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'''Theatre Genesis''' was an [[off-off-Broadway]] theater founded in 1964 by Ralph Cook. Located in the historic [[St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery]] in [[New York City]], it produced the work of new American playwrights, including [[Lanford Wilson]], [[Murray Mednick]], [[Leonard Melfi]], Walter Hadler and most notably [[Sam Shepard]]. It is regarded as one of four theaters responsible for the explosion of New York's [[off-off-Broadway]] movement, along with [[Joe Cino]]'s Caffe Cino, [[Judson Poets Theatre]] and [[La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club]].


'''Theatre Genesis''' was an [[Off-Off-Broadway|off-off-Broadway]] theater founded in 1964 by Ralph Cook. Located in the historic [[St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery]] in the [[East Village, Manhattan|East Village of Manhattan]], it produced the work of new American [[Playwright|playwrights]], including [[Lanford Wilson]], [[Tony Barsha]], [[Murray Mednick]], [[Leonard Melfi]], [[Walter Hadler]], and [[Sam Shepard]]. Theatre Genesis is often credited as one of the original off-off-Broadway theaters, along with [[Joe Cino]]'s [[Caffe Cino]], [[Ellen Stewart]]'s [[La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club]], and [[Judson Poets Theatre]].
Known for its anarchistic, heterosexual and machismo energy, Theatre Genesis produced gritty and political plays that often attracted the post-[[Beat Generation]] street poets of the 1960s. Between the volatile and socially charged environment of New York City's East Village, and the rejection of the city's [[off-Broadway]] commercial producing model, writers and actors flocked to Theatre Genesis to create an extremely fertile and experimental period in American playwriting.


The theatre was known for its [[Anarchism|anarchistic]], [[Heterosexuality|heterosexual]], [[machismo]] energy, and often produced political plays. Like the other off-off-Broadway theatres, Theatre Genesis used a [[non-commercial]] model of production.
==A Theatre's Genesis==


==Founding the theatre==
:' ''Theatre Genesis is a place apart, going its own way with cool Western Machismo, implacable concentration, and no interest in any other theater.'' '
:--Michael Smith, critic for the Village Voice
[[File:St Mark's Church - New York City.jpg|thumb|St Mark's Church - New York City]]
[[File:St Mark's Church - New York City.jpg|thumb|St Mark's Church - New York City]]


===Rector Michael Allen marries religion with art===
===Michael Allen at St. Mark's===


Theatre Genesis finding a home in a church may seem an odd partnership, if it weren't for a forward-thinking young rector named Michael Allen. The progressive Episcopalian took the helm of the church in 1963, and quickly opened his parish to all of the neighborhood's constituents, mounting a large-scale outreach effort to include all demographics and all ethnicities from the surrounding streets. At that time the east village was a melange of artists, young counterculturists, emigrates from more expensive Manhattan neighborhoods as well as the homeless. Allen's mission was to fund the arts and education initiatives in order to make its programming a microcosm of the neighborhood outside the church. Unlike its counterpart, [[Judson Church]] in the west village, [[St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery]] had less initial resistance from its older wealthier and therefore more conservative members, and Allen's arts programming quickly amplified the restless voice of a neighborhood. What resulted was an artistic questioning of New York's and the country's status quo.
A young, progressive [[Episcopal Church (United States)|Episcopalian]] [[Rector (ecclesiastical)|rector]] named Michael Allen came to St. Mark's in 1963 and opened the [[parish]] to everyone from the neighborhood. He did [[outreach]] to the many [[demographics]] and [[ethnicities]] in the East Village, which included artists, [[Counterculture|counterculturists]], [[immigrants]], and [[homeless people]], among others. Allen aimed to fund arts and education initiatives in order to reflect the character of the neighborhood. Unlike [[Judson Church]], in the [[West Village]], the cultural programming at St. Mark's received minimal resistance from the church's older, wealthier, more conservative members.


Plays, poetry readings, underground films and political gatherings all started occurring on church premises with the help and blessing of Rector Allen, but it soon became clear an arts curate would need to be hired in order to spearhead Allen's vision of arts integration.
[[Play (theatre)|Plays]], [[Poetry reading|poetry readings]], [[Underground film|underground films]], and political gatherings began happening regularly at the church. Allen then decided an additional staff member was necessary to coordinate this programming, and hired Ralph Cook.


===Ralph Cook: Prophet/Curator===
===Ralph Cook as curator===
After a short-lived first arts curate named Tom Pike, Allen serendipitously met Ralph Cook, an actor who had stumbled into a Sunday service to listen to Allen's sermon. Cook was so moved by the Rector's presence that he returned week after week, and the two men struck up a friendship. Being well-connected socially in the downtown arts scene, Cook's many friends - including [[Sam Shepard]] - were already poised looking for a theater to showcase their emerging talent and insatiable creativity. Steeped in the jazz and poetry scene below 14th street, Cook rubbed shoulders with the more language-based playwrights who wrote in the unpredictable rhythms of New York City street life. In addition to Shepard, writers like [[Murray Mednick]], [[Leonard Melfi]] and Tom Sankey were frustrated young artists, writing from a place of isolation and alienation from the political and social maelstrom around them. Their work was angst-driven and testosterone-fueled, which fit less in [[Caffe Cino]]'s and [[La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club]]'s more loose structure and perceived camp aesthetic. In an intimate 70-seat blackbox with sixteen lights and nine dimmers, spare sets, minimal props and a focus on hard-driving language and nihilistic themes, Theatre Genesis became a sharp-edged testing ground for new work.
After temporarily employing the curator Tom Pike, Allen met Ralph Cook, an [[actor]], who came to one of Allen's [[Church service|Sunday services]]. Cook began coming to the church regularly, and Allen and Cook became friends. Allen hired Cook for the role of curator, as Cook was well-connected in the downtown arts scene and had many friends who were looking for a space to showcase their creative work. His friends included Sam Shepard, [[Murray Mednick]], [[Leonard Melfi]], and Tom Sankey, among others. Their writing reflected the political and social upheaval that they were witnessing, and was often full of [[angst]] and [[testosterone]]. Their work didn't fit comfortably into the perceived [[Camp (style)|camp]] aesthetic and looser structure at Caffe Cino and La MaMa. The church housed a 70-seat [[black box theater]] with sixteen lights, nine dimmers, spare sets, and minimal props. Much of the work being produced at the theatre had [[Nihilism|nihilistic]] themes. Cook said of Theatre Genesis:


