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State of the Woman
Produced by viBe Theater Experience
Directed by Liz Parker
Performed at HERE Arts Center
Think Like a Woman
Produced by viBe Theater Experience
Directed by Liz Parker
Performed at the YWCA of Brooklyn
'State of the Woman' was created by an intergenerational ensemble to explore the themes of 'V-day'. Teenagers and grown women came together under Liz's direction to reflect on their experiences and share wisdom. The group explored different manifestations of violence against women while still taking the time to celebrate female power.
viBe's Two-week Summer Intensive is a chance for teenage girls to expand thier theatre skills and create art over the summer. This summer, girls worked together to create Think Like a Woman - a short piece that gave voice to problems like street harassment and overly-aggressive dates. Among other playful reflections, this piece featured 'DON'T Touch my Body', a re-work of a Mariah Carey's pop hit.
Liz Parker and Carrie Ellman-Larsen co-directed a theatre program for High School students at the Museum of the City of New York in 2011 and 2012. This program used theatre to activate Museum archives and exhibits. Students created original performances in response to the content explored.
On Stage: Discovering New York's Diversity Through Theatre, 2011
'On Stage' focused on the history of immigration in New York City and how this has been represented in works of theatre over time. Students worked with primary sources from the museum to help create a final performance.
ACTivism, 2012
ACTivism focused on the Activist New York exhibit, with a special lens to the Federal Theatre Project and the Living Newspaper. Students created modern Living Newspaper plays based on issues of resonance to them.
Money, Money, Money...Talks!
Directed by Liz Parker and Rachel Sullivan
Produced by Urban Stages in collaboration with the Florence E Smith Senior Center
Created and performed by the seniors at Florence E Smith, Money, Money, Money...Talks! is about the way money influences our lives for better or for worse . Featuring personal stories, scenes, music and dancing!
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Life, One Season at a Time
Directed by Liz Parker and Rachel Sullivan
Produced by Urban Stages in collaboration with the Florence E Smith Senior Center
Created and performed by the seniors at Florence E Smith, Seasons of Life explores the cycles in our lives and the joy of each passing season. Featuring personal stories, scenes, dancing and 'Cruiseship Style', a senior version of the popular PSY song.
For five weeks each summer, Urban Stages turns over it's theater space to young people ages 10-14 and provides this youth ensemble with instruction in acting, voice, dance, spoken word and theatrical design. In five weeks, the youth create a brand new piece of theater incorporating using the skills they've learned to craft their vision. Liz has directed Urban Stages summer camp for the past two summers, working with an incredible staff to create exciting experiences for both the young people and their audiences.
Eye See You (2013)
Combining the camper's deep interest in mythology and the injustice of Trayvon Martin's recent death, the play analyzed the misjudgment and unfair treatment of the cyclops throughout mythological history and showed this analysis as a parallel with present-day prejudice.
Revolution Solution (2014)
In this dystopian future drama, the overwhelming trash from planet earth has been sent off to other planets, destroying habitats and killing alien creatures. Two aliens escape death and work to show the people of earth what destruction earthlings are causing. The aliens, a rag-tag team of young, frustrated students and boy from 2014 who finds himself transported, band together to overtake Madame's fortress.
Official SELECTION: ‘Designing for free speech’ 2014
Sponsored by Theatrum Mundi, in partnership with the AIA New York,
‘Designing for Free Speech’ challenged applicants to propose architectural or performative designs that would transform spaces in New York City into places that stimulate the rights enshrined in the First Amendment.
Liz Parker created a proposal with friend and landscape architect, Isaac Cohen. NEW-STAND was chosen as a winning design and was exhibited at the Center for Architecture in New York City. Liz and Isaac are now seeking community partners interested in making the idea a reality.
Please contact Liz for more information: dareapeach@gmail.com
Proposed PUBLIC SPACE
The North East corner of East 106th Street and Second Avenue is a place of compelling contradiction – an oasis of trees and benches amid traffic and construction. Across the street, a Chase bank is being erected. In another direction, a 99cent store appears to crumble. This corner resides firmly in ‘El Barrio’, or Spanish Harlem. Though it is now a predominantly Latino/a community, the area has a tense and sometimes violent history of changing demographics. Once the place of an important Lenape campground, the area has also been home to German, Irish, Eastern European Jewish and Italian American communities.
