Tag Archives: Jami Brandli

The FPI Files: A New Play Journey at Outside In Theatre

LA-based playwright Jami Brandli is a longtime LAFPI Instigator who we’ve heard from before as Guest Blogger and on Alyson Mead’s Podcast, “What She Said.” (We miss you, Alyson!)

And we’ve been a fan of Jami’s and her beautiful play “O: A Rhapsody in Divorce” for a long time now. We’ve followed it over the years and are thrilled to see it’s now receiving a world premiere at LA’s Outside In Theatre.

Not a spoiler alert: This is a play that’s a modern, femme re-imaging of The Odyssey, which of course is a story about… a journey.

We love that.

But as playwrights, we were also curious about the journey of the play itself, from inception to this beautiful production, directed by Jessica Hanna. I mean, sometimes the journey is much longer than expected, right?

So we were delighted to listen in to a Playwrights Union Podcast where, in part, Jami and Jessica talked about just that. A lightly edited transcript of an excerpt is below. (Thank you, Jami for sharing!)

Playwright Jami Brandli

Jami Brandli: And where do we start?

At the end of 2015, [Jessica Hanna] and I both experienced the life change of our marriages disintegrating. And we both began a couch hopping odyssey throughout Los Angeles. Mine lasted about six months and Jess’ lasted two years. We started talking and basically the conversation started from there!

At the time, I was very much in the world of my play, “BLISS (or Emily Post is Dead!)” where I take Clytemnestra, Medea, Antigone, Apollo, and Cassandra and I put them in 1960, New Jersey. So Jess and I met up for drinks around the holidays and talked. And then I sent a late night text that said, “What about a female Odysseus play?” And Jess was like, YEAH!

But I was in this emotional storm. So I wrote a lot ideas down.

Meanwhile, over the course of next couple of years—especially in 2018—I wound up having a few productions and one of them was “BLISS (or Emily Post is Dead!)” in LA in the fall of 2018. But before the production, the Playwrights Union Challenge came up in February—where you write a play in a month. And I was like, You know what? I’m going to write this play!

I probably wrote half of “O: A Rhapsody in Divorce” in February. But I was determined to finish the play by June 2018, because too many signs were out there. Like people that I knew were having problems with their relationships. And Jess was super energetic.

And so, I finished the play and the very first reading of this play was in June of 2018 for Playwrights Union’s First Peek Reading Series.

Donna Simone Johnson, Andrew Brian Carter, Tania Verafield in “O: A Rhapsody in Divorce” – photo by Mallury Patrick

Jess directed it. Donna Simone Johnson, an amazing actor, was in that reading, and Donna is in the production now.

And then this play went on its own odyssey, if you will. Truly its own odyssey of getting workshops and then readings and an almost-production at Sacred Fools in 2020.

Then we had a big development opportunity with Inkwell Theater in 2023, which gave us three weeks with Jess as the director. And then finally it landed at Outside In Theatre, but there was a delay in the opening. But you will see that Andrew Brian Carter, who is in the production, has been in several of these readings.

It’s been an amazing journey. And so I’ll pass it to Jess.

Director Jessica Hanna

Jessica Hanna: So we’ve had a lot of actors come in and then tap out.

The generosity of all the actors over the course of what is now almost eight years has contributed to the evolution—the development—of this play. They are in the DNA of this play forever.

After the Inkwell workshop, in 2024 we did a workshop at Outside In in 2024 in a way that I’ve done now a couple times with new plays. Over the course of a week, we did three full days of work, but with time in between for playwright to write. Each day we had an entirely different cast and they were all “new play” people.

We were like: Let’s have conversation around this. Let’s read. Let’s talk. Let’s ask questions. In my opinion, working that way gives the playwright a chance to hear their words coming out of different mouths over the course of a week. So know if an actor keep saying a line in that way and the playwright doesn’t want them to, then the playwright needs to look at that line. As opposed to, me—the director—thinking: Oh, I need to give that actor a note.

This kind of workshop really keeps the focus on the play, as opposed to on day three, the actors are really getting into