This Week 
at Mosaic Templars


The Rep Comes to MTCC

 

The Mosaic Templars Cultural Center is excited about a new partnership with the Arkansas Repertory Theatre. MTCC will host Voices at the River II -- performance readings of 5 plays by African American and Latino playwrights. Seating is first come, first serve and the Auditorium doors will be open 20 minutes before showtime.

Take this opportunities to visit the museum exhibits, shop in the Museum Store and experience the best theatre Arkansas has to offer. Voices at the River II is made possible with funding from the Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation and the National Endowment of the Arts.


FRIDAY, JULY 17, 2010

6:00 p.m. | Free Public Reading of Liddy’s Sammiches, Potions and Baths by Tearrance Chisholm

Liddy’s Sammiches, Potions, and Baths is a play about the daughter of a sorceress who seeks to realize her identity through her deceased mother’s spell book. Teaching herself through her mother’s words, Liddy journeys to find the truth about the mother she never got a chance to know. This play lives in the south, on the border between reality and the fantastic, and explores how one begins to put together the ingredients to concoct the truth.

Tearrance Chisholm is a native of St. Louis, Missouri, and a graduate from the University of Missouri Columbia with a degree in Fine Arts. A playwright and graphic artist, he feels that the theatre is a synthesis of both his passions. His works have been featured in the Mizzou New Play Series and Endstations Theatre’s New Playwrights Initiative, and he has worked closely with the Kennedy Center’s Playwrighting Intensive.

8:30 p.m. | Free Public Reading of Weback by Elaine Romero

Tensions arise on the U.S./Mexican border as the Minuteman Militia hold rallies in the park and lobby to deny citizenship to the American-born children of undocumented workers. The play charts the intertwined fates of a privileged Latina high school principal and the Mexican undocumented worker she fires to protect her job. The irrevocable consequences of her choice force her to question her position in the community and herself.

Elaine Romero is the Playwright-in-Residence at the Arizona Theatre Company and has taught at Linfield College and the University of Arizona. Romero’s plays have been developed and produced at such theatres as Actors Theatre of Louisville, the Magic Theatre, the Ford Amphitheatre, New Theatre, Arizona Theatre Company, Curious Theatre Company, Bloomington Playwrights Project, Kitchen Dog Theatre, Urban Stages, INTAR, the Playwrights’ Center, Women’s Project and Productions, the Working Theater, Su Teatro, the Lark Theatre, San Diego Repertory Theatre, Borderlands Theater, Bay Area Playwrights Festival, and Miracle Theatre.

SATURDAY, JULY 17, 2010

2:00 p.m. | Young Playwright Selection: Free Public Reading of Waking Up to You by Michael Chavez

Michael Chavez’s Waking Up to You is a comical view into the short-lived relationship of a college aged couple. The classic story of boy meets girl is turned upside down as the romance dissipates into a fog of memory.

6:00 p.m. | Free Public Reading of Solterona by Augusto Federico Amador

Maria is a solterona. A spinster. Unmarried and quickly becoming middle-aged, she struggles to find an independent life of her own while caring for her repressive mother, Delores.

Augusto Federico Amador was born in the San Francisco Bay Area. In Los Angeles, his work has been presented at the Audrey Skirball-Kenis Theater Projects, the Ricardo Montalban Theater, the John Anson Ford Theater and Playwrights Arena. In New York, his work has been presented at the Ensemble Studio Theater, Terra Nova Collective Theater, Repertorio Espanol and INTAR Theater. Currently, he is a member of the 2010 Emerging Writers group at the Public Theater in New York City.

8
:30 p.m. | Free Public Reading of Roses in the Water by La’Chris Jordan

Life in the New Orleans Desire Housing Projects is not easy for Clarice. The dead end job, the drive-by shootings, and the constant struggle to pay the rent have all taken their toll and she wants out. With no other options, Clarice enlists in the U.S. Navy against her mother’s wishes. But will life in the military be any safer than life in the streets? A challenging and timely drama with sharp humor, Roses in the Water touches on the tough choices we are sometimes forced to make.

La’Chris Jordan is an award-winning playwright who was named one of the ‘50 to Watch’ by the Dramatists Guild of America. Roses in the Water recently received a staged reading at the award-winning off-Broadway theatre Urban Stages in New York as part of their New Works for a New Season reading series. Jordan is a member of the Dramatists Guild of America, the International Centre for Women Playwrights, and the Northwest Playwrights Alliance.
 
 


The Mosaic Templars Cultural Center is located at the corner of 9th and Broadway Streets in downtown Little Rock. Parking is available in the museum's parking lot to the west of the building on 9th Street. Additional parking is available on 9th Street and Arch Street.
 
For more information about these and other events, visit our website at http://www.mosaictemplarscenter.com/.
 


The Mosaic Templars Cultural Center
is a museum of the Department of Arkansas Heritage.