New York, NY — Sundance Institute today announced the seven artists selected for its 2014 Playwrights Retreat at Ucross Foundation. The 15th annual writing colony at the 20,000-acre working cattle ranch outside of Sheridan, WY takes place February 3-21. Under the supervision of Artistic Director Philip Himberg and Producing Director Christopher Hibma, the Playwrights Retreat is made possible through the generosity of Ucross Foundation.
Himberg said, “Our Playwrights Retreat at Ucross Foundation celebrates a milestone 15th anniversary this year, and we are pleased to continue this unique collaboration between Sundance Institute and the renowned Ucross Foundation. The Retreat provides a rare opportunity for theatre artists to begin new projects and refine drafts while creating an intimate community of theatre makers. Sundance Institute dramaturg Mame Hunt is on hand to guide and respond to the writing.”
Notable artists and projects supported in previous years through the Playwrights Retreat program include A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder by Steven Lutvak and Robert L. Freedman (Hartford Stage Company and La Jolla Playhouse, Broadway), Song for the Disappeared by Tanya Saracho (Goodman Theater, Chicago), ToasT by Lemon Anderson (Under The Radar), and Appropriate by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins (Woolly Mammoth, Washington D.C. and Signature Theatre, NYC).
The seven artists selected are:
Eisa Davis 
 Plays include Bulrusher (Pulitzer  Prize finalist), Angela’s Mixtape, Ramp (Ruby Prize), The  History of Light, Warriors Don’t Cry, the musical Flowers Are  Sleeping, and the collaborations Hip Hop Anansi and Active  Ingredients. Recent performing credits in theatre include The Cradle  Will Rock (Encores), David Auburn’s new play Lost Lake (O’Neill), Luck  of the Irish (LCT3), The Call, This (Playwrights Horizons, CTG), the  rock musical Passing Strange; the films Free Angela, Welcome  to the Rileys (opposite James Gandolfini), In The Family, The Architect,  Robot Stories, The Volunteer and Jack Ryan (both upcoming); and the  television series The Wire, Damages, Smash, and Hart of Dixie. In  addition, her songs were featured regularly on the Showtime series Soul Food.  Eisa has received two Obie Awards, the Helen Merrill Award, and fellowships  from the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, Cave Canem, the Van Lier and Mellon  Foundations. She was an artist-in-residence at Symphony Space, a resident  playwright at New Dramatists, and was the 2012 winner of the Alpert Award in  Theatre. She is the 2013/14 Arthur Levitt Fellow at Williams College. Something  Else and Tinctures are albums of her original music.
Frank  London
 Frank  London is a member of The Klezmatics, winning a Grammy Award for Best  Contemporary World Music for their recording, Wonder Wheel (lyrics by  Woody Guthrie). He composed 1001 Voices: A Symphony for Queens, Talmud  Texts for poet Jake Marmer and the Ayn Sof Arkestra, the multimedia  Jewish opera A Night in the Old Marketplace, Brass and Percussion  Quartets for Carnegie Hall, Wachauer Begegnungen for folksinger  Norbert Hauer, improvising soloists, and 90-piece wind ensemble Trachtenkappelle  Rossatz in Austria, and the opera Green Violin. He has played with  Angelique Kidjo, Youssou N’dour, Omara Portuando, Itzhak  Perlman, David Byrne, Karen O & the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Iggy Pop, and is  featured on over 300 recordings. 
Dave  Malloy 
 He  has written music for seven full-length musicals, most recently Natasha,  Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812, an electropop opera based  on War & Peace, for which he was also librettist, orchestrator  and Pierre. Comet premiered at Ars Nova in the fall of 2012,  winning a Richard Rodgers Award and a Special Citation OBIE, before  transferring to Kazino, a Russian supper club built specially for the show. He  is also one of the co-creators/performers of Three Pianos, a  drunken romp through Schubert’s “Winterreise” (Ontological-Hysteric  Theater, New York Theater Workshop, American Repertory Theater; 2011 Special  Citation OBIE Award), and the composer for the Brooklyn-based ensemble Banana  Bag & Bodice. Other musicals include Beowulf – A Thousand  Years of Baggage; Beardo; Sandwich; and Clown  Bible. Other notable shows include (The 99-cent) Miss Saigon, a  shoe-string adaptation complete with a toy helicopter on a zip line, and pieces  with Hoi Polloi, Witness Relocation, Clubbed Thumb, and Shotgun Players. He won  a 2009 Jonathan Larson Grant and the 2009-11 NEA/TCG Career Development Program  Grant for Theatre Designers. He has been a Guest Professor in devised music  theater at Princeton and Vassar Universities. Upcoming: Black  Wizard / Blue Wizard at the Incubator Arts Project, with  co-creator/performer Eliza Bent. He lives in Brooklyn.
