2020-2021 – The Civilians

R&D Groups

Past 2020-2021

The Civilians’ R&D Group is comprised of writers, composers, and directors who meet throughout a season to develop original pieces of theater through the creative investigation of a pre-selected topic of their choosing. The creative processes may include interviews, community engagement, research, and other experimental methods of inquiry. Led by R&D Program Director Ilana Becker, the Group shares and discusses their methodologies and the resulting work. This year, the Group will be meeting online. The process culminates in the FINDINGS Series, a works-in-progress reading series.

This season marks 10 years for The Civilians’ R&D Group.

SUNWATCHER

SUNWATCHER, a Noh-inspired musical, is the story of astronomer Hisako Koyama (1916-1997) – intertwined with the ancient Japanese myth of the sun goddess Amaterasu, in a retelling inspired by the structure of classical Noh theatre. Hisako was a woman with no formal scientific training – also a survivor of the 1945 US air raid of Tokyo, the deadliest bombing in history – who managed to rise to the stature of Galileo. She did so by drawing the sun in painstaking detail every day for 40 years, a landmark achievement for solar science. SUNWATCHER is a celebration of Hisako’s extraordinary dedication to ordinary observation, reminding us how seemingly small acts can have an immense impact over time and space.

Isabella Dawis

Isabella Dawis is a playwright, actor, and musician who works with artists of all disciplines to create genre-crossing theater. Isabella's work with Tidtaya Sinutoke includes SUNWATCHER (Weston Playhouse's Songs for Today) and HALF THE SKY (5th Avenue Theatre First Draft Commission, Weston-Ghostlight New Musical Award, Theater Mu's New Eyes Festival, Theater Latté Da's NEXT Festival, O'Neill Center Residency, Rhinebeck Writers Retreat). She recently collaborated with Emily Gardner Xu Hall on the 24 Hour Plays: Viral Musicals. Isabella's writing has also been supported by Musical Theatre Factory, the Kurt Weill Foundation, New York Theatre Barn, the Bushwick Starr, Broadway Buskers, Central Square Theater, the Skeleton Rep, and the Schubert Club. Isabella was a 2019-2020 Rockwell Scholar at the Primary Stages Einhorn School of Performing Arts. B.M. summa cum laude and highest distinction, piano performance, University of Minnesota; Classical Voice Diploma Program, New England Conservatory.

Librettist

Tidtaya Sinutoke

Tidtaya Sinutoke is a Thailand born, NYC-based composer. Her composition credits include HALF THE SKY (5th Avenue Theatre's First Draft Commission), CLOUDS ARE PILLOWS FOR THE MOON (Yale Institute for Music Theatre, Kilroy's Honorable Mentions), HART ISLAND REQUIEM (The Civilians R&D Group, Polyphone Festival), and WATER IS LIFE (NYMF - How The Light Gets In). She was awarded a 2017 Jonathan Larson Grant and won the 2020 Weston-Ghostlight New Musical Award. She's also a recipient of the Composer-Librettists Studio at New Dramatists, Johnny Mercer Songwriter Projects, NYFA IAM Mentoring Program, Robert Rauschenberg Residency, EtM Con Edison Composer-in-Residence, Musical Theatre Factory's MAKERS Cohort, and Rhinebeck Writers Retreat. A proud member of ASCAP, the Dramatists Guild, Maestra, and Thai Theatre Foundation. BM: Berklee College of Music; MFA: NYU. tidtayasinutoke.com

Composer

Nana Dakin

Nana Dakin is a Thai American director of new work, classics and devised performance based in New York City. Her work pursues social equity by examining the way culture is constructed and unsettling dormant biases. Recent productions: WHITE PEARL (The Royal Court Theatre), an all-female production of Shakespeare’s RICHARD III (Lenfest Center for the Arts), DAMAGE JOY (B-Floor Theatre). Assistant Director: MARY JANE (NYTW), THE BACCHAE (Getty Villa, BAM Next Wave 2018), WILD GOOSE DREAMS (The Public Theater), CAMELOT (Lincoln Center Theater). New work development includes GOLDEN SHIELD by Anchuli Felicia King, a finalist for the 2020 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize and HALF THE SKY by composer Tidtaya Sinutoke and bookwriter/lyricist Isabella Dawis, recipients of the 2020 Weston-Ghostlight New Musical Award. Nana was a 2050 NYTW Directing Fellow in 2018/19. MFA Theatre Directing: Columbia University. www.nanadakin.com

