Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Limelight Editions
Pages: 384
Trim: 5½ x 8¾
978-1-5381-3318-7 • Paperback • April 2020 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-5381-3635-5 • eBook • April 2020 • $34.00 • (£25.00)
Actors Theatre of Louisville, the State Theatre of Kentucky, is the flagship arts organization in the Louisville community. For over four decades, Actors Theatre has been the home of the internationally acclaimed Humana Festival of New American Plays, which has introduced more than 450 plays into the American theatre repertoire and has showcased the work of more than 400 playwrights and ensembles. The Humana Festival is recognized as a crucial incubator for new work and a launchpad for myriad subsequent productions around the country and the world.
Do You Feel Anger? by Mara Nelson-Greenberg
Evocation to Visible Appearance by Mark Schultz
we, the invisibles by Susan Soon He Stanton
Marginal Loss by Deborah Stein
God Said This by Leah Nanako Winkler
You Across from Me by Jaclyn Backhaus, Dipika Guha,Brian Otaño, and Jason Gray Platt
This year’s Humana Festival of New American Plays was groundbreaking. Inclusion was big this year, with virtually all the plays representing refreshingly nontraditional perspectives.
— Rick Pender, Cincinnati CityBeat
In its 42nd season, the Humana Festival at Actors Theatre of Louisville featured an exceptional lineup of nine playwrights with six pieces in rep.... Actors Theatre programmed a stellar lineup of probing, formally unique, disparate, extraordinary new plays for its audiences.
— Kate Bergstrom, Santa Barbara Independent
This Festival has accomplished what theater does better than any other medium: It has offered a constant stream of epiphanies about authentic lived experiences that don’t merely tell us stories. If we’re receptive, they open us up to see the world through the minds of the writers.
— Marty Rosen, Louisville Eccentric Observer
This year’s lineup of world premieres, with women being six of the festival’s nine writers...pointed the way to the female future, happening now.
— Allison Considine, American Theatre