It was a night just like this... Some people tell me The Manhattan Project is just a story meant to frighten children, but I KNOW that there's a theatre company in Cleveland dedicated to creating awesome and terrible plays. I've seen it with my own eyes. You never know for certain when you might encounter the Manhattan Project, but my cousin's step-dad says that there will be a Meet and Greet next week on Monday, October 1 when the clock strikes 8:00 pm.
This month the playwrights Amanda vanAllen, Peter J Roth, and others will be summoning haunting new 10-minute plays about ghostly hitchhikers from beyond the grave. We need awesome actors to join us in creating these
Please join us on October 1 at 8:00 pm at Mahall's 20 Lanes in Lakewood for our Meet & Greet. Performances will be held at Mahall's on October 29 at 8:00 pm.
Save the Date
The Bomb Meets the Barn!This January The Manhattan Project and Barnhouse Journal are teaming up for an explosive new year and a new beginning for Manhattan Project. Come find out what we're up to and help us create some brand new awesome and terrible plays!
Meet & Greet January 7 Performance January 28
What exactly is The Manhattan Project - Cleveland Lab? The Manhattan Project is a low-stakes, nonthreatening place for actors and playwrights to meet and work together. Based on the Theatre Lab model taught at the Carnegie Mellon School of Drama and inspired by The Brooklyn Generator in New York, The Manhattan Project wants to introduce Cleveland actors and playwrights to each other by organizing a bi-monthly production of brand new 10-minute plays. Participating artists will meet early in the month and will be broken into teams, each with one playwright. The playwright will then be given a writing prompt to write a new 10-minute play based on the prompt and including all the team's actors. The rest of the evening the team members will get to know each other and get a feel for each other's skills and voices. The teams will reconvene later in the month to perform these plays for each other.
These 10-minute plays are not an end in themselves. Through these small collaborations we hope to build relationships between the two most vulnerable artists in theatre; the actors who put themselves on stage and the playwrights who pour themselves onto the page. Perhaps these 10-minute plays will grow into longer works or maybe these collaborations will become partnerships on larger projects. |