:'''Here, now, in lower Manhattan, the phenomenon is taking place: the beginning, the Genesis, of a cultural revolution. It is taking place out of utter necessity. Out of the necessity to survive....Personally I have little hope for the survival of our civilization. But whatever hope we have lies with our artists. For they alone have the ability (if we do not continue to corrupt them) to withstand the onslaught of the mass media and the multitude of false gods. They alone have the ability to show us ourselves.'' '
:Here, now, in lower Manhattan, the phenomenon is taking place: the beginning, the Genesis, of a cultural revolution. It is taking place out of utter necessity. Out of the necessity to survive....Personally I have little hope for the survival of our civilization. But whatever hope we have lies with our artists. For they alone have the ability (if we do not continue to corrupt them) to withstand the onslaught of the mass media and the multitude of false gods. They alone have the ability to show us ourselves.<ref>Orzel and Smith, ''Eight Plays from Off-Off-Broadway.'' New York: [[Bobbs-Merrill Company]], 1966.</ref>
:--Ralph Cook<ref>Orzel and Smith, ''Eight Plays from Off-Off-Broadway'' New York: Bobbs-Merrill Company Inc, 1966</ref>.


==The Early Days==
==Early history of the theatre==
===Sam Shepard: Western Rebel===
As the newly appointed 'lay minister of the arts', Ralph Cook soon began the six-year-long routine of reading scripts. He read incessantly, and soon instigated a more diligent and thorough selection process than any other off-off-Broadway theater of the time. He created a two-pronged production track: a self-selected season of up to six new plays, and then a Monday night workshop series where writers could hear their work aloud for the first time. Cook believed it was his job to give a large degree of exposure and continuity to writers early in their career, in order to develop the artist instead of just the play. Despite his nurturing of individual artists and their potential, Cook never commissioned work or guaranteed a future production, instead basing his programming decisions purely on his opinion of each play. While this often led 'Genesis playwrights' to be produced elsewhere, it developed a great deal of trust in Cook to be honest and objective in his programming, which created a closeness and camaraderie with the playwrights who frequented there.


===[[Sam Shepard]]===
[[Image:sjff 04 img1608.jpg|thumb|Sam Shepard at the age of 20, when he was first produced at Theatre Genesis]]
As the theatre's newly-hired "[[Laity|lay minister]] of the arts", Cook began his routine of reading scripts. He quickly created a diligent and thorough selection process with a two-pronged production track: there was a season of six or fewer new plays, and a Monday night workshop series where playwrights could have their work read. Cook believed in giving new playwrights exposure and continuity, in order to develop the artist in addition to the individual play. Cook never commissioned work or guaranteed that a work would be produced in the future. While this often led Genesis playwrights to produce their work elsewhere, it also developed their trust in Cook to be honest and objective.
After an initial off-key production of the didactic ''Study in Color'' by Michael Boyd, Cook produced a double-bill of one acts by his friend and recent co-worker [[Sam Shepard]]. ''Cowboys'' and ''The Rock Garden'' were homages to the writing of [[Samuel Beckett]], and reflected Shepard's aimless wanderings both physical and psychological with then comrade Charles Mingus III (son of the jazz legend [[Charles Mingus]]). The plays harnessed a youthful energy of playful language, but were also a representation of a raw voice—a voice from the streets. Cook's decision to supporting Shepard was an instinct that would launch the career of the most celebrated child of off-off-Broadway, while setting a tone for Theatre Genesis works to come.


[[Image:Sam Shepard.jpg|thumb|Sam Shepard at the age of 20, when he was first produced at Theatre Genesis]]
Shepard describes the energy behind mounting those first productions: 'We were in rehearsal for [two plays] within that week," Shepard recalls. "We had no money. I can remember getting props off the street. We'd take Yuban coffee cans, punch a hole in them, and use them for lights. We did it all from scratch, which was pretty incredible.'<ref>Soloski, Alexis. “True East: Sam Shepard Returns to New York.” Village Voice. Village Voice, 24 June. 2008. Web. 15 Dec. 2010.</ref>
After an early off-key production of Michael Boyd's ''Study in Color'', Cook produced a double-bill of [[One-act play|one-acts]] by Sam Shepard. ''Cowboys'' and ''The Rock Garden'' were both homages to [[Samuel Beckett]], and reflected Shepard's wanderings with then-comrade Charles Mingus III (son of [[Charles Mingus]]). The one-acts harnessed his youthful energy, using playful language, but also represented a raw, innovative voice from the streets. Shepard describes those first productions: <blockquote>We were in rehearsal for [two plays] within that week... We had no money. I can remember getting props off the street. We'd take Yuban coffee cans, punch a hole in them, and use them for lights. We did it all from scratch, which was pretty incredible.<ref>Soloski, Alexis. “True East: Sam Shepard Returns to New York.” ''[[The Village Voice]]''. Retrieved December 15, 2010.</ref></blockquote>''Cowboys'' and ''The Rock Garden'' were largely dismissed by critics, who could not see past the similarities to Beckett. However, Michael Smith of ''[[The Village Voice]]'' wrote in 1964:


:I know it sounds pretentious and unprepossessing: 'Theatre Genesis... dedicated to the new playwright'... But they have actually found a new playwright, [and] he has written a pair of provocative and genuinely original plays... Shepard is feeling his way, working with an intuitive approach to language and dramatic structure and moving into an area between ritual and naturalism, where character transcends psychology, fantasy breaks down literalism, and the patterns of ordinariness have their own lives. His is a gestalt theater which evokes the existence behind behavior.
''Cowboys'' and ''The Rock Garden'' were largely dismissed by critics, who could not see past the similarity to Beckett's style, until Michael Smith of [[The Village Voice]] prophesied,


Smith's review bolstered attendance, allowing the public to notice Shepard and introducing other new playwrights to the theatre.
:'''I know it sounds pretentious and unprepossessing: 'Theatre Genesis... dedicated to the new playwright' But they have actually found a new playwright, [and] he has written a pair of provocative and genuinely original plays... Shepard is feeling his way, working with an intuitive approach to language and dramatic structure and moving into an area between ritual and naturalism, where character transcends psychology, fantasy breaks down literalism, and the patterns of ordinariness have their own lives. His is a gestalt theater which evokes the existence behind behavior'' (1964).'


