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E. M. Lewis

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E. M. Lewis
BornSilverton, Oregon
OccupationPlaywright
LanguageEnglish
EducationSilverton High School
Alma materWillamette University
University of Southern California
Princeton University
Period2004–
Genresdrama, opera
Subjectsclimate change, war and gun control
Notable awardsSteinberg Award
Primus Prize
Edgerton Award
Hodder Fellowship
Website
emlewisplaywright.com

Literature portal

Ellen M. Lewis (professionally known as E. M. Lewis) is an American playwright, teacher, and opera librettist based in Oregon.

Career

Lewis pursued degrees in literature (BA English, MFA Writing) before moving to Baltimore in 2013 to train with the American Lyric Theater’s Composer Librettist Development Program.

Her work has gone on to receive critical success. Edward Albee, in his award citation for Heads, remarked it was ″provocative and wonderfully threatening.″ The LA Weekly observed of the play that “the question of who we are beneath our posturing lands with such force, it jangles the nerves long after the play has ended.” Of Magellanica The New Yorker wrote ″part drawing-room comedy, part locked-room mystery, Magellanica de-abstracts the larger threats surrounding the characters and their relationships, gradually immersing the audience in possibilities usually too complex—or too disturbing—to face.″ Her one-man The Gun Show, which went on tour across the U.S. and to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, has been called a “compact yet high-caliber theatrical, a short one-hour blast of personal recollection, rhetoric and genuinely conflicted questioning.”

Her plays have been workshopped, developed, and produced by a range of organizations, including the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, American Lyric Theatre, The Lark, Page 73, Project Y, Ashland New Plays Festival, Arkansas New Play Festival, PlayFest Santa Barbara, EcoDrama Festival, the HotCity Greenhouse Festival, Great Plains Theater Conference, Last Frontier Theater Conference, William Inge Center for the Arts, Artists Repertory Theater, TimeLine Theater, Guthrie Theatre, Playwrights Theater of New Jersey, New Voices for the Theater Program, Theatre Latte Da, Moving Arts, Passage Theater, 16th Street Theater, and University of Maryland Opera Studio, among others.

Originally from rural Oregon, Lewis has taught at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Lewis & Clark College, Independence Community College, and Hostos Community College. She returned to the Pacific northwest in 2014, where she writes and frequently gives workshops through the ArtsHub at Artists Repertory Theatre. She is a member of the LineStorm Playwrights writing collective, International Center for Women Playwrights, the National Opera Center, and the Dramatists Guild.

Awards

In addition to this positive critical reception, Lewis has been a finalist for the Sundance Theater Lab, Oregon Book Award, the Shakespeare's Sisters fellowship, and Arizona Opera’s “Arizona Bold!” program, and a semi-finalist for the O’Neill Playwrights Conference.

  • 2018 Edgerton Award, Theater Communications Group
  • 2016 Drama Fellowship, Oregon Book Awards
  • 2012 Drama Fellowship, New Jersey State Arts Commission
  • 2010 Hodder Fellowship, Princeton University
  • 2009 Harold and Mimi Steinberg New Play Award, American Theater Critics Association
  • 2009 EcoDrama Playwrighting Competition, University of Oregon
  • 2008 Francesca Primus Prize, American Theater Critics Association
  • 2008 Ted Schmitt Award, Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle
  • 2008 Ashland New Plays Festival
  • 2007 Production of the Year, L.A. Weekly
  • 2007 New Works for the Stage Competition, Coe College
  • 2007 IN10 Competition, University of Maryland / Baltimore County

Works

Full-Length Plays

  • Apple Season
  • Goodbye, Ruby Tuesday
  • The Great Divide, co-commission for Artists Repertory Theatre and the Oregon Shakespeare Festival “American Revolutions” cycle
  • The Gun Show
  • Heads
  • How the Light Gets In
  • Infinite Black Suitcase
  • Magellanica
  • Now Comes the Night
  • Reading to Vegetables
  • Song of Extinction
  • The Stone Languages
  • True Story
  • You Can See All the Stars

One-Acts

  • Dorothy's Dictionary
  • The Edge of Ross Island

Operas

  • Town Hall with Theo Popov
  • Dear Erich with Ted Rosenthal
  • The Crossing with Clarice Assad
  • Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Fallen Giant with Evan Meier

Published works

References

  1. "Focus on a Playwright: E.M. Lewis". Breaking Character Magazine. Samuel French. April 1, 2010. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  2. Bermea, Bobby (January 19, 2018). "Spotlight on: E.M. Lewis and 'Magellanica'". Oregon ArtsWatch. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  3. Nijhuis, Michelle (January 25, 2018). "A Six-Hour Theatrical Epic About the Hole in the Ozone Layer". The New Yorker. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  4. Hughley, Marty (September 13, 2016). "The great American (gun) divide". Oregon ArtsWatch. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  5. Lewis, E.M.; Stolowitz, Andrea (March 16, 2020). "New Plays at Artists Repertory Theatre". Dramatists Guild. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
  6. "The Hodder Fellowship". Lewis Center for the Arts. Princeton University. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  7. Hirschman, Bill. "U.S. theatre critics honor E.M. Lewis' Song of Extinction" (PDF) (Press release). American Theatre Critics Association. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  8. "EMPS New Play Competition". Earth Matters On Stage. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  9. "ACTA Awards: 2008". About The Artists. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  10. "2008 Awards". LA Drama Critics Circle. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  11. "Past Winners". Ashland New Plays Festival. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  12. BWW News Desk (August 15, 2019). "Oregon Shakespeare Festival Announces 6 New Commissions For Acclaimed American Revolutions Cycle". Broadway World. Wisdom Digital Media. Retrieved August 15, 2019.
  13. "E.M. Lewis, The Great Divide". Table / Room / Stage. Artists Repertory Theatre. Retrieved August 18, 2019.
  14. Lane, Nicole. "Artists Rep takes on Climate Science in Epic Play set in South Pole" (PDF) (Press release). Artists Repertory Theatre. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  15. Carlsson, Jae (February 26, 2020). "Fertile Ground 2: 'Dorothy's Dictionary,' etc". Oregon Arts Watch. Retrieved May 11, 2020.

External links

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