christopher oscar peña 
 He is originally from California and now resides in  Manhattan. Selected plays include maelstrom, icarus burns, alone  above a raging sea, l(y)re, the suicide tapes and awe/struck. His  play with composer Melissa Lusk i wonder if it’s possible to have a love  affair that lasts forever? or things I found on craigslist will close the  University of Illinois-Chicago School of Theater’s LAUNCH year season in 2014. He is the creator and co-star of 80/20, a new series for the web, which was recently named an Official Selection at the 2013 New Media Film Festival in LA,  and won the 2013 Outstanding Achievement in writing from LAWEBFEST. His newest play TINY PEOPLE (or, it gets  better) was featured in the 2013 Crossing Borders Festival at Two Rivers  Theater. Awards/fellowships: Latino Playwrights Award (Kennedy Center), New  York Theatre Workshop Emerging Artist Fellow, Playwrights Realm Writing Fellow,  Sewanee Writers Conference Fellow, US/UK Exchange (Old Vic New Voices). His  play a cautionary tail received its professional world premiere at The  Flea Theater in 2013. He is working on a new commission from Chicago’s Goodman  Theater where he is in residence as a member of their Playwrights Unit. He was  the Lark Play Development Center’s 2012-2013 Van Lier Fellow and is currently a  2013-2014 Fellow in the Lark’s Playwrights Workshop. The first collection of his  work is forthcoming from NoPassport Press.
Roxie  Perkins
 A  San Francisco Bay Area native, Roxie Perkins is a graduate from UCLA’s School  of Theatre, Film, and Television with a BA in playwriting and directing. Her  work has been produced at CalArts, UCLA’s MFA New Play Festival, A Working  Theatre, The Shed, and UCLA’s MFA Francis Ford Coppola One Act Marathon. As the  2013 recipient of the Dr. Floyd Gaffney National Playwriting Award, her play, RUN,  was featured in UCSD’s MFA Wagner New Play Festival. She is a Teaching Artist  at Berkeley Repertory School of Theatre and resides in 
 Los  Angeles.
Shaina  Taub 
 Shaina  is a songwriter and performer, raised in Vermont and living in Brooklyn. She  was Ars Nova’s 2012 Composer-in-Residence. Her original soul-folk opera, The  Daughters, was a finalist for the Richard Rodgers Award and has been  developed by the Yale Institute of Music Theater and CAP21 Theater Company. She  is currently writing songs for two new musicals: There’s A House,  commissioned by the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, with playwright, Kim  Rosenstock, and Robin, commissioned by Ars Nova, with playwright Jen  Silverman. She has developed songs for Walt Disney Imagineering, been a member  of the Johnny Mercer Songwriter’s Project, and recently gave a TEDx Talk on why  artistic communities are crucial to creativity. As a singer/ songwriter, she  plays regularly in New York with her trio, has released two albums, What  Otters Do and Shaina Taub Trio, and her headlining Joe’s  Pub concert was featured on NPR/WNYC’s Best Gigs of the Year. She has traveled  the world as a musician and performer, appearing on stages from Abu Dhabi to  Germany to Nashville, and venues including the Sydney Opera House, the Kennedy  Center and the Beacon Theater. She has received a MacDowell Fellowship, a Yaddo  Fellowship, served on the music theater faculty at Pace University and is a  University Scholar alumnus of NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts. Shaina is  currently playing the role of Mary in the critically acclaimed electropop  opera, Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812. 