===Off-off-Broadway, off-Broadway, and Broadway===
This review bolstered the theatre's attendance in just enough time for the public to take real notice of Shepard and for other emerging playwrights to know the look and feel of a Genesis production.
Although Shepard's work was produced in other off-off-Broadway theaters, he considered Theatre Genesis his true beginning. In 1965, his one-act ''Chicago'' was produced alongside [[Lawrence Ferlinghetti]]'s ''The Customs Inspector in Baggy Pants''. The production was transferred to another theatre due to its success, which caused problems for shows like ''Chicago'' for multiple reasons. First, Theatre Genesis plays were often written in response to the increasingly [[Consumerism|consumerist]] model of [[off-Broadway]] theatre. They were written specifically for the gritty, intimate environment of Theatre Genesis. [[Uptown Manhattan|Uptown]], the plays lost their context and were less successful. [[Sally Banes]] has argued that, "For off-off-Broadway, graduating to off-Broadway - leaving the alternative home and the alternative community - was a fate to be avoided, for it altered the relations of production, turning the artists into alienated labor."<ref>Banes, Sally. "Greenwich Village 1963: Avant-Garde Performance and the Effervescent Body". Durham, NC: [[Duke University Press]], 1993.</ref> Ralph Cook is quoted as saying, "We couldn't care less about [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]]. We are aware that it exists somewhere uptown, no more."<ref>Davis, Douglas M. "The Expanding Arts: Success for Off-Off-Broadway". ''National Observer'', April 10, 1967.</ref>


There were also more practical concerns about transferring shows uptown. Due to union restrictions in off-Broadway theatres, a transfer meant that most of the non-union cast had to be replaced. Shepard and his actors were frustrated when ''Chicago'' was transferred, as many of his actors had helped to create their roles. Off-off-Broadway's tensions with [[Actors' Equity Association]] continued until the showcase code was created. This code allows union actors to perform in experimental, not-for-profit productions in exchange for being compensated for travel expenses to rehearsals.
===Writing as an Act of Rebellion===
Shepard's career was all but launched. Although he would receive productions in other off-off-Broadway theaters, he considered Theatre Genesis his true artistic beginning. In 1965 his one-act ''Chicago'' was produced alongside ''The Customs Inspector in Baggy Pants'' by Lawrence Ferlingetti and due to its success was transferred to a larger venue. This proved to be a misstep for shows such as ''Chicago'', for numerous reasons. First and foremost, Theatre Genesis plays were often written or conceived in violent response to the increasingly consumerist/commercial off-Broadway machine. In other words, 'selling out' was sacrilege. The plays were written for the gritty intimacy of Theatre Genesis, and for the motley crew of the lower east side. Transplants uptown presented so foreign an environment that many productions floundered. As [[Sally Banes]] has argued, 'For off-off-Broadway, graduating to off-Broadway—leaving the alternative home and the alternative community—was a fate to be avoided, for it altered the relations of production, turning the artists into alienated labor' <ref>Banes, Sally. "Greenwich Village 1963: Avant-Garde Performance and the Effervescent Body". Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1993.</ref>. Ralph Cook is even quoted as saying, 'We couldn't care less about Broadway. We are aware that it exists somewhere uptown, no more.' <ref>Davis, Douglas M. "The Expanding Arts: Success for Off-Off-Broadway". National Observer, April 10, 1967</ref>


[[Jack Kroll]] said of the theatre:
Aside from the ego or alienation of transferring a show out of its beloved community, there were practical concerns. Due to union restrictions in off-Broadway houses, every transfer meant that most of the 'unprofessional' cast had to be replaced. With ''Chicago,'' Shepard and his actors were frustrated to no end, as many of them had helped create the roles. The off-off-Broadway community's tensions with [[Actors' Equity Association]] would continue to mount over the years, until the 'showcase code' was created as a means to allow union members to participate in more experimental non-profit-seeking work in exchange for travel compensation to and from rehearsals. However, some in the community regard the compromise as 'too-little-too-late', and they consider Equity's crackdown in the late 1960s as the eventual nail in the coffin of the off-off-Broadway movement.


:Theatre Genesis is a mix of counterculture ingredients; a coolness that can explode like liquid oxygen, a dropout hipsterism, a polymorphous perversity of language and feeling, a Zap Comix mocking of straight heads.<ref>Jack Kroll in ''[[Newsweek]].''</ref>
==Finding the Playwright's Voice==


===[[Leonard Melfi|Melfi]], [[H.M. Koutoukas|Koutoukas]], and [[Murray Mednick|Mednick]]===
:' ''Theatre Genesis is a mix of counterculture ingredients; a coolness that can explode like liquid oxygen, a dropout hipsterism, a polymorphous perversity of language and feeling, a Zap Comix mocking of straight heads.'' '
:Jack Kroll --Newsweek

