Desert Road Publishing Launches 'One Acts of Note'
Los Angeles, CA, February 13, 2009 --(PR.com)-- The anthology of notable 2008 one-act plays includes works from Sharon Yablon, Carol Schlanger, Walter Dalton, David Miguel Estrada, Scott Brooks, John Lane, Bill Mesce Jr., John Ireland, Dan Guyton, George Freek, Gerry Sheridan, Olivia Arieti, Christine Emmert, Brendan Andolsek Bradley, Jonson Yuhn, and Ariel Marks.
Desert Road Publishing is proud to announce the publication of "One Acts of Note." The collection of one-act plays will be available at http://www.desertroadpublishing.com/ on February 20, 2009. "One Acts of Note" is a compelling anthology of one-act plays that showcases established and up-and-coming playwrights from the West Coast to the East Coast, from comedy to drama and everything in between. This collection of American one-acts embodies the kind of work that takes place in a topsy-turvy year that saw the markets crumble and the unprecedented election of the first African-American president.
In "The Limp," a window is opened into today's Corporate America when a worker, afraid of being put on the chopping block is ironically able to keep his job after his boss learns of his "limp," written by John Lane ("ingenious" writes Eric Marchese - Backstage West). "The Homeless Secretary," is a comedy about a woman who is on the brink of penury after accidentally typing a few too many zeroes shopping online, written by Gerry Sheridan ("Kerry & Angie" - Best Play of 2005 Award by Samuel French Critics Choice).
Sharon Yablon contributes "Look Up," which the L.A. Times called, "line for line, the best play" out of the recent Padua Players/LaDADspace production, "A Thousand Words." It tells the story of an LA real estate agent trying to talk a family into buying an Irvine home in a gated community that is suicide-prone.
The anthology also has its fair share of inspirational pieces that exemplify the indomitable American spirit. In John Ireland's poignantly personal play "Mom and Dad Meet in Heaven," Academy Award nominated screen actor, John Ireland, meets his ex-wife in the after-life. "Last Dance" is a play about a mother coming to grips with the death of her son in Iraq, written by award-winning playwright and Obie-nominee Carol Schlanger.
Playwright/actor Walter Dalton (who recently starred opposite Michelle Williams in "Wendy & Lucy" and whose TV writing credits include "Barney Miller," "Laverne & Shirley," and "Donny & Marie"), writes of advertising gone to hell in "The Selling of the Soul." After breaking up a garden shed, a wife climbs on it, induced by a vision of "The Raft of Medusa" for mankind, in Christine Emmert's "Raft Of Medusa: Post Modern." "Jettison," the story of a fuzzy rabbit standing between three starving men adrift at sea, is an examination of hunger vs. humanity written by Brendan Andolsek Bradley. In its review of "Swim Shorts," the ten-minute plays that daringly took place on a Manhattan rooftop swimming pool, NYTheatre.com raves, "...Despite the patently safe confines of the pool, (Jettison) does a good job of bringing the audience much further out to sea."
Bill Mesce Jr.'s "A Good Kid," (Winner of Best Play/Audience Favorite at the Turnip Theatre One-Act Festival) is a play about old Italian buddies who meet at the funeral of neighborhood kid, who happens to have been gay. Scott Brooks' "American Interlude," (Winner of the 2006 Nantucket One-Act Festival) is a road-not-taken romance in which two strangers at a bar meet and imagine an entire life together.
In "Georgie Gets a Facelift," a dark comedy by two-time Kennedy Center Award Winner Dan Guyton, a young man attempts suicide many times, but an accidental murder puts things in perspective. George Freek's "She is and She Isn't" is a comedy about a well-off lawyer who becomes jealous when his wife's former college flame is invited over to sell him life insurance. In "Amarillo Rose," written by David Miguel Estrada, whom ShowBusiness Weekly calls "a maverick writer-actor-director," a young man shows up at his military father's Texas trailer to present his new fiancee.
Passions flare in the Australian outback when a woman who is unsatisfied with her foreign boyfriend decides to take a new lover in Olivia Arieti's "Dawnless Days." "4 Days In Bed" is a personal play about a recovering alcoholic and an aspiring playwright's budding love, written by Jonson Yuhn and Ariel Marks.
