Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective

Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective 1971 (L-r) Sally Ordway, Susan Yankowitz, Christina (Chryse) Maile, Gwen Gunn, Patricia Horan, Dolores Walker in center. Photo: Sondra Lowell

The Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective was a group of professional women playwrights in New York active from 1971 to 1975. They wrote and produced feminist plays and were one of the first feminist theatre groups in the United States to do so.[1] The members' individual works had been produced at the Public Theater, La Mama, Joe Chaikin’s Open Theater, Café Cino,[2] Circle Repertory Company, Mark Taper Forum, Lincoln Center, and New York Theater Ensemble.

History

The playwrights' group was one of the first feminist theatre groups in the country.[3] Original members included Helen Duberstein,[4] Helene Dworzan, Patricia Horan, Gwen Gunn, Christina Maile,[5] Sally Ordway,[6] Dolores Deane Walker,[7] and Susan Yankowitz. Megan Terry and Dacia Maraini were among the guest playwrights.

Feminist issues

The plays of the Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective featured such women's issues as religious patriarchy, work-place discrimination, dominance/submission relationships, historical figures, masquerade, and sexual harassment.

Rape-In showing scene from Liberation by Dolores Walker. Backdrop by Eunice Golden. Actors: Helen Pugatch, David Kent. 1971. Photo by Paul Lubitz

Subsequent to their first production, RAPE-IN, the plays transcended the limiting context of agit-prop theatre by discarding the revenge themes current in much feminist writing at the time, and instead strove to accurately reflect the complexity of women’s lives and celebrate their accomplishments.

?! A Musical Revue showing scene from Trading Places by Gwen Gunn. Actors (l-r) Kristen Christopher, Richard Darrow, Lois Beckett, Norman Thomas Marshall. 1973 Photo by Cookie Cirillo

The company was especially noteworthy for writing about women's issues with lacerating humor in often absurdist situations. Christopher Olsen in his book, Off Off Broadway 1968 -1970 The Second Wave (2011),[8] noted the playwrights’ abilities to balance a serious social message about the marginalization of women with a sense of humor and a commitment to good writing.[9] Linda Killian, in analyzing the group’s first production, RAPE-IN, wrote that they “used humor, anger, and horror, sometimes in combination, sometimes alone.[10]

Kevin Sanders, in his 1973 WABC Eyewitness News review of WICKED WOMEN stated: “Their two earlier highly successful shows, RAPE-IN and UP!–AN UPPITY REVUE! were sharp, perceptive and fiercely satirical representations of a contemporary feminist viewpoint – a tradition maintained in this new show [Wicked Women]."[11] Gloria Rojas of WNEW-TV Midday Live, New York agreed: “Wicked Women is outrageous, funny and, to me, a little shocking.”[12]

Wicked Women Revue showing scene from Franklin's Bride by Chryse (Christina) Maile. Actors: (l-r) Helen Pugatch, Michael Darrow, Joel Simon, Tom Leo, Alix Elias. 1973. Photo by Patricia Horan

The group’s productions were widely and positively reviewed, and, with its theatrical emphasis,[13] it became one of the first feminist theater groups reviewed in the New York Times on an ongoing basis. Howard Thompson in his NY Times review called the Collective's productions, "witty and original.".[14] Mel Gussow said that the Collective's productions work both as "a course in consciousness raising and a call to arms."[15] Debbie Wasserman in her Show Business review of The Wicked Women Revue noted, “It is certainly a pleasure to see a crusading group which doesn’t use its crusade as an excuse for bad theatre, but rather uses good theatre to assist its crusade.”[16]

Job opportunities

Because it was specifically a women's playwrights’ and producing group, the Collective hired professional actors, and group members did not perform.[17]

While the Collective used both male and female actors - unusual for feminist stage productions in the 1970s[18] – the company offered serious employment opportunities for women stage managers, directors, producers, and lighting designers. Many women currently working in theatre credit the Collective for giving them their first real job experience in theater. All productions featured original songs composed and performed by women musicians. The playwrights strongly believed in collective creation among women and operated a separate theater workshop to explore new works.

Other work

Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective on roof of Westbeth in NYC, 1971. From l-r Sally Ordway, Susan Yankowitz, Christina (Chryse) Maile, Dolores Walker (in front) Gwen Gunn, and Patricia Horan. Photo by Lucille Rhodes

Not limited to theater productions, the playwrights group branched out to produce poetry readings, and film screenings. As a preamble to the opening of JUMPIN’ SALTY - a show about historic women in Greenwich Village – they organized a march[19] through downtown Manhattan complete with speakers at numerous historic sites. These included the site of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, Margaret Sanger’s office, and Henrietta Rodman's[20] Feminist Alliance office at McDougal St., the former Café Society location at Sheridan Square where Lena Horne sang, Bessie Hillman's[21] Women's Trade Union League, and a location of Harriet Tubman's Underground Railroad.[22] In 1974-75, the Collective sponsored a nationwide playwriting contest for women playwrights. The prize was a theatrical production in New York City.

