PEN and the Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater give three awards to playwrights in different stages of their careers. In all three cases, PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater honorees are writers working indisputably at the highest level of achievement. The three awards are for a master American Dramatist, an American Playwright in mid-career with an outstanding voice, and an emerging american playwright who demonstrates great promise. The awards were developed to reflect Laura Pels’s dedication to supporting excellence in American theater as well as PEN’s commitment to recognizing and rewarding the playwright’s literary accomplishment.
PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater Award for Master American Dramatist
Luis Alfaro, for his impressive craft, the socially important questions he rises in his plays, and his priceless contribution to contemporary theater, including Oedipus El Rey, St. Jude, and Pico Union.
A Chicano born and raised in the Pico-Union district of downtown Los Angeles, Alfaro has been working in theatre, performance, poetry and journalism since 1982. A multi-disciplined artist, he is also works as a director, curator, producer, educator and community organizer.
Alfaro is the recipient of a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation fellowship, popularly known as a “genius grant,” awarded to people who have demonstrated expertise and exceptional creativity in their respective fields, and is the first playwright-in-residence in the 83-year history of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, the largest repertory company in the United States, serving for six seasons (2013-19) through the generous support of the Andrew S. Mellon Foundation. Alfaro is the only playwright to have received two Kennedy Center ‘Fund for New American Play’ awards in the same year.
His most recent production, Oedipus el Rey, is part of the current 50th anniversary season off-Broadway at The Public Theatre in New York City with a sold-out run, extended three times.
PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater Award for an American Playwright in Mid-career
Sybil Kempson, for her fine craft, intertextual approach, and her body of work including Crime or Emergency and Let Us Now Praise Susan Sontag.
Kempson’s plays have been presented in the United States, Germany, and Norway. Her work has received support from the Jerome Foundation, the Greenwall Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts, among others.
She is a MacDowell Colony Fellow, a member of New Dramatists, a USA Artists Rockefeller Fellow, an Artist-in-Residence at the Abrons Arts Center, a 2014 nominee for the Doris Duke Impact Award, the Laurents Hatcher Award and the Herb Alpert Award, and a New York Theatre Workshop Usual Suspect. Her plays are published by 53rd State Press, PLAY: Journal of Plays, and Performance & Art Journal (PAJ). MFA Brooklyn College under the instigation of Mac Wellman and Erin Courtney. She teaches and has taught experimental performance writing at Sarah Lawrence College, Brooklyn College, and the Eugene Lang College at the New School in NYC.
PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater Award for an Emerging American Playwright
Mike Lew, for his original voice, playful sense of provocation, and his body of works including Stockton, microcrisis, and Tiger Style!
Lew is a Tony voter, Dramatists Guild Council member, and recipient of a Mellon Foundation residency, Lark Venturous residency, NYFA fellowship, and the Lanford Wilson, Helen Merrill, Heideman, and Kendeda awards. He is co-director of Ma-Yi Writers Lab, the largest collective of Asian-American playwrights in the country.
2018 PEN/Laura Pels Award Judges
THOMAS BRADSHAW‘s plays have been produced at regional theaters in New York City and in Europe, including The Bereaved,Burning, Job, Intimacy, and most recently Thomas & Sally. He has received fellowships from the Lark Play Development Center and the New York Theatre Workshop. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Prince Charitable Trust, the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Award, and the 2017 PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater Award. | |
LISA KRON has been writing and performing theater since 1984. Her work has been widely produced in New York, regionally, and internationally. Her plays include the musical Fun Home, based on the graphic novel by Alison Bechdel. She is a founding member of the legendary collaborative theater company The Five Lesbian Brothers, whose plays have all been produced by the New York Theater Workshop, and have been performed widely throughout the country. Lisa has received fellowships from the Lortel and Guggenheim Foundations, Sundance Theater Lab, and grants from the Creative Capital Foundation and New York Foundation for the Arts. | |
LIESL TOMMY is an award-winning stage director. Ms. Tommy is the recipient of an Obie Award, Lucille Lortel Award, Pioneer of the Arts Award, Lillian Hellman Award, Alan Schneider Award, NEA/TCG Directors Grant, New York Theatre Workshop Casting/Directing Fellowship, and the inaugural Susan Stroman Award from the Vineyard Theatre. Ms. Tommy facilitated the inaugural Sundance East Africa Theatre Director’s Lab and is a member of the Board of the Sundance Institute. She has worked at Dallas Theater Center, California Shakespeare Theater, Center Stage, Sundance East Africa, among others |
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Please note that any playwright, writer, or member of the theater community may submit a nomination for an Emerging or Mid-career playwright. However, a playwright may not nominate his or herself, and candidates of the Master American Dramatist Award are proposed by the judges; nominations are not accepted.
ELIGIBILITY
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- Master American Dramatist: Candidates are proposed by the judges; nominations are not accepted.
- American Playwright in Mid-career:
- Playwrights writing in English
- Playwright must have had a professional production of at least two full-length works mounted in a theater of at least 299 seats and contracted specifically for either limited or open runs.
- The work of writers produced by regional theaters across the United States will be given consideration equal to work produced in major metropolitan centers.