For more information on "One Acts of Note" please contact Tim Evans at SilverCityPR@aol.com or call (323) 762-3940. To purchase the anthology visit http://www.desertroadpublishing.com.
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Desert Road Publishing is proud to announce the publication of "One Acts of Note." The collection of one-act plays will be available at http://www.desertroadpublishing.com/ on February 20, 2009. "One Acts of Note" is a compelling anthology of one-act plays that showcases established and up-and-coming playwrights from the West Coast to the East Coast, from comedy to drama and everything in between. This collection of American one-acts embodies the kind of work that takes place in a topsy-turvy year that saw the markets crumble and the unprecedented election of the first African-American president.
In "The Limp," a window is opened into today's Corporate America when a worker, afraid of being put on the chopping block is ironically able to keep his job after his boss learns of his "limp," written by John Lane ("ingenious" writes Eric Marchese - Backstage West). "The Homeless Secretary," is a comedy about a woman who is on the brink of penury after accidentally typing a few too many zeroes shopping online, written by Gerry Sheridan ("Kerry & Angie" - Best Play of 2005 Award by Samuel French Critics Choice).
Sharon Yablon contributes "Look Up," which the L.A. Times called, "line for line, the best play" out of the recent Padua Players/LaDADspace production, "A Thousand Words." It tells the story of an LA real estate agent trying to talk a family into buying an Irvine home in a gated community that is suicide-prone.
The anthology also has its fair share of inspirational pieces that exemplify the indomitable American spirit. In John Ireland's poignantly personal play "Mom and Dad Meet in Heaven," Academy Award nominated screen actor, John Ireland, meets his ex-wife in the after-life. "Last Dance" is a play about a mother coming to grips with the death of her son in Iraq, written by award-winning playwright and Obie-nominee Carol Schlanger.
Playwright/actor Walter Dalton (who recently starred opposite Michelle Williams in "Wendy & Lucy" and whose TV writing credits include "Barney Miller," "Laverne & Shirley," and "Donny & Marie"), writes of advertising gone to hell in "The Selling of the Soul." After breaking up a garden shed, a wife climbs on it, induced by a vision of "The Raft of Medusa" for mankind, in Christine Emmert's "Raft Of Medusa: Post Modern." "Jettison," the story of a fuzzy rabbit standing between three starving men adrift at sea, is an examination of hunger vs. humanity written by Brendan Andolsek Bradley. In its review of "Swim Shorts," the ten-minute plays that daringly took place on a Manhattan rooftop swimming pool, NYTheatre.com raves, "...Despite the patently safe confines of the pool, (Jettison) does a good job of bringing the audience much further out to sea."
Bill Mesce Jr.'s "A Good Kid," (Winner of Best Play/Audience Favorite at the Turnip Theatre One-Act Festival) is a play about old Italian buddies who meet at the funeral of neighborhood kid, who happens to have been gay. Scott Brooks' "American Interlude," (Winner of the 2006 Nantucket One-Act Festival) is a road-not-taken romance in which two strangers at a bar meet and imagine an entire life together.
In "Georgie Gets a Facelift," a dark comedy by two-time Kennedy Center Award Winner Dan Guyton, a young man attempts suicide many times, but an accidental murder puts things in perspective. George Freek's "She is and She Isn't" is a comedy about a well-off lawyer who becomes jealous when his wife's former college flame is invited over to sell him life insurance. In "Amarillo Rose," written by David Miguel Estrada, whom ShowBusiness Weekly calls "a maverick writer-actor-director," a young man shows up at his military father's Texas trailer to present his new fiancee.
Passions flare in the Australian outback when a woman who is unsatisfied with her foreign boyfriend decides to take a new lover in Olivia Arieti's "Dawnless Days." "4 Days In Bed" is a personal play about a recovering alcoholic and an aspiring playwright's budding love, written by Jonson Yuhn and Ariel Marks.
For more information on "One Acts of Note" please contact Tim Evans at SilverCityPR@aol.com or call (323) 762-3940. To purchase the anthology visit http://www.desertroadpublishing.com.
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Contact
Silver City Public Relations
Tim Evans
323-762-3940
Contact
Tim Evans
323-762-3940
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