===Melfi, Koutoukas & Mednick===
[[Image:Wiki008Playwrights.JPG|thumb|Lanford Wilson, Jean-Claude van Itallie, H.M. Koutoukas, Rosalyn Drexler, Irene Fornes, Leonard Melfi, Tom Eyen, Paul Foster --many of whom were produced at Theatre Genesis. 1966]]
[[Image:Wiki008Playwrights.JPG|thumb|Lanford Wilson, Jean-Claude van Itallie, H.M. Koutoukas, Rosalyn Drexler, Irene Fornes, Leonard Melfi, Tom Eyen, Paul Foster --many of whom were produced at Theatre Genesis. 1966]]
Fueled by the successful productions of Shepard, Ralph Cook quickly began programming more new and experimental young talent. Cook's metabolism was running high between 1964 and 1966, when he produced debut productions of numerous playwrights, including two one-acts from a then-unknown [[Charles L. Mee]]. One production worth noting due to its sheer audacity, is a version of ''Medea'' by [[H.M. Koutoukas]]. Its notoriety lies not in the fantastical setting (a laundromat), nor in how Medea kills her offspring (in the washing machine) but because Koutoukas was pursuing simultaneous productions at both Theatre Genesis and [[Caffe Cino]], unbeknownst to the other. The Cino production had Medea played by a man in drag, and when Koutoukas submitted the script to Genesis—partly as a subversive joke—the role was played by a woman. Although the Genesis production was a respectable one, Cook was outraged at the prank. It is also worth noting that the critical and artistic community far favored the campy Cino version. Playwright Paul Foster describes the effect the play's climax: 'Medea was there for you to reach out and touch, forming the unspeakable crime of infanticide in her mind. Then she threw her baby into a laundromat and washed it to death with Oxydol. She slammed the lid down and set the dial on HEAVY LOAD. How can you forget things like that?"<ref name="bottoms">Bottoms, Stephen J. ''Playing Underground: A Critical History of the 1960s Off-Off-Broadway Movement''. 2004. Ann Arbor, MI: The University of Michigan Press, 2007</ref> Whether the dual production was a byproduct of overactive zeal or intentional subversion, the litmus test of this particular play and its success with [[Joe Cino]] further solidified the divide between a free-wheeling camp of the west village and the 'good-old-boy' persona of Theatre Genesis.
Between 1964 and 1966, Cook produced debut productions of many playwrights, including one-acts from a then-unknown [[Charles L. Mee]]. Another early production was a version of ''[[Medea (play)|Medea]]'' by [[H.M. Koutoukas]]. The production was set in a [[laundromat]], where Medea kills her offspring in the [[washing machine]]. Koutoukas was simultaneously having his work produced at Theatre Genesis and Caffe Cino, not having told either theatre about the other theatre's production. The Caffe Cino production had Medea played by a man (Charles Stanley) in drag. When Koutoukas submitted the script to Genesis, the role was played by a woman (Linda Eskenas), which he intended as a [[prank]]. Although the production was successful, Cook was angry at Koutoukas. Theatre Genesis' production of Koutoukas' ''Medea'' opened on October 31, 1965, the final weekend of the Caffe Cino run. Many favored the [[Camp (style)|campy]] Cino production. [[Paul Foster (playwright)|Paul Foster]] describes the play's climax: <blockquote>Medea was there for you to reach out and touch, forming the unspeakable crime of infanticide in her mind. Then she threw her baby into a laundromat and washed it to death with [[Oxydol]]. She slammed the lid down and set the dial on HEAVY LOAD. How can you forget things like that?<ref name="bottoms">Bottoms, Stephen J. ''Playing Underground: A Critical History of the 1960s Off-Off-Broadway Movement''. 2004. Ann Arbor: [[University of Michigan Press]], 2007.</ref></blockquote>A third production, with the Caffe Cino cast, ran at La MaMa on October 13, 1965. The three productions of Koutoukas' ''Medea'', at Caffe Cino, La MaMa, and Theatre Genesis, furthered the divide between the campiness of the first two theaters and the more masculine persona of Theatre Genesis. [[File:Salome.genesis.jpg|left|thumb|Linda Eskenas and Anthony Sciabona in "Medea" by Harry M. Koutoukas, Theatre Genesis. Photo by James D. Gossage.]]


[[Leonard Melfi]] was another playwright hot on the heels of Shepard, and one who would become Theatre Genesis' most-produced writer. In 1965 alone, Melfi had five of his one act plays produced by Cook, but it was his short play ''Birdbath'' for which he received the most success. Written specifically for Cook, who would later direct, ''Birdbath'' (previously titled ''Coffeecake and Caviar'') was a well-crafted piece of stage realism. The plot centers around the protagonist Frankie, who has a tumultuous one night rendezvous with a waitress named Velma. The two drink and talk into the night, getting deeper and deeper into one another's hidden past, until Velma reveals through a fit of hysterics that she has murdered her mother earlier that morning. Due to the play's intense subject matter and heightened emotions demanded of its actors, ''Birdbath'' remained a staple of the off-off-Broadway circuit, receiving productions at [[La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club]], later being published by [[Ellen Stewart]] in her volume ''Six From La Mama''.
Leonard Melfi would become Theatre Genesis' most-produced playwright. In 1965, Melfi had five of his one-acts produced by Cook. He received the most success for his short play ''Birdbath''. The play was written specifically for Cook, who would later direct the production, and was originally titled ''Coffeecake and Caviar''. ''Birdbath''<nowiki/>'s plot centers around Frankie, who has a [[one-night stand]] with a waitress named Velma. They drink and talk into the night, going further into their hidden pasts, until Velma reveals that she murdered her mother earlier that morning. ''Birdbath'' remained a staple of off-off-Broadway, receiving a production at La MaMa and later being published by [[Ellen Stewart]] in ''Six From La Mama''.


[[File:14Chaikin.jpg|thumb|Joe Chaikin paints Joyce Aaron in San Shepard's "Fourteen Hundred Thousand" at Theatre Genesis cir. 1967]]
[[File:Joseph Chaikin and Joyce Aaron at Theatre Genesis.jpg|thumb|Joe Chaikin paints Joyce Aaron in San Shepard's "Fourteen Hundred Thousand" at Theatre Genesis cir. 1967]]
Perhaps the most experimental and enigmatic of the Theatre Genesis playwrights was [[Murray Mednick]]. Mednick, who would later co-run Theatre Genesis after Cook's departure, made full use of the theatre's development process—often workshopping his scripts repeatedly with Genesis actors before finalizing the text. His plays ''The Hunter'', ''Willie the Germ'', and most notably ''The Hawk'' were careening, grungy and ritualistic interpretations of life on the streets. ''The Hawk'' is particularly interesting formally, because Mednick developed the script through improvisation with a group of actors over the course of two months. An exploration of drug addiction, ''The Hawk'' employed both the ritual elements and the poetic language emblematic of Theatre Genesis. The freeness of form is something that would appear with greater frequency throughout the off-off-Broadway and the avant garde (such as in [[The Living Theater]] and [[Joseph Chaikin]]'s [[The Open Theater]]) and was a notable side-step from the historically script-based programming of the Genesis. Michael Smith from [[The Village Voice]] championed, '[''The Hawk''] is convincingly detailed, yet mysterious...sharply contemporary, the form strange but not obstructive; it is performed with exceptional immediacy and authority; its ultimate intent remains veiled or vague, but the other levels are so rich it doesn't matter.' Smith goes on to opine that 'in moving beyond the documentary realism of the world of heroine addiction, ''The Hawk'' and Theatre Genesis had gone a step beyond gritty poetic realism, and for that reason, it was perhaps the most daring venture yet attempted by Genesis and perhaps its single most important achievement.<ref name="crespy">Crespy, David A. ''Off-Off-Broadway Explosion: How Provocative Playwrights of the 1960s Ignited a New American Theater''. New York: Back Stage Books, 2003</ref>'
Perhaps the most experimental and enigmatic of the Theatre Genesis playwrights was [[Murray Mednick]]. Mednick, who later co-ran Theatre Genesis after Cook's departure, often workshopped his scripts repeatedly with Genesis actors before finalizing the text. His plays ''The Hunter'', ''Willie the Germ'', and ''The Hawk'' were ritualistic interpretations of life on the streets. For ''The Hawk'', Mednick developed the script through [[improvisation]] with a group of actors over two months. An exploration of [[Drug-addiction|drug addiction]], ''The Hawk'' employed the ritual elements and poetic language emblematic of Theatre Genesis. The free-form style of the play began to appear with greater frequency at theaters like [[The Living Theater]] and [[Joseph Chaikin]]'s [[The Open Theater]], and was a departure from the scripted plays previously produced at Theatre Genesis. Smith, of ''[[The Village Voice]]'', wrote: <blockquote>''The Hawk'' is convincingly detailed, yet mysterious... sharply contemporary, the form strange but not obstructive; it is performed with exceptional immediacy and authority; its ultimate intent remains veiled or vague, but the other levels are so rich it doesn't matter.... in moving beyond the documentary realism of the world of heroin addiction, ''The Hawk'' and Theatre Genesis had gone a step beyond gritty poetic realism, and for that reason, it was perhaps the most daring venture yet attempted by Genesis and perhaps its single most important achievement.<ref name="crespy">Crespy, David A. ''Off-Off-Broadway Explosion: How Provocative Playwrights of the 1960s Ignited a New American Theater''. New York: Back Stage Books, 2003.</ref></blockquote>Mednick describes his use of poetic language in the play:


:There was a kind of presentational quality to the language which I think we were very influenced by. We had a similar attitude toward language, which has to do with a feeling about the spoken word as an almost shamanistic act, incantatory, ritualistic, as opposed to the theatrical dialogue tradition... We had a very high estimation of the idea of the word itself coming through the medium of the actor.<ref name="bottoms" />
Mednick describes his blending of poetic language into a new theatrical form:


==Masculinity and heterosexism of Theatre Genesis==
:'''There was a kind of presentational quality to the language which I think we were very influenced by. We had a similar attitude toward language, which has to do with a feeling about the spoken word as an almost shamanistic act, incantatory, ritualistic, as opposed to the theatrical [dialogue] tradition... We had a very high estimation of the idea of the word itself coming through the medium of the actor'' <ref name="bottoms" />.'

==Masculinity and Heterosexism of the Genesis==
[[File:Tango Palace.jpg|thumb|Ben Masters and Bill Moor in María Irene Fornés' “Tango Palace” at Theatre Genesis. 1973.]]
[[File:Tango Palace.jpg|thumb|Ben Masters and Bill Moor in María Irene Fornés' “Tango Palace” at Theatre Genesis. 1973.]]
There was no denying the 'boy's club' atmosphere of Theatre Genesis. The work was fueled by testosterone and drugs, and the close-knit 'membership quality' of artists created a perceived machismo around the theatre's persona. Tony Barsha, a playwright who admits that the predominantly heterosexual character of Theatre Genesis made it the only off-off venue he would have felt comfortable working at, is quoted as saying the theatre consisted of 'a bunch of guys, and their babes, and their drugs' <ref name="bottoms" />.
Most of the work produced at Theatre Genesis incorporated testosterone and drugs, and the close-knit community of artists created a perceived machismo persona for the theater. Tony Barsha, a playwright who has said that the heterosexual environment of Theatre Genesis made it the only off-off-Broadway theatre where he felt comfortable, is quoted saying that the theatre consisted of "a bunch of guys, and their babes, and their drugs".<ref name="bottoms" />


However, many women did work at the Genesis in its later years, most notably [[María Irene Fornés]]. Her analysis of the theatre's machismo is as such:
However, many women did work at the Genesis in later years, including [[María Irene Fornés]]. She said of the theatre:


:' ''[Theatre Genesis] was not macho in the usual way, but something very kind of defeated... Not 'macho macho', but 'macho drug', which is different. These were straight men but from the street drug world. Macho drug has this kind of undercurrent of anger, disappointment, possible violence.'' ' <ref name="bottoms" />.
:[Theatre Genesis] was not macho in the usual way, but something very kind of defeated... Not 'macho macho', but 'macho drug', which is different. These were straight men but from the street drug world. Macho drug has this kind of undercurrent of anger, disappointment, possible violence.<ref name="bottoms" />
[[File:Salome.genesis.jpg|left|thumb|Linda Eskenas and Anthony Sciabona in Oscar Wilde’s “Salome,” Theatre Genesis. Photo by James D. Gossage.]]


By 1967, the delineation between the homosexuality of the [[Caffe Cino]] and its west village counterparts, compared to the straight macho Theatre Genesis, began to dissolve. More work was directed towards social and political issues in the world at large, namely America's involvement in [[Vietnam]] as well as civil and gay rights issues. One particular Genesis production that interwove social and political commentary was Grant Duay's ''Fruit Salad'' (1967). Duay's play juxtaposed film footage containing a woman making fruit salad with depicted scenes of soldiers in warfare. Each soldier had a name such as 'Banana,' 'Melon,' & 'Cherry' and the seriousness of their situation was meant to play against the triviality of the dish. What is most notable in this production, vis a vis the changing sexual politics of the time, is the character 'Cherry' very clearly being homosexual. Throughout the course of the play, Banana throws homophobic epithets at Cherry, only to succumb to his own gay urges in a climactic fit of passion between the two men.
By 1967, the divide between the homosexual environment of Caffe Cino and the heterosexual Theatre Genesis began to dissolve. More work was focused on social and political issues, particularly America's involvement in [[Vietnam]] and [[Civil rights|civil]] and [[LGBT rights in the United States|gay rights]]. One Genesis production involving social and political commentary was Grant Duay's ''Fruit Salad'' (1967). The play juxtaposed film footage of a woman making fruit salad with scenes of soldiers engaged in war. Each soldier had a name like Banana, Melon, or Cherry, and the seriousness of their situation was intended to be juxtaposed against the trivial nature of the fruit salad. The character Cherry is clearly intended to be a homosexual. Throughout the play, Banana makes [[Homophobia|homophobic]] comments to Cherry, then eventually reveals to his own homosexuality in a sexual interaction between the two men.


