Friday, February 10, 2012

Reading Room: Magic Fairy in the Microwave

This week I had the great pleasure of reading what is likely the most bizarre, strange, weird, quirky, and hilarious play I've ever read. As a matter of fact, I don't think I've ever seen anything like it. It's violent and bloody, which is something you rarely ever see on the high school stage, but so gleefully funny (in a dark and twisted way) that it totally gets away with it. I am 100% certain that high school students will love its many physical challenges and teachers will appreciate its message.

The play is called Magic Fairy in the Microwave, written by Dara Murphy. It's published by Theatrefolk and I highly recommend that you check it out by clicking here. It's all about a young girl named Sarah who lets her imagination get the best of her. With the aid of a cunning narrator, Sarah reinvents herself, along her friends and family. Feeling trapped in her life, she creates an entirely new reality for herself that involves serial killer parents, talking kittens, and magic fairies. As a result, she soon loses track of what's real and what's fiction. By the time the play is over, practically everyone is dead.

This description doesn't sound particularly funny, but trust me...it is. I wish I could do the play the justice it deserves, but you will just have to read it for yourself to understand what I cannot put into words. Truly, it's a play you need to see in order to believe. It actually reminds me a lot of one of my plays, Laughing Stock. In that play, a narrator takes control of the leading lady and encourages her to invent a far more interesting life for herself than the one she already has. Only I never would have had the courage to take it as far as Murphy does in her script. She has a knack for black comedy and is definitely not afraid to venture into the darkest corners. It's the sort of play I wish I had written, but know that I just don't have the guts. Thankfully Murphy does, as does Theatrefolk for making it available to those willing to take a risk on something grisly, funny, and thoughtful -- three words you never see together...and probably never will again.

Wednesday, February 08, 2012

New Releases

Brooklyn Publishers has just released three of my brand new comedies. Click the pictures below to check them out!


Tuesday, February 07, 2012

Drama Geeks Clip

Here's a fun clip from Nashoba High School's production of Drama Geeks in Stow, MA.

Monday, February 06, 2012

Epic Fail

Here are some fun photos from a production of Epic Fail, presented by Holdingford High School in Minnesota.






(I love how they spelled "EPIC" backwards on the blocks. Nice touch!)

Sunday, February 05, 2012

Note to Self

Here are a few awesome (and colorful!) production photos from Note to Self, presented by Aitkin High School in Aitkin, Minnesota.











Saturday, February 04, 2012

Drama Geeks

Here are a few terrific photos from an award winning production of Drama Geeks, presented by Great Plains Lutheran High School (Watertown, South Dakota) at the 2012 South Dakota State One-Act Play Festival. Congratulations to all the students and teachers who made it such a success! (Photos courtesy of South Dakota Public Broadcasting.)




Wednesday, February 01, 2012

Teachers on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown

I have added a brand new play to my website! This comedy features a completely flexible cast, easy to rehearse vignettes, and terrific opportunities for young actors to work as an ensemble.

TEACHERS ON THE VERGE OF A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN


Genre:
Comedy
Cast: Gender flexible cast of 10, easily expandable
Running Time: 30-35 minutes
Setting: Classroom

Synopsis: Five high school teachers find themselves at the end of their rope...and it's only the first day of school! From an English teacher with mood swings and a math teacher in the middle of a divorce, to an elderly chemistry teacher with back pain and a geography teacher with a whip, the semester gets off to a rocky start. Add to the mix a drama teacher who sleeps on his desk, and it only becomes a matter of time before one of them snaps. As the students navigate this bumpy road, they begin to realize it may have been their behavior that pushed these teachers perilously close to the edge. Will they be able to make things right before it's too late, or has this faculty completely lost its faculties?

Please visit www.bradleyhayward.com and follow the links to read a preview!