Playwrights in the Newsroom

The Mommies Reviews

Playwrights in the Newsroom (Debut) a presentation of the AT&T Performing Arts Center’s 2020 Elevator Project Season March 5-8 and March 12-15, 2020 Dee and Charles Wyly Theatre – Studio Theatre
New play by Janielle Kastner and Brigham Mosley 

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Dallas – Playwrights in the Newsroom, an immersive new play about journalism and the search for truth written by local theater artists and SMU Meadows School of the Arts alumni Janielle Kastner (’12) and Brigham Mosley (’10), will premiere over two successive weekends, March 5 through 8 and March 12 through 15, 2020 at the Studio Theatre, the intimate black-box style space, on the sixth floor of the Wyly Theatre in the downtown Dallas Arts District. Showtimes are 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday & Saturday and 2 p.m. Saturday & Sunday. Playwrights in the Newsroom is part of the 2020 Elevator Project Season. General admission tickets are $29 each.

Tickets will be available online at www.attpac.org, by telephone at 214-880-0202 or in person at the AT&T Performing Arts Center Winspear Opera House Box Office at 2403 Flora Street. The Box Office is open 10:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and before performances – closed Saturdays and Sundays. 

In addition to Kastner and Mosley in featured roles, the cast includes six local actors. The show will be directed by New York-based theater artist Aaron Landsman.

Playwrights in the Newsroom grew out of discussions in 2017 between Lauren Smart, a journalism faculty member at SMU Meadows and contributing arts writer to The Dallas Morning News, and Tom Huang, the paper’s assistant managing editor for journalism initiatives. The idea was to let playwrights learn more about the challenges journalists face in collecting and reporting facts, then create an engaging story that builds greater understanding about journalists’ roles and, said Huang, “hopefully increases trust and transparency in what a local newsroom does for its community.”

Kastner, an actor, podcaster and playwright, and Mosley, a playwright and solo performer, loved the idea and agreed to undertake the project. Joining the effort was the Ignite/Arts Dallas (I/AD) initiative at SMU Meadows, led by Clyde Valentín. I/AD provided a $5000 commission to the playwrights to bring the work to fruition and has served as a key co-developer for the project. 

“I wanted Janielle and Brigham to bring their unique creative spirit and passion to this project, so we agreed from the beginning that our newspaper would have no control or oversight over the content of the play,” said Huang. “We opened our newsroom to them and trusted their judgment.”

Beginning in fall 2017, Kastner and Mosley spent hundreds of hours shadowing and interviewing reporters at the newspaper’s offices. They asked questions like, “What’s the metaphor that describes your job? What are your best and worst days? How do you decide what gets covered?” They also talked to journalism students and met with community members to discuss news consumption, including a group of Meadows School trustees who are newspaper readers and a group of LatinX millennials who prefer other media sources.

The resulting play combines humor and drama to reflect the playwrights’ journey of understanding how news is gathered and reported, the difference between fact and opinion, and why trustworthy journalism matters to a democracy. 

“From those first pivotal days shadowing the newsroom, our dream was to turn our realizations into a truly special, theatrical, one-of-a-kind experience for our city,” said Kastner. “We set our sights on the Elevator Project as the perfect home to debut this original theatrical experiment – what a gift to have the space and resources to do Playwrights in the Newsroom at the scale we dreamed of! We’re so grateful to the Elevator Project team, and can’t wait to share Playwrights in the Newsroom with the audience on the sixth floor of the Wyly.” 

“Building this piece has been a transformative experience for us as individuals (I once got my news exclusively from Buzzfeed and SNL, for goodness’ sake!),” said Mosley. “This golden opportunity provided by the Elevator Project to share with Dallas our revelations about Journalism (What It Is and Why It Matters) is a gift for which we’re deeply grateful.”

Ignite/Arts Dallas’ commission of Playwrights in the Newsroom was made possible thanks to grants to I/AD from the Mellon Foundation and George and Fay Young. I/AD also provided technical and artistic support. PEN America, a New York-based foundation that supports freedom of the press and media literacy, helped fund the project’s outreach and engagement activities. The Dallas Morning News provided the playwrights $450 and unlimited access to the newsroom, held regular meetings with the artists and producers and provided critical feedback on the early drafts of the script.

About AT&T Performing Arts Center

There is no better place to explore and experience live performing arts than the AT&T Performing Arts Center in the Dallas Arts District. On its vibrant 10-acre downtown campus, the nonprofit Center operates three of the nation’s finest performance venues: the Winspear Opera House (the best stage for Broadway in North Texas), Wyly Theatre, Strauss Square and the welcoming public green space, Sammons Park

The Center invites you to explore by the best in live theatre, opera, pop, ballet, comedy, cutting-edge speakers and, through its partner TITAS/Dance Unbound, the finest dance companies from across the globe. The Center’s stages are a launching pad for world premieres – more than 70 since the Center opened – and an incubator for the city’s emerging arts groups. And this is where you can see the award-winning work of its five resident companies: Anita N. Martinez Ballet Folklorico, Dallas Black Dance Theatre, The Dallas Opera, Dallas Theater Center and Texas Ballet Theater. 

The Center serves our community through a range of donor and sponsor supported programs. Each year thousands of students experience our arts education programs like Open Stages, Backstage Spotlight and Disney Musicals in Schools, which lets student both explore the arts and boost education outcomes. Our Community Partners and ArtsBridge-Powered by Toyota programs help ensure access to the arts for Dallas families who have been culturally underserved. 

At the AT&T Performing Arts Center, you’ll find a public gathering place for everyone. A place that entertains audiences, inspires creativity and makes the cultural fabric of our great community even stronger. AT&T Performing Arts Center. Yours to discover! www.attpac.org 

About the Elevator Project

The Elevator Project is a series of performances by Dallas-based arts groups, presented on the AT&T Performing Arts Center campus. The series provides performance space in the Dallas Arts District to local talent, while giving audiences exposure to the vibrant arts scene around them. Drawing from all genres of performing arts, the projects are chosen through an annual submission process and curated by an independent panel of arts professionals. The Elevator Project was created in 2014 by the AT&T Performing Arts Center and is presented with generous support from the City of Dallas Office of Arts and Culture.

Thank you,

Glenda, Charlie and David Cates