Although the play includes homosexual themes—a departure for the material of Theatre Genesis—many critics and historians have noted that the overall aesthetic and tone of the piece was consistent with the Genesis precedent. Ironically, Tony Barsha directed the non-camp production, and Michael Smith from [[The Village Voice]] praised it as being 'vivid, simple and arresting... A bitter, painful, almost despairing vision presented with lightness, fluidity, conciseness and cunning' <ref name="bottoms" />.
Although the play includes homosexual themes, a departure for Theatre Genesis, many critics have noted that the overall aesthetic of the piece was consistent with the earlier work produced at the theater. Barsha directed the production, and Smith of ''The Village Voice'' wrote that it was "vivid, simple and arresting... A bitter, painful, almost despairing vision presented with lightness, fluidity, conciseness and cunning".<ref name="bottoms" />


==End of the Fervent Years==
==Later history of the theatre==
Fueled by the success of the mid-to-late-sixties, Theatre Genesis soon found itself on the slippery slope to mainstream. Many off-off-Broadway theaters were being more closely scrutinized both by industry insiders looking to turn a profit, as well as by outside funding organizations; In short... by the system it was trying to subvert. In 1966 St. Mark's accepted a $185,000 federal grant brokered by The New School to support the church's art and educational outreach programs, which meant that each Theatre Genesis production could now have a budget of $200. Artists were all of a sudden awarded fees; a first for off-off-Broadway. As much as this benefited all the artists involved, the grant proved to be a 'canary in the cole mine' of Theatre Genesis' troubled relation to outside funding. Later that year Cook and Rector Allen turned down a large Ford Foundation grant on matters of principal, yet later severed the New School funding deal citing 'excessive entanglement with the government' <ref name="bottoms" />. Cook now had no other choice but to solicit funds from the Ford Foundation, making the organization reliant solely on a foundation. When that cash flow was reduced in 1969, Theatre Genesis had no other choice but to cut their season from six shows down to three.
Theatre Genesis eventually moved closer to the mainstream. Many off-off-Broadway theaters began being scrutinized by those looking to make a profit and by external funding organizations. In 1966, St. Mark's accepted a $185,000 [[Federal grants in the United States|federal grant]] brokered by [[The New School]] to support the church's art and educational outreach programs, giving each production a budget of $200. Artists were then paid for the work, which was new for off-off-Broadway. The grant eventually led to a troubled relation between Theatre Genesis and external funding. Later in 1966, Cook and Allen refused a large [[Ford Foundation]], and later stopped accepting the New School funding deal due to "excessive entanglement with the government".<ref name="bottoms" /> Cook then had to solicit funding from the Ford Foundation, and the theatre eventually became reliant on this external funding. When that funding was reduced in 1969, the theatre had to cut the season from six shows to three.


Ralph Cook withdrew from the theater in 1969, leaving Genesis to be co-run by [[Murray Mednick]] and Walter Hadler. The men kept the company running as a cooperative for a few more years, but Cook's exit left the theatre changed forever. The Village was morphing around them as well... Jazz was being replaced by psychedelic rock, and the long-haired counterculture of 1969 was bringing a less angst-driven energy'<ref name="crespy" />. Activism downtown was still in full force, but with the death of [[Joe Cino]] in 1970 the rare breed of off-off-Broadway experimental theater was moving out of the coffeehouses and into other venues.
Cook left the theater in 1969, leaving it to be co-run by [[Murray Mednick]] and Walter Hadler. They operated it as a cooperative for a few more years. David Crespy wrote, "The [East] Village was morphing around them as well... Jazz was being replaced by psychedelic rock, and the long-haired counterculture of 1969 was bringing a less angst-driven energy".<ref name="crespy" /> Downtown [[activism]] was still prevalent, but Joe Cino's death on April 2, 1967 marked a departure from the origins of off-off-Broadway.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=us_fAgAAQBAJ&q=%22joe+cino%22+%22death%22&pg=PA57|title=The Queen of Peace Room|last=Dominic|first=Magie|date=October 2009|publisher=Wilfrid Laurier University Press|isbn=9781554586691|language=en}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


== {{coord|40.7305|-73.9874|type:landmark_globe:earth_region:US-NY|display=title}}External links ==
{{coord missing|New York City}}

* [https://catalog.lamama.org/Detail/Entities/418 Theatre Genesis on La MaMa Archives Digital Collections]


[[Category:Former theatres of Manhattan]]
[[Category:Former theatres in Manhattan]]
[[Category:1964 establishments in New York City]]
[[Category:Off-Off-Broadway]]

Latest revision as of 15:06, 14 February 2024

Theatre Genesis was an off-off-Broadway theater founded in 1964 by Ralph Cook. Located in the historic St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery in the East Village of Manhattan, it produced the work of new American playwrights, including Lanford Wilson, Tony Barsha, Murray Mednick, Leonard Melfi, Walter Hadler, and Sam Shepard. Theatre Genesis is often credited as one of the original off-off-Broadway theaters, along with Joe Cino's Caffe Cino, Ellen Stewart's La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club, and Judson Poets Theatre.

The theatre was known for its anarchistic, heterosexual, machismo energy, and often produced political plays. Like the other off-off-Broadway theatres, Theatre Genesis used a non-commercial model of production.

Founding the theatre

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St Mark's Church - New York City

Michael Allen at St. Mark's

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A young, progressive Episcopalian rector named Michael Allen came to St. Mark's in 1963 and opened the parish to everyone from the neighborhood. He did outreach to the many demographics and ethnicities in the East Village, which included artists, counterculturists, immigrants, and homeless people, among others. Allen aimed to fund arts and education initiatives in order to reflect the character of the neighborhood. Unlike Judson Church, in the West Village, the cultural programming at St. Mark's received minimal resistance from the church's older, wealthier, more conservative members.

Plays, poetry readings, underground films, and political gatherings began happening regularly at the church. Allen then decided an additional staff member was necessary to coordinate this programming, and hired Ralph Cook.