Director

Ikumi Kuronaga

Ikumi Kuronaga is a Japanese producer based in NYC and Tokyo. She collaborates with international artists to connect people beyond cultures through storytelling. She was part of Steps Dance Studio in Manila, COMPA Teatro in La Paz, and Avex Entertainment in Tokyo. She moved to NYC in 2017 as a U.S.-Japan Creative Artists Fellow. Selected productions: TOKYO VICE (HBOMax), ANGELS IN AMERICA (Neil Simon Theatre), HEAD OVER HEELS (Hudson Theatre), BIOHAZARD (RESIDENT EVIL): THE STAGE (Ex Theater Roppongi), WATASHI NO HOST-CHAN: THE STAGE AND MINI SERIES (Sunshine Theatre, Japan tour, AbemaTV). MFA candidate: Theatre Management and Producing at Columbia University. Besides theatre, she is working as a creative consultant for Amazon JP Originals and she writes articles on art and entertainment for Forbes Japan and Vogue Japan.

Producer/Cultural Consultant

Black Girl in Paris

Black Girl in Paris is a musical about one of the most famous and least known black women in the American historical canon: Sally Hemmings. It hones in on her years spent in Paris, a point in her life where she both had the most access to freedom ever afforded her and the beginnings of the relationship that would forever define her legacy. Black Girl in Paris seeks to explore the inherent contradictions of an enslaved young black woman held in bondage in a city where slavery has been outlawed, under a man widely considered to be one of the architects of one of the greatest articulations of the necessity of freedom in the western world. It also centers an ensemble cast of Ancestors who chide and guide Sally along her journey, interweaving fables and history to craft the nuanced world Sally is forced to grapple with. At the heart of this musical is the question "What does it mean to be free?", a question black Americans have been grappling with since the original kidnapping and enslavement of Africans for the American project.

Jacinth Greywoode

Jacinth Greywoode is a New York-based composer and music director. Recent compositional credits include: GONE MISSING Encores! Off-Center Lobby Project (New York City Center); MASTER (America Opera Projects, NYU Tisch; words by Deepali Gupta); WHITE RAVEN/BLACK DOVE (commissioned by White Snake Projects, premiering in Boston, 2022); and IRON JOHN (2020 Richard Rodgers Finalist, 2019 O’Neill NMTC Semifinalist, NAMT 31st Festival of New Musicals, TheatreWorks Silicon Valley New Works Festival, 2019 O’Neill Incubator Residency; words by Rebecca Hart). Recent directing/arranging credits include A SOLDIER’S PLAY and THE ROSE TATTOO (American Airlines Theater) and WiLDFLOWER (Apollo Theater; music assistant). Jacinth received a Bachelor of Arts in music with a Certificate in collaborative piano performance from Princeton University, a Master of Arts in composition from Stony Brook University, and a Master of Fine Arts from the Graduate Musical Theatre Writing Program at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts. More information at www.jacinthgreywoode.com.

Music

AriDy Nox

AriDy Nox is a multi-disciplinary black femme storyteller and social activist with a variety of forward-thinking creative works under her/their belt including the historical reimagining of the life of Sally Hemmings BLACK GIRL IN PARIS (2020), the ancestral reckoning play A WALLESS CHURCH (2019), the afrofuturist ecopocalypse musical METROPOLIS (2019), and many others. AriDy creates out of the vehement belief that creating a future in which marginalized peoples are free requires a radical imagination. Their tales are offerings intended to function as small parts of an ancient, expansive, awe-inspiring tradition of world-shaping, created by and for black femmes. As a graduate of the Graduate Musical Theatre Writing Program at Tisch School of the Performing Arts at NYU and a beneficiary of the Emerging Writer’s Group at the Public Theatre, she has been inordinately privileged to share the workings of her imagination among a vast array of inspiring and supportive artists of various radical backgrounds throughout the city. Please visit www.aridynox.com for more information.