East Harlem’s 23rd Precinct had more stop-and-frisks in 2011 than any other precinct in Manhattan but crime has increased. Median household income here is one of the lowest in the five boroughs but it neighbors one of the city’s wealthiest areas. East Harlem is a ‘waterfront community’ that lacks easy access to riverfront green space and may be facing the loss of more recreation areas. Recently, NYCHA proposed leasing open land within East Harlem’s 24 housing projects to private luxury housing developers. Already luxury buildings are popping up in the area, producing record high rents.
Corners are ideal places for dialogue and exchange. This particular corner sits at the intersection of tradition and gentrification, passion and politics. The space holds huge potential to amplify voices of an ever-evolving community and to unite residents in civic action as they face the powerful contradictions around them.
DESIGN PROPOSAL
The NEW-STAND is a physical and performative intervention. A familiar sight in NYC, the newsstand is a place of consumption where people pay to read current events. The NEW-STAND subverts this model, creating a place for free news distribution that allows community members to stage active responses to information and participate in the life of the community.
In addition to distributing free information, the NEW-STAND will serve as a performance platform for community-created Living Newspaper Plays. The Federal Theatre Project of the 1930s utilized Living Newspaper Plays as a means of broaching complex, current issues. These plays break down complex issues and persuade the audience to take action. Through a process of recruiting and rehearsing, the artists will guide community members to create their own Living Newspaper Plays based on issues the community wishes to explore. These plays will be performed for a public audience in the plaza using the NEW-STAND as a performance platform. Between performances, the NEW-STAND can also be the base for interactive experiences on the corner including workshops, popup performances, protests and gatherings.
The pedestrian nature of this community makes this central corner an ideal location for neighbors to come together to create or witness art. Because the corner is a regular part of many people’s daily experience, there is potential for regular interaction and participation in NEW-STAND events. The corner space is large enough to host performance and audience, but compact enough to feel personal and connected.
IMPLEMENTATION
The NEW-STAND will be designed to replicate the look of a typical newsstand; using standard construction techniques and materials including lumber, plywood, and repurposed materials. Already an amenity within the public realm, the newsstand will be easily understood by regulators and implemented by the team with community based organizations and local residents. After construction the programming and functioning of the NEW-STAND will subvert the commercial nature of typical newsstands and create a valuable space for engagement and action. The everyday activation of the space through information exchange and gathering will be formalized through the creation of a Living Newspaper play around critical issues facing the community.
Community actors and audience will be recruited from local housing, educational and cultural institutions and through direct engagement and word-of-mouth. Auditions will be open to anyone and the cast will accommodate up to twenty participants. A minimum of twenty rehearsals will be held in a private space. We will seek indoor space donations from community partners. During rehearsals, participants will learn and practice Living Newspaper strategies, they will discuss and determine a topic of interest to the group and of relevance to the community, and they will collaborate to devise a Living Newspaper performance that investigates and communicates the issue to a local audience. Liz will direct the group from recruitment to public performance.
Construction and performance costs will be funded through Kickstarter campaign, in-kind donations and fundraiser events. We will seek other grant opportunities to sustain the project.
TEAM
Isaac Cohen has a Masters Degree in Landscape Architecture from the University of Virginia. He is a Community Design Fellow at bcWORKSHOP in Dallas, TX. He will work with the community to design the NEW-STAND and activate the plaza through the creation of theatrical set pieces and everyday amenities.
Liz Parker has a Masters in Applied Theatre from the City University of New York. She has created many plays with teenagers, senior citizens and intergenerational groups and works as a teaching artist with The Museum of the City of New York, the New Victory Theater and Lincoln Center Theater. Liz also performs regularly throughout New York City as well as across the US and Canada. Liz will guide the community creation and performance of Living Newspaper Plays.