Ralph Cook as curator

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After temporarily employing the curator Tom Pike, Allen met Ralph Cook, an actor, who came to one of Allen's Sunday services. Cook began coming to the church regularly, and Allen and Cook became friends. Allen hired Cook for the role of curator, as Cook was well-connected in the downtown arts scene and had many friends who were looking for a space to showcase their creative work. His friends included Sam Shepard, Murray Mednick, Leonard Melfi, and Tom Sankey, among others. Their writing reflected the political and social upheaval that they were witnessing, and was often full of angst and testosterone. Their work didn't fit comfortably into the perceived camp aesthetic and looser structure at Caffe Cino and La MaMa. The church housed a 70-seat black box theater with sixteen lights, nine dimmers, spare sets, and minimal props. Much of the work being produced at the theatre had nihilistic themes. Cook said of Theatre Genesis:

Here, now, in lower Manhattan, the phenomenon is taking place: the beginning, the Genesis, of a cultural revolution. It is taking place out of utter necessity. Out of the necessity to survive....Personally I have little hope for the survival of our civilization. But whatever hope we have lies with our artists. For they alone have the ability (if we do not continue to corrupt them) to withstand the onslaught of the mass media and the multitude of false gods. They alone have the ability to show us ourselves.[1]

Early history of the theatre

[edit]

As the theatre's newly-hired "lay minister of the arts", Cook began his routine of reading scripts. He quickly created a diligent and thorough selection process with a two-pronged production track: there was a season of six or fewer new plays, and a Monday night workshop series where playwrights could have their work read. Cook believed in giving new playwrights exposure and continuity, in order to develop the artist in addition to the individual play. Cook never commissioned work or guaranteed that a work would be produced in the future. While this often led Genesis playwrights to produce their work elsewhere, it also developed their trust in Cook to be honest and objective.

Sam Shepard at the age of 20, when he was first produced at Theatre Genesis

After an early off-key production of Michael Boyd's Study in Color, Cook produced a double-bill of one-acts by Sam Shepard. Cowboys and The Rock Garden were both homages to Samuel Beckett, and reflected Shepard's wanderings with then-comrade Charles Mingus III (son of Charles Mingus). The one-acts harnessed his youthful energy, using playful language, but also represented a raw, innovative voice from the streets. Shepard describes those first productions:

We were in rehearsal for [two plays] within that week... We had no money. I can remember getting props off the street. We'd take Yuban coffee cans, punch a hole in them, and use them for lights. We did it all from scratch, which was pretty incredible.[2]

Cowboys and The Rock Garden were largely dismissed by critics, who could not see past the similarities to Beckett. However, Michael Smith of The Village Voice wrote in 1964:

I know it sounds pretentious and unprepossessing: 'Theatre Genesis... dedicated to the new playwright'... But they have actually found a new playwright, [and] he has written a pair of provocative and genuinely original plays... Shepard is feeling his way, working with an intuitive approach to language and dramatic structure and moving into an area between ritual and naturalism, where character transcends psychology, fantasy breaks down literalism, and the patterns of ordinariness have their own lives. His is a gestalt theater which evokes the existence behind behavior.

Smith's review bolstered attendance, allowing the public to notice Shepard and introducing other new playwrights to the theatre.

Off-off-Broadway, off-Broadway, and Broadway

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Although Shepard's work was produced in other off-off-Broadway theaters, he considered Theatre Genesis his true beginning. In 1965, his one-act Chicago was produced alongside Lawrence Ferlinghetti's The Customs Inspector in Baggy Pants. The production was transferred to another theatre due to its success, which caused problems for shows like Chicago for multiple reasons. First, Theatre Genesis plays were often written in response to the increasingly consumerist model of off-Broadway theatre. They were written specifically for the gritty, intimate environment of Theatre Genesis. Uptown, the plays lost their context and were less successful. Sally Banes has argued that, "For off-off-Broadway, graduating to off-Broadway - leaving the alternative home and the alternative community - was a fate to be avoided, for it altered the relations of production, turning the artists into alienated labor."[3] Ralph Cook is quoted as saying, "We couldn't care less about Broadway. We are aware that it exists somewhere uptown, no more."[4]

There were also more practical concerns about transferring shows uptown. Due to union restrictions in off-Broadway theatres, a transfer meant that most of the non-union cast had to be replaced. Shepard and his actors were frustrated when Chicago was transferred, as many of his actors had helped to create their roles. Off-off-Broadway's tensions with Actors' Equity Association continued until the showcase code was created. This code allows union actors to perform in experimental, not-for-profit productions in exchange for being compensated for travel expenses to rehearsals.

Jack Kroll said of the theatre:

Theatre Genesis is a mix of counterculture ingredients; a coolness that can explode like liquid oxygen, a dropout hipsterism, a polymorphous perversity of language and feeling, a Zap Comix mocking of straight heads.[5]
Lanford Wilson, Jean-Claude van Itallie, H.M. Koutoukas, Rosalyn Drexler, Irene Fornes, Leonard Melfi, Tom Eyen, Paul Foster --many of whom were produced at Theatre Genesis. 1966

Between 1964 and 1966, Cook produced debut productions of many playwrights, including one-acts from a then-unknown Charles L. Mee. Another early production was a version of Medea by H.M. Koutoukas. The production was set in a laundromat, where Medea kills her offspring in the washing machine. Koutoukas was simultaneously having his work produced at Theatre Genesis and Caffe Cino, not having told either theatre about the other theatre's production. The Caffe Cino production had Medea played by a man (Charles Stanley) in drag. When Koutoukas submitted the script to Genesis, the role was played by a woman (Linda Eskenas), which he intended as a prank. Although the production was successful, Cook was angry at Koutoukas. Theatre Genesis' production of Koutoukas' Medea opened on October 31, 1965, the final weekend of the Caffe Cino run. Many favored the campy Cino production. Paul Foster describes the play's climax:

Medea was there for you to reach out and touch, forming the unspeakable crime of infanticide in her mind. Then she threw her baby into a laundromat and washed it to death with Oxydol. She slammed the lid down and set the dial on HEAVY LOAD. How can you forget things like that?[6]

A third production, with the Caffe Cino cast, ran at La MaMa on October 13, 1965. The three productions of Koutoukas' Medea, at Caffe Cino, La MaMa, and Theatre Genesis, furthered the divide between the campiness of the first two theaters and the more masculine persona of Theatre Genesis.

Linda Eskenas and Anthony Sciabona in "Medea" by Harry M. Koutoukas, Theatre Genesis. Photo by James D. Gossage.