Book and Lyrics

Desaparecidas (working title)

Told through the lens of Mexican folklore, our story explores the psychology behind societal suppression and the strategic erasure of female voices in the fight to end gender-based violence and the killing of women and girls. A female ensemble assumes a community of characters in a tapestried play of dramatized accounts, fictionalized scenes and musical sequences to unearth and dismantle the moral behind the ‘myth’ of violence against women.

Jaime Lozano

Jaime Lozano Considered by Hamilton’s Lin-Manuel Miranda as the “next big thing” on Broadway. Joe’s Pub Working Group 2020 residency. Selected works: THE YELLOW BRICK ROAD (Off-Broadway & National Tour), CARMEN LA CUBANA (European Tour), CHILDREN OF SALT (NYMF 2016 “Best of Fest” Production), A NEVER-ENDING LINE (Comédie Nation in Paris, France & Off-Broadway), SAVAGE (UAB at Birmingham), PRESENT PERFECT (Live & In Color). Albums: “Tlatelolco,” “Carols for a Cure 2010,” R.Evolución Latina’s “Dare to Go Beyond,” Florencia Cuenca’s “Aquí – Los Nuevos Standards,” Doreen Montalvo's “American Soul / Latin Heart,” “A Never-Ending Line,” and “Songs by an Immigrant,” these last three released by Broadway Records. “Jaime Lozano and the Familia: Songs by an Immigrant” sold-out shows at Two River Theater, Joe’s Pub, and The Green Room 42. BFA: Music & Composition, Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León; MFA: NYU/Tisch, Graduate Musical Theatre Writing Program; part of the BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theatre Workshop. Proud member of the Dramatists Guild of America, AFM Local 802, BMI and GRAMMY and Latin GRAMMY voting member. www.jaimelozano.net Twitter/IG: @jaimelozano

Creator/Lyricist/Composer

Rachel M. Stevens

Rachel M. Stevens is a director and educator based in New York. Most recent credits include HOMEGROWN STORIES (City Theatre of Pittsburgh, zoom play festival), THE WOLVES (The Pittsburgh Playhouse), Associate Director to Peter Flynn, SMART BLONDE (59E59). Select directing credits include, Quantum Theatre, Front Porch Theatricals, New York Film Academy, SheNYC, NYMF and TheaterWorksUSA. Rachel was Assistant Director to Rachel Chavkin, PRELUDES (Lincoln Center Theater, LCT3), NATASHA PIERRE AND THE GREAT COMET OF 1812 (A.R.T, Imperial Theatre) and Andy Blankenbuehler THE BANDSTAND (Paper Mill Playhouse). Rachel is currently a monologue coach with MTCA, (Musical Theater College Auditions), here in NYC. She is a founding member of Brave Space Studios, a virtual theater program developed in response to the pandemic that offers a communal space for students to embrace current challenges and explore their talents, ideas and identities through the performing arts. Rachel holds her MFA in Directing from The Actors Studio Drama School at Pace University and is proud SDC Associate.

Director/Creator

Florencia Cuenca

Mexican actress, singer, director and writer based in New York City. She entered the artistic world at the age of three acting alongside her father in stadiums and theaters throughout Mexico and the USA. Back in Mexico she is known for telenovelas such as “De que te quiero te quiero,” “Muchachitas como tú,” “De Pocas, Pocas Pulgas,” “Te Sigo Amando,” “La Rosa de Guadalupe,” “Como Dice el Dicho” and for being part of the successful Mexican musical SI NOS DEJAN (Mexico City), the Mexican premiere of SHREK THE MUSICAL and SELENA THE MUSICAL. Her first album “Aquí - The New Standards”, -produced by husband Jaime Lozano- made her tour all around Mexico, Latin America and New York City; performing in some of the most prestigious jazz venues and Festivals, being awarded with the Hot House Jazz Award 2016 for Best New Jazz Artist. She has performed in shows such as CHILDREN OF SALT (NYMF 2016 Best of Fest) and A NEVER-ENDING LINE (Off-Broadway). She is interested in developing projects that celebrate diversity and especially the Latinx community.