Elise  Thoron 
 Elise’s  musical plays have been produced in the United States and Europe: Green  Violin, music by Frank London of the Klezmatics; Prozak and the  Platypus, music by Jill Sobule; Charlotte: Life? or Theater?, music  by Gary Fagin. As writer/director: Recycling: washi tales in  collaboration with Karen Kandel and company of Japanese traditional performers,  commissioned/premiered at The Krannert Center for the Performing Arts; also Los  Angeles County Museum (2011), Hong Kong, Singapore (2014). For 20 years, Elise has  created cross-cultural exchanges with Russian and American theater artists. She  directed the first Sam Shepherd play in Moscow; adapted and directed The  Great Gatsby in Russian at a The Pushkin Theater in Moscow, where it played  for over nine years. As Associate Artistic Director at American Place Theatre,  Elise developed and directed many new plays and solo shows. She also co-founded  with Wynn Handman Literature to Life, a theater literacy program, now  nationwide where Lemon Andersen’s County of Kings was first developed  for students, before performing at The Public, Spoleto, and venues around the  world. Elise is thrilled to be working again with Lemon on his new play ToasT, developed at Sundance Institute Theater Lab and the Ucross Foundation, at  the Public Theater; and writing a new opera, Memory of Fire: Hatuey, with  composer Frank London.
The Sundance Institute Theatre Program is made possible by generous support from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation’s Leading National Theatres Program Endowment, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, John and Marcia Price Family Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, Time Warner Foundation, LUMA Foundation, The Shubert Foundation, Joan and George Hornig, Regina Kulik Scully and John Scully, and Karen Lauder.
Sundance Institute Theatre Program
 The Theatre Program  has been a core component of Sundance Institute since Robert Redford founded  the Institute in 1981. The Theatre Program identifies and assists emerging  theatre artists, contributes to the creative growth of established artists, and  encourages and supports the development of new work for the stage. Under the  guidance of Artistic Director Philip Himberg and Producing Director Christopher  Hibma, the Theatre Program is one of the leading play development programs in  the United States. Titles such as Spring  Awakening, An Iliad, I Am My Own Wife, The Good Negro, Circle Mirror  Transformation, Passing Strange, Grey Gardens, Crowns and Marie Antoinette have gone from Theatre Program Labs to production from coast to coast and  internationally, garnering multiple Pulitzers, Tonys, OBIEs and other  recognition. The Theatre Program’s East Africa initiative is the only  professional program of its type on the continent, offering Labs,  cross-cultural exchange, mentorship and exposure to artists in six African  countries. The Theatre Program’s newest initiative is the Theatre Directors  Retreat at Domaine de l’Armellière in Arles, France. sundance.org/theatre
Sundance Institute 
 Founded by  Robert Redford in 1981, Sundance Institute is a global, nonprofit cultural  organization dedicated to nurturing artistic expression in film and theater,  and to supporting intercultural dialogue between artists and audiences. The  Institute promotes independent storytelling to unite, inform and inspire,  regardless of geo-political, social, religious or cultural differences.  Internationally recognized for its annual Sundance Film Festival and its  artistic development programs for directors, screenwriters, producers, film  composers, playwrights and theatre artists, Sundance Institute has nurtured  such projects as Beasts of the Southern  Wild, Fruitvale Station, Sin Nombre, An Inconvenient Truth, Spring Awakening, Born into Brothels, Trouble  the Water, Light in the Piazza and Angels in America. Join Sundance  Institute on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube.
Ucross Foundation
 Founded  in 1981, Ucross Foundation is an internationally known retreat for visual  artists, writers, composers and choreographers working in all creative  disciplines. It provides living accommodations, studio space, uninterrupted  time and the experience of the extraordinary High Plains landscape to competitively  selected individuals. Ucross supports individuals whose work reflects  innovative thinking, a depth of creative exploration, and the potential for  significant future accomplishments. A number of residents have won recognition  such as the Pulitzer Prize, the Tony Award, the National Book Award, the  MacArthur Fellowship, the Guggenheim Fellowship and many other honors. Through  its Residency Program, art gallery, and associated activities, Ucross actively  seeks to support an appreciation for vibrant human creativity and aims to cast  a reflection into the future from the cultural mirror of our lives and times. ucrossfoundation.org
 
								 
															 
															 
															 
															