Leonard Melfi would become Theatre Genesis' most-produced playwright. In 1965, Melfi had five of his one-acts produced by Cook. He received the most success for his short play Birdbath. The play was written specifically for Cook, who would later direct the production, and was originally titled Coffeecake and Caviar. Birdbath's plot centers around Frankie, who has a one-night stand with a waitress named Velma. They drink and talk into the night, going further into their hidden pasts, until Velma reveals that she murdered her mother earlier that morning. Birdbath remained a staple of off-off-Broadway, receiving a production at La MaMa and later being published by Ellen Stewart in Six From La Mama.

Joe Chaikin paints Joyce Aaron in San Shepard's "Fourteen Hundred Thousand" at Theatre Genesis cir. 1967

Perhaps the most experimental and enigmatic of the Theatre Genesis playwrights was Murray Mednick. Mednick, who later co-ran Theatre Genesis after Cook's departure, often workshopped his scripts repeatedly with Genesis actors before finalizing the text. His plays The Hunter, Willie the Germ, and The Hawk were ritualistic interpretations of life on the streets. For The Hawk, Mednick developed the script through improvisation with a group of actors over two months. An exploration of drug addiction, The Hawk employed the ritual elements and poetic language emblematic of Theatre Genesis. The free-form style of the play began to appear with greater frequency at theaters like The Living Theater and Joseph Chaikin's The Open Theater, and was a departure from the scripted plays previously produced at Theatre Genesis. Smith, of The Village Voice, wrote:

The Hawk is convincingly detailed, yet mysterious... sharply contemporary, the form strange but not obstructive; it is performed with exceptional immediacy and authority; its ultimate intent remains veiled or vague, but the other levels are so rich it doesn't matter.... in moving beyond the documentary realism of the world of heroin addiction, The Hawk and Theatre Genesis had gone a step beyond gritty poetic realism, and for that reason, it was perhaps the most daring venture yet attempted by Genesis and perhaps its single most important achievement.[7]

Mednick describes his use of poetic language in the play:

There was a kind of presentational quality to the language which I think we were very influenced by. We had a similar attitude toward language, which has to do with a feeling about the spoken word as an almost shamanistic act, incantatory, ritualistic, as opposed to the theatrical dialogue tradition... We had a very high estimation of the idea of the word itself coming through the medium of the actor.[6]

Masculinity and heterosexism of Theatre Genesis

[edit]
Ben Masters and Bill Moor in María Irene Fornés' “Tango Palace” at Theatre Genesis. 1973.

Most of the work produced at Theatre Genesis incorporated testosterone and drugs, and the close-knit community of artists created a perceived machismo persona for the theater. Tony Barsha, a playwright who has said that the heterosexual environment of Theatre Genesis made it the only off-off-Broadway theatre where he felt comfortable, is quoted saying that the theatre consisted of "a bunch of guys, and their babes, and their drugs".[6]

However, many women did work at the Genesis in later years, including María Irene Fornés. She said of the theatre:

[Theatre Genesis] was not macho in the usual way, but something very kind of defeated... Not 'macho macho', but 'macho drug', which is different. These were straight men but from the street drug world. Macho drug has this kind of undercurrent of anger, disappointment, possible violence.[6]

By 1967, the divide between the homosexual environment of Caffe Cino and the heterosexual Theatre Genesis began to dissolve. More work was focused on social and political issues, particularly America's involvement in Vietnam and civil and gay rights. One Genesis production involving social and political commentary was Grant Duay's Fruit Salad (1967). The play juxtaposed film footage of a woman making fruit salad with scenes of soldiers engaged in war. Each soldier had a name like Banana, Melon, or Cherry, and the seriousness of their situation was intended to be juxtaposed against the trivial nature of the fruit salad. The character Cherry is clearly intended to be a homosexual. Throughout the play, Banana makes homophobic comments to Cherry, then eventually reveals to his own homosexuality in a sexual interaction between the two men.

Although the play includes homosexual themes, a departure for Theatre Genesis, many critics have noted that the overall aesthetic of the piece was consistent with the earlier work produced at the theater. Barsha directed the production, and Smith of The Village Voice wrote that it was "vivid, simple and arresting... A bitter, painful, almost despairing vision presented with lightness, fluidity, conciseness and cunning".[6]

Later history of the theatre

[edit]

Theatre Genesis eventually moved closer to the mainstream. Many off-off-Broadway theaters began being scrutinized by those looking to make a profit and by external funding organizations. In 1966, St. Mark's accepted a $185,000 federal grant brokered by The New School to support the church's art and educational outreach programs, giving each production a budget of $200. Artists were then paid for the work, which was new for off-off-Broadway. The grant eventually led to a troubled relation between Theatre Genesis and external funding. Later in 1966, Cook and Allen refused a large Ford Foundation, and later stopped accepting the New School funding deal due to "excessive entanglement with the government".[6] Cook then had to solicit funding from the Ford Foundation, and the theatre eventually became reliant on this external funding. When that funding was reduced in 1969, the theatre had to cut the season from six shows to three.

Cook left the theater in 1969, leaving it to be co-run by Murray Mednick and Walter Hadler. They operated it as a cooperative for a few more years. David Crespy wrote, "The [East] Village was morphing around them as well... Jazz was being replaced by psychedelic rock, and the long-haired counterculture of 1969 was bringing a less angst-driven energy".[7] Downtown activism was still prevalent, but Joe Cino's death on April 2, 1967 marked a departure from the origins of off-off-Broadway.[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Orzel and Smith, Eight Plays from Off-Off-Broadway. New York: Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1966.
  2. ^ Soloski, Alexis. “True East: Sam Shepard Returns to New York.” The Village Voice. Retrieved December 15, 2010.
  3. ^ Banes, Sally. "Greenwich Village 1963: Avant-Garde Performance and the Effervescent Body". Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1993.
  4. ^ Davis, Douglas M. "The Expanding Arts: Success for Off-Off-Broadway". National Observer, April 10, 1967.
  5. ^ Jack Kroll in Newsweek.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Bottoms, Stephen J. Playing Underground: A Critical History of the 1960s Off-Off-Broadway Movement. 2004. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2007.
  7. ^ a b Crespy, David A. Off-Off-Broadway Explosion: How Provocative Playwrights of the 1960s Ignited a New American Theater. New York: Back Stage Books, 2003.
  8. ^ Dominic, Magie (October 2009). The Queen of Peace Room. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 9781554586691.
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