Lyricist/Creator

Dissentary

Tasked with escaping your neighborhood, you inevitably run across environmental hazards that impede your progress. Especially if you’re Black, Indigenous or Latinx. Dissentary takes inspiration from the classic game The Oregon Trail and adds an environmental justice lens; your group can do one of two things - leave in pursuit of clean air, water and healthy food, or stay and defeat the corporations focused only on profits. Dissentary will both be a participatory theatrical piece as well as an accompanying card game that will allow people to play the game off-line themselves, thus giving access to people who normally don’t have access to the arts.

Reynaldo Piniella

Reynaldo Piniella is an actor, writer and director from East New York, Brooklyn. He received the Fox Foundation Resident Actor Fellowship from TCG to develop, translate and star in a bilingual English-Spanish production of Hamlet with the Classical Theatre of Harlem in association with the Public Theater’s Shakespeare Initiative. He is a recipient of a HB Studio Rehearsal Space Residency, the Thomas Barbour award for Playwriting and a “Play at Home” commission from Baltimore Center Stage. As an actor, he’s been previously seen Off-Broadway in The Death of the Last Black Man…, Venus (Signature), The Skin of Our Teeth (TFANA), Lockdown (Rattlestick), The Space Between the Letters (The Public/UTR) and Terminus (NYTW Next Door). Regional credits include Baltimore Center Stage, Syracuse Stage, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Cleveland Play House, Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, O’Neill and the Sundance Theater Lab in Morocco. Follow him @ReynaldoRey. www.reynaldopiniella.com

Writer

Emily Lyon

Emily Lyon is an award-winning Brooklyn-based theatre director and dramaturg whose work delves into the poetry and politics of language. As Associate Artistic Director of Hedgepig Ensemble Theatre, she is curating Expand the Canon, a call to action to include a diverse set of women playwrights in the classical canon. In March, she was selected for the first U.S. Creative Climate Leadership cohort. Directing credits include the world premieres of #YOURMEMORIAL (HERE Arts), HOW WE HEAR (The Brick, LPAC), THE SUMMONING (Best Direction, Best Production: sheNYC), THE SWORD & THE STONE/THE TEMPEST (Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival), WOMEN OF WILLIAMS COUNTY (Best Ensemble: MITF), and SOME OF THE SIDE EFFECTS (Best Premiere: UnitedSolo). She has worked with HVSF, The Old Globe, Yale Rep, Royal Shakespeare Company, The Flea, The Folger, LaMaMa, BEDLAM and others. Drama League Directing Fellow, Geva Theatre Directing Fellow. SDC Associate. BFA: Michigan. EmilyALyon.com

Director

RESET: RACE and CULTURE CONTACTS in the MODERN WORLD

an investigative work of theatre
about how incidents between police and black Americans
continues to reset race relations in the country.

Tylie Shider

Tylie Shider is a two-time recipient of the Jerome Fellowship at the Playwrights’ Center and an I Am Soul playwright in residence at the National Black Theatre. He holds a BA in Journalism from Delaware State University and an MFA in Dramatic Writing from NYU. Recent plays include: CERTAIN ASPECTS OF CONFLICT IN THE NEGRO FAMILY and THE GOSPEL WOMAN.

Writer

El Cóndor Mágico

El Cóndor Mágico examines the events of Operation Condor, the US-backed campaign of right-wing dictatorships and repressive regimes in South America throughout the 1970s-80s via oral history, research, and satire. It will also explore the American fascination with magical realism, a Latin American narrative tool rooted in history in a region where people have been known to “disappear,” problems miraculously go away, and corruption can serve as a curtain behind which history does tricks. Research will unravel how the political imprisonment of over 400,000 people, varied intimidation/torture tactics taught by the US, and unknown thousands of “disappeared” people set a precedent for relations between the US and Latin America that haunt us today. With an eye on Operation Condor's long shadow and impressive wingspan, it asks: who is the magician behind the “magical realism” when it comes to the relationship between Latin America and the US?

