Category Archives: Broadway

New Updated Playwright and Directing Curriculum Vitae

Playwright:

Greg Hatfield Playwriting Resume

Contact:
– Email: greghatfield@greghatfield.com
– Social: @greghatfield
-NPX: https://newplayexchange.org/users/14397/greg-hatfield
Dramatist Guild Member

Summary:
Accomplished playwright, director, and actor with a proven record of delivering sophisticated and witty plays. Member of the Dramatists Guild known for creating uniquely entertaining works. Recognized by the Pittsburgh New Works Festival and the NPX for exceptional dialogue and humor.

Notable Quotes:
– “(Greg Hatfield) has a knack for writing witty dialogue!” – Pittsburgh New Works Festival

– “Brilliantly funny” “Sophisticated humor, through wit, wordplay, and charm” – NPX

– “The King of the One-Acts!” – Cincinnati Playwrights Initiative

– “Funny dialogue!” – The Black List

Plays:

**Curtain Call**

  – Production: The Drama Workshop, Cincinnati, OH, January 2023

  – Virtual Production: PlayZoomers, Boston, MA, October 2021

  – Staged Reading: The New Town Players, Richmond, VA, November 2021

– **The Ten-Minute Play (with a Nice Picture of Jimmy Carter)**

  – Production: Rebound Productions, London, England, November 2022

  – Production: The Drama Workshop’s Home Brew 4 festival, Cincinnati, OH, June 2019

  – Featured Playwright Reading: Midwest Dramatists Center Conference, Kansas City, MO, 2018

– **Mundy Tuesday Friday**

  – Radio Adaptation: Theatrical Shenanigans, London, England, February 2023 (Streamed worldwide)

  – Finalist: Shakespeare in the Burg, Middleburg, VA, 2018

– **Lily Blossoms, or Modern Subdivision Zoning in the Present Day**

  – Shortlisted: William Inge Theatre Festival, Independence, KS, 2020

  – Staged Reading: Cincinnati Playwright’s Initiative New Voices Series, Cincinnati, OH, 2020

– **The Janus Circle**

  – Virtual Reading: Philadelphia Screenwriters, 2020

  – Virtual Reading: Kentucky Playwrights Group, 2021

– **The Sequel to Citizen Kane**

  – Virtual Reading: New City Players, Ft. Lauderdale, FL, 2020

  – Staged Reading: Miami Writes, Miami University, OH, 2020

– **The Great Stalinski**

  – Finalist: Pittsburgh, PA, New Works One Act Play Festival, 2018

  – Staged Reading: Company’s New Works Play Readings series, 2018

Television:

– Alice Goodheart (Five-episode mini-series)

DIRECTING:

“Bringing a production to life on stage is exhilarating,” expresses Greg Hatfield, reflecting on his passion for directing. “The process of rehearsing and uncovering the play’s characters with the actors is a joy. Witnessing the culmination of that hard work during a live performance is an unmatched experience.”

Greg is renowned for his knack for character creation, honed through years of performing, writing, and directing as an integral member of the award-winning Cincinnati-based comedy troupe, Dr. Browndog’s Monkeytime. The troupe graced stages across Cincinnati, including prominent venues like Playhouse in the Park and Ensemble Theatre.

A trailblazer at Northern Kentucky University’s theater department, Greg became the first student to dedicate himself to directing. This journey led him to be the inaugural student to produce and direct a full-length college performance, “The Gingerbread Lady,” and to helm a production as part of the regular theater season, “Harvey.”

As a director, Greg’s hallmark is his meticulous organization and exhaustive play research, fueled by his passion for theater history. His background as a concert and special events producer equips him to handle any theatrical challenge. He’s not just a director for the actors; he’s an actor’s director, fostering excellent relationships with the cast, and his behind-the-scenes experience endears him to the crew. His mastery extends to sound and lighting techniques.

In January 2023, Greg showcased his original play, “Curtain Call,” for The Drama Workshop in Cincinnati, Ohio. Notable directing credits include Monk Ferris’ “Let’s Murder Marsha,” which premiered on October 6, 2022, with Beechmont Players in Cincinnati. The production garnered multiple awards at the 2023 ACT Convention. In June 2022, Greg helmed Christine Charlson’s “The Surprise Engagement” for The Drama Workshop’s Home Brew Festival.

From February 25 to March 5, 2022, Greg’s rendition of “You Can’t Take It with You” by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart graced the Village Players of Ft. Thomas stage, earning numerous Orchid Awards in 2022.

Further showcasing his directorial prowess, Greg presented Teri Foltz’s “Lessons” for The Drama Workshop’s Home Brew 4 festival in Cincinnati during the summer of 2019.

One of Greg’s proudest achievements, “Lily Blossoms, or Modern Subdivision Zoning in the Present Day,” both written and directed by him, featured in the Cincinnati Playwright’s Initiative’s reading series in January 2020. This play also achieved recognition by being shortlisted at the William Inge Theatre Festival in Independence, KS, in 2020.

Additional works directed by Greg Hatfield include:

“Clevenger’s Trial” by Joseph Heller

“The Wager” by Mark Medoff

“Man of La Mancha” by Dale Wasserman (Community theater production, St. Agnes Church, Ft. Wright, Kentucky)

“The Gingerbread Lady” by Neil Simon (First student production at NKU)

“The Browning Version” by Terence Rattigan

“Sorry, Wrong Number” by Lucille Fletcher

“The Sandbox” by Edward Albee

“The Bald Soprano” by Eugene Ionesco

“Harvey” by Mary Chase (First student production as part of NKU’s regular season)

“The Odd Couple” by Neil Simon

In addition to his directorial achievements, Greg Hatfield is an accomplished international playwright, with several of his plays having been produced both live and virtually in the US and UK.

Notable Productions:

“Comedy Beat Starring The Act” (Television and stage)

“Dr. Browndog’s Monkeytime” (Television and stage) – Available at YouTube.com/dickbeaks

“Cinema Beat” (Television)

“Eight Flights Up” (Television)

We’re On the Air!

And we are on the air! Tune in and listen to my play, Mundy Tuesday Friday, on this podcast! It’s free and available now at these fine podcast websites: https://rss.com/podcasts/theatrical-shenanigans/… https://open.spotify.com/show/54qD1COB9WRnH4HMrq142H…
https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/0505ca3d-8b2e-46db-b487-5a63ea96f628/theatrical-shenanigans
https://facebook.com/profile.php?id=100087550385392

Mundy Tuesday Wednesday and Curtain Call

I’m looking forward to this. I hope you’ll tune in. So many of my friends on LI can’t get to a theater where my plays have been performed, so here’s a perfect way to experience one of them from the comfort of your own home. It’s free and the plays are archived in case you make it on the debut night.

My play, Mundy Tuesday Wednesday is presented as a radio play beginning Sunday, January 15 produced by Theatrical Shenanigans. Here’s a link: https://lnkd.in/gFNtXHJF

Mundy Tuesday Friday was a comedy play I wrote when I got back into theater. I had this idea for a play about this group of people and it just wouldn’t leave me. I wasn’t actively writing at the time, so to have this one idea just stay with me seemed important. It was if the jokes poured out of me. I wrote it. It seemed good to me and then I had to figure out what to do with it. That, friends, led me to discover the “joys” of submitting plays to theater groups all over the world.
I’m still doing it four years later, still writing plays and trying to get them produced. I’ve been fortunate to have had a few plays performed outright by theater companies here in the U.S., and recently, had one of my plays performed in the UK (Theatrical Shenanigans, who is producing this play, is also based in the UK. I may have to move). I’ve also had several Zoom productions, during the shut-down, and have had many staged readings.

Following this production, I am directing my play, Curtain Call, for The Drama Workshop’s Home Brew VI, here in Cincinnati (Cheviot, actually), Ohio. We open January 20. This is a play about the theater and actors, and I have a wonderful cast. It’s also very funny. Tickets are at thedramaworkshop.org and they will sell out, so plan accordingly. #theater #playwright #director

Home

What’s Happening in 2023?

Happy New Year everyone! I have some important announcements to make before we get started. Please feel free to take notes. You may need your calendar to circle the important dates. We’ll start at the beginning and work our way down.

January 15 will be the debut of a radio adaptation of my play, Mundy Tuesday Friday. This is a very funny comedy about love in the workplace and is in the vein of the screwball comedies from the 40’s, like His Girl Friday and The Philadelphia Story. This is produced by Theatrical Shenanigans (check out their FB page, they have a whole season of plays in their schedule) and the marvelous Rachel Feeny-Williams, who is herself a remarkable playwright.

Mundy Tuesday Friday can be found on these fine podcast platforms:
music.amazon.com/podcasts/0505ca3d-8b2e-46db-b487-5a63ea96f628/theatrical-shenanigans

open.spotify.com/show/54qD1COB9WRnH4HMrq142H

rss.com/podcasts/theatrical-shenanigans

There is no charge for listening and it’s available worldwide (so all my friends in other states and countries can listen to it. It’s also archived, so if you don’t get a chance to listen on the 15th, you have a while to hear it. If you do listen to it, let me know how you liked it.

The second thing I want to tell you about is closer to my home here in Cincinnati, Ohio. I’m directing my play, Curtain Call, for The Drama Workshop’s production of Home Brew VI. We open Friday, January 20, and run that weekend. Details at https://thedramaworkshop.org/. Tickets will go fast. We usually sell out each performance, so get them now. Home Brew is an evening of ten-minute plays written by local playwrights. I’ve participated in the past two productions and I love it.

Curtain Call is my tribute to Noel Coward, Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, based on a true story from their production of Coward’s Design for Living in 1938. It’s very funny and features Karen Romero, Steve Krieger, Michael Scarpelli and Allie Webber.

So that’s it for now. Thanks to everyone who has supported my theater work these past couple of years. 2022 was a great year for me, back after the shut-down. I directed two well-received plays (You Can’t Take It With You for Village Players and Let’s Murder Marsha for Beechmont Players) and had a play, The Ten Minute Play (with a Nice Picture of Jimmy Carter), performed in London. I was also interviewed for an article in The Dramatists magazine and got paid the most money I’ve ever made in the theater for a play that the theater company decided not to produce.

My Play, Curtain Call, Will Be Produced

I’ll be directing my own play, Curtain Call, for The Drama Workshop’s Home Brew series January 20-22, in Cheviot, Ohio (Cincinnati metro).

Details are here: https://thedramaworkshop.org

Curtain Call is my tribute to Noel Coward and Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne. During rehearsals for Design for Living in 1932, Noel wasn’t used to working with the perfectionists Lunts, who changed things liberally before opening night. I wanted to give my interpretations.

Tickets On Sale Now for “Let’s Murder Marsha”!

In case you missed it, I have a show that I’ve directed opening Friday, October 7. It’s “Let’s Murder Marsha” by Monk Ferris, a comedy murder mystery, presented by Beechmont Players. Tickets are available at beechmontplayers.org. The theater is in the Anderson Center, 7850 Five Mile Rd, Cincinnati, OH 45230.

This is a very funny play performed by a wonderful cast, whom you can see below in the accompanying photo, taken by Kristy Rucker. I hope you’ll come.

The cast, from left to right, are: Bryce Willson, Mary Jo Bissmeyer, Susan Smith, Kiya Fix, Robert Tully, Cheri Russell and TJ McDonough.

New Dramatists Guild Article for Cincinnati Playwrights

I was interviewed for this article for the @dramatistsguild about Cincinnati playwriting opportunities. https://dramatistsguild.com/thedramatist/ohio-cincinnati-update?fbclid=IwAR1dUUZluhaIoe44nYuN0Dq7pR1bbYAN1TWYNPL9lzxvhrXztWYwmvC4Prg…#WritingCommnunity#theater#writerslife

Village Players Present “You Can’t Take It With You”

Little article about my Moss Hart and George Kaufman show I’m directing for Village Players in Ft. Thomas, Kentucky.

https://www.rcnky.com/articles/2022/02/10/comedy-classic-you-cant-take-it-you-comes-village-players-fort-thomas

Tickets Now On Sale for “You Can’t Take It With You”

Attention all theater goers in the Greater Cincinnati area: Tickets are now on sale for the play, “You Can’t Take It With You” by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman, presented by Village Players of Ft. Thomas (Kentucky) and directed by me. The show runs February 25-27 and March 3-5. All information regarding the show, cast, safety protocols and other information can be found at villageplayers.org.

I wanted to do this play because I have great admiration for Hart and Kaufman. They both directly influenced my life as a young man and led me down the path of theater, writing and taking comedy seriously.

Moss Hart and George Kaufman wrote eight plays together from 1930 to 1940. They were so popular on Broadway that Hart, who was born in poverty, was able to buy a mansion in Bucks County, Pennsylvania and planted full grown trees on each side of the driveway leading up to the main house. Kaufman took one look at it and said, “That’s what God would have done, if he’d had the money.”

Two of those plays are still being widely produced today: You Can’t Take It With You and The Man Who Came to Dinner. You Can’t Take It With You won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1936, was turned into a Frank Capra film in 1938 and won the Oscar for Best Picture. The film of The Man Who Came to Dinner is now something of a Christmas staple. (And the story from Merrily We Roll Along is used in the Sondheim musical.)

I first became aware of Kaufman and Hart through Harpo Marx’s autobiography, Harpo Speaks, at an early age. I devoured it, cover to cover, and discovered a world of Broadway, literary wits, writers, artists, actors and musicians that still inspire me to this day. I was entranced by the world of Alexander Woollcott (the subject of The Man Who Came To Dinner), Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley, Harold Ross and the New Yorker, Frankin P. Adams, Neysa McMein, Marc Connelly and of course, George Kaufman.

Kaufman, with his many collaborators, set me on a path to wanting to emulate him, writing plays, being witty and hanging out with people that were just like that.

It took longer to really discover Moss Hart. I found his 1959 autobiography, Act One, in a used book store in the 1970’s, read it and loved it. Hart is as star struck as anyone meeting Kaufman and has to work hard to convince him to stay with their first collaboration, Once in a Lifetime, after Kaufman tells Hart that he has done all he can on the play. Hart figures out what’s wrong with the play, returns to Kaufman with the revisions and Kaufman agrees to give it another shot. They are successful and the play is a hit. Then the book ends.

Research material for me in the early 70’s was limited. I had the library, but information on Hart was scarce, especially after he and Kaufman split up. But what a career he had. He wrote (and directed) the groundbreaking musical Lady in the Dark (with Gertrude Lawrence), wrote the 1954 version of A Star is Born, wrote the multi Academy Award winning Gentlemen’s Agreement (Hart was nominated), and directed the original productions of My Fair Lady and Camelot.

I hope you’ll come to see this show. It’s very entertaining and the cast is great. I think you’ll like it. Go to villageplayers.org for all the info you need.

Curtain Call Gets Another Performance

My play, Curtain Call, about two actors who are quitting a show because their performance isn’t up to their high standards (ok, it’s really about the Lunts) will be part of the North Street Playhouse production on Nov 5 & 6, in VA. http://northstreetplayhouse.org #theater #Broadway

The Playhouse is located in Virginia, 34 Market Street, Onancock, VA 23417. I wish I could be there.

Look at some of my earlier posts nearby to read about Curtain Call. It’s very witty. It’s really about Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne and Noel Coward.

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