) and the perfect delivery of stars Nell Mooney and
Cole Wimpee."
- Doug Strassler,Monsters and Critics
"fuckplays was a delight. I found myself laughing about 80
percent of the time I was there—which I guess is a good sign that
I’m not as uptight as I thought I was about sex. But a couple of
the darker plays urged me to think a little more deeply about human
relationships and the expectations some attach to The Act. My favorite
was definitely 1.1-1.7, a sardonic tale of a couple in which both partners go astray and actually talk about it in gross detail...all the time. Don’t worry, this one, unlike some of the others, has a happy(ish) ending."
- Lisa,Brooklyn Record
"Thoughtful, entertaining, funny, and quite smart... fuckplays provides a fresh, creative outlook on sex, sexuality, and the way it interacts with our lives."
- Lux Nightmare, Sexerati
"Four and a half stars (out of five)... Never underestimate the power of a good title. I was curtly
chided for showing up a few minutes after 7:30 to collect my ticket and
was put on stand-by status as the house was completely sold out.
Happily, there was one seat left for me and happily this collection of
8 lusty short plays by 8 lusty playwrights was as slutty and fun as its
title. Ranging from naughty to downright crass, every one of these
plays was actually very well written and very well performed... And the
final play's dialogue was so hysterically raunchy ('...she shit in my
mouth!... about two shot glasses full') that I would like to ask the
playwright's hand in marriage. The 'lights up!'/crew exposed/'cue the
bed!' cacophony in between the scenes made us feel like we were on the
set of a porn shoot. Great idea!"
- David Bell, Show Showdown






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FUCKPLAYS
Presented by Working Man's Clothes, The Thursday Problem, Soho
Thinktank, and Galapagos Art Space, in association with Jeffrey Schulman
The Impotence of Being Ernest
by Joshua Hill, directed by Julie Rossman
Marriage Play
by Bekah Brunstetter, directed by Diana Basmajian
Arms and the Octopus
by Casey Wimpee, directed by Isaac Byrne
Wood
by Justin Cooper, directed by Steven Gillenwater
Sharpen My Dick
by Greg Romero, directed by Cole Wimpee
Candy Room
by William Charles Meny, directed by Thomas Caruso
The Saddest Thing in the History of the World
by Kyle Jarrow, directed by Matthew Hancock
1.1-1.7
by Eric Sanders, directed by Stephen Brackett
With:
Adam Belvo
Mick Bleyer
Elliotte Crowell
Jared Culverhouse
Anne Dyas
Paul Fears
John Flynn
Robert Funaro
Kaci Gober
Eboni Hogan
Elizabeth Kensek
Michael Mason
Julian James Mohamed
Erin McCarson
David Mitsch
Nell Mooney
Will Neuman
Amy Lynn Stewart
Steven Strobel
Mark Thornton
Lucy Walters
Molly Ward
Charlie Wilson
Cole Wimpee
Alessandra Ziviani
Production Stage Manager: Allison Smith
Production Manager: Tom Bonner
Lighting Design: Maegan Kidd and Kat Stevens
Costume Design: Candice Thompson
AD of "Arms and the Octopus": Cat* Johnson
Original Music for "Candy Room": Linda Dowdell
Wardrobe Assistance: Paul Fears
Props Assistance: Anne Dyas
Board Operators: Kat Stevens and Tom Bonner
Technical Consultant at Ohio: Aaron Lemon-Strauss
Technical Consultant at Galapagos: Austin Dugan
Marketing Director of Galapagos: Kyle Jarrow
Soho Thinktank Artistic Director: Robert Lyons
Soho Thinktank Associate Producer: Vanessa Sparling
Galapagos Artistic Director: Travis Chamberlain
WMC Artistic Director: Isaac Byrne
WMC Executive Director: Jared Culverhouse
WMC Director of Finances: Amanda Hamilton
WMC Director of Development: Bekah Brunstetter
WMC Director of Communications: David Carr-Berry
The Thursday Problem Artistic Director: Eric Sanders
Press/Marketing: {ibid}PR
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