As the work of the group grew, so did its administrative needs. At any one time, the Advisory Board of the Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective was filled with women dedicated to good writing who were concerned with women's issues. These included Margaret Croyden, author; Alice Denham, author; Elizabeth Fisher, author and founder of Aphra Feminist Literary Journal; Ellen Frankfort, author and journalist; Carol Greitzer,[23] New York City Councilwoman; Florynce Kennedy, women’s rights activist and civil rights lawyer; Eleanor Perry, screenwriter; Muriel Rukeyser, poet; Alix Kates Shulman, author; Anita Steckel,[24] artist; Tania, artist; and Gloria Steinem, author and founder of Ms. Magazine.

In May, 1974, the Collective hired Nancy Rhodes as Administrative Director. Subsequently she founded the Encompass New Opera Theatre and has continued for the past thirty years as Artistic Director of that opera company.

The Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective, was partially funded as a not-for-profit theater company by the National Endowment for the Arts and the New York State Council on the Arts.[25]

The name of the group is derived from Westbeth Artists Housing – an affordable housing complex for artists in New York City, where most of the playwrights lived and worked, and which made accessible to the Collective free rehearsal space, and sometimes, production space.

Rape-In, the playwrights’ first show, began as a workshop project at the suggestion of a male playwright in a then-mixed Westbeth playwrights' group. But it was the women who wrote on the theme, and when they did, they discovered they were all feminists.[26]

Productions and events

The Collective also presented the work of other feminists:

Disbanding

Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective at videtoped interview in 2011. From left to right, Marjorie Melnick, Christina Maile, Gwen Gunn, Dolores Walker, Nancy Rhodes, and Helen Duberstein. Photo by Lauren Maile.

After five years of theatre productions, the Westbeth Playwrights Collective disbanded, each member to pursue individual careers - some as playwrights, poets, television and nonfiction writers. Others, perhaps encouraged by the avenues of opportunity they had striven to open, became bishops, attorneys, landscape architects, publishers, printmakers, and videographers.

Recently a group of Collective playwrights and directors met in an hour-long videotaped interview to recall the above events.

Bibliography and references

Archival references and material:

Bibliography

Reviews – news and television

Books

Articles

External references

References

  1. Leavitt, Dinah L., Feminist Theatre Groups, McFarland & Co., Inc., 1980, pg 19
  2. "Caffe Cino". warholstars.org.
  3. Leavitt, Dinah L., Feminist Theatre Groups, McFarland & Co., Inc., 1980, pg 18
  4. "Helen Duberstein Biography (1926-)". filmreference.com.
  5. "Christina Maile". christinamaile.com.
  6. "Sally Ordway Biography ((?)-)". filmreference.com.
  7. "DOLORES WALKER – playwright, writer". westbeth.org.
  8. "Off-Off Broadway: The Second Wave: 1968-1980: Christopher Olsen: 9781460933138: Amazon.com: Books". amazon.com.
  9. Olsen, Christopher, Off Off Broadway: The Second Wave 1968 - 1980, 2011, pg 161
  10. Killian, Linda, "Feminist Theater", Feminist Art Journal, vol. 3, no. 1 1974, pg 23
  11. Sanders, Kevin, Wicked Women Revue review by Eyewitness News, WABC-TV, January 1973
  12. Rojas, Gloria, The Wicked Women Revue, Midday LIve, WNEW-TV, January 1973
  13. Leavitt, Dinah L., Feminist Theatre Groups, McFarland & Co., Inc., 1980, pg 20
  14. Thompson, Howard, New York Times review of "?!" May 23, 1973
  15. Gussow, Mel, New York Times review of "What Time of Night It Is, 1973
  16. Wasserman, Debbie, "The Wicked Woman Revue", review in Show Business, January, 1973
  17. Brown, Janet, Feminist Drama: Definition and Analysis, Scarecrow Press, 1991, pg 87
  18. Rea, Charlotte, Women's Theatre Groups in The Drama Review, vol. 16, no 2, June 1972, pg 87
  19. Jumpin' Salty Event Announcement, New York Magazine, vol 8, no. 17, April 28, 1975, pg 22
  20. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F4081FFD3C5D17738DDDAC0A94DC405B858DF1D3
  21. "NMAJH - Only in America - Bessie Hillman". nmajh.org.
  22. "Performances on Street and Stage: Village Heroines - Yesterday and Today" The Villager, NYC April 17, 1975, pg 7
  23. http://www.nytimes.com/1990/11/19/style/j-s-vogel-lawyer-and-carol-greitzer-new-york-city-councilwoman-marry.html
  24. "Brooklyn Museum: Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art: Feminist Art Base: Anita Steckel". brooklynmuseum.org.
  25. Lowell, Sondra, "New Feminist Theater", Ms Magazine, August 1972, pg 18
  26. Croyden, Margaret, "Women Directors and Playwrights", Viva Magazine, May 1974, pg. 39
  27. "Columbia Psychiatry". columbia.edu.
  28. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0379010/bio
  29. http://www.dioceseny.org/pages/7-bishop-roskam
  30. "Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective Benefit" New York Magazine, vol 7, no. 8, February 25, 1974, pg 51
  31. "Birdie M. Hale". rottentomatoes.com.
  32. http://www.mh.com/bio/121/Kline-Linda
  33. "WOMEN MAKE MOVIES - Lucy Winer". wmm.com.
  34. "Theatre Will Never Be the Same - Archives - Honor Moore". honormoore.com.
  35. February 2008, Theatrical Communications Group
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