Noelle Viñas

Noelle Viñas is a playwright, educator, and theater-artist from Springfield, Virginia and Montevideo, Uruguay. She is a resident playwright at Playwrights Foundation and was a 2019 Artist-in-Residence at the Djerassi Resident Artists Program. Her play Derecho won the 2019 John Gassner Playwriting Award, along with being workshopped as part of the 2020 Bay Area Playwrights Festival. Her one-act play, La profesora, was commissioned and produced by TheatreFirst and is currently in development to become the podcast Abuelito with We Rise Production. Recent commissions include One Room Commission from Weston Playhouse Theatre Company for her short play Zoom Intervention (NY Times Critic's Pick), Lauren Gunderson's New Now Commission, and Shotgun Players. She is currently an MFA Playwriting Candidate at Brooklyn College under Erin Courtney, Tina Satter, and Anne Washburn. Viñas resides in Brooklyn and is a proud member of the NYC Latinx Playwrights Circle.

Writer

Galia Backal

Galia Backal has acted as director and creator for collaborative works including A VERY GIRLY STORY (EAT), ONE DAY OLDER (Theatre Row), SILENCE (The Tank), NIGHTCAP (Match:Lit Theatre Company), and IF I DARE (Layton Studios). Galia is a part of the 2020 – 2021 Roundabout Directors Group Cohort and has worked with The Sol Project, The Drama League, Samuel French, Atlantic Theater Company, The Broadway League, Theatre for a New Audience, The Tank, and LaGuardia Performing Arts Center. Recent productions include INÚTIL by Alisha Espinosa (Teatro LATEA), CANCIONES PROJECT WORKSHOP by Beto O’Byrne (The Sol Project), THE END OF INCORPORATED FILTH by Chloe Hayat (The Chain Theater), WEST SIDE STORY (Bay View Music Festival), LATCH by Tom Mularz (Samuel French OOB Festival), GRUESOME PLAYGROUND INJURIES by Rajiv Joseph (Schaeberle), and JULY 7, 1994 by Donald Margulies (Schaeberle). https://www.galiabackal.com/

Director

THE MODERATE

a new play by Ken Urban, directed by Steve Cosson - commissioned by the EST/Sloan Project and developed by the Civilians

ACCEPT. ACCEPT. REJECT. ACCEPT. REJECT. For a minimum of eight hours a day, with a target of at least 2,000 videos a day, Frank evaluates the videos and photos uploaded on the world’s largest social media site. What Frank sees, he can’t un-see, but he soon realizes he has the power to change the world. Playwright Ken Urban and director Steve Cosson will interview scientists, researchers and policymakers in order to dramatize the hidden human cost of the internet, and imagine a future when a free exchange of knowledge and information is possible again. This project is an EST/Alfred P. Sloan Science & Technology Project Commission.

Ken Urban

Ken Urban is a playwright based in New York. His plays include A GUIDE FOR THE HOMESICK (Huntington Theatre Company, Trafalgar Studios in the West End), THE REMAINS (Studio Theatre), SENSE OF AN ENDING (59E59 Theatres, Theatre503), NIBBLER (The Amoralists and Rattlestick Playwrights Theater), THE CORRESPONDENT (Rattlestick Playwrights Theater), THE AWAKE (59E59 Theatres, First Floor Theater), and THE HAPPY SAD (The Public Theatre/Summer Play Festival). Awards include Weissberger Playwriting Award, New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship, the Independent Reviewers of New England’s Award for Best New Script, Headlands Artist Residency, Dramatist Guild Fellowship, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts Fellowship, and MacDowell Colony Fellowships. He is a resident playwright at New Dramatists and an affiliated writer at the Playwrights’ Center. Ken wrote the screenplay for the feature-film adaptation of THE HAPPY SAD. His plays are published by Dramatists Play Service. He leads the band Occurrence and runs the dramatic writing program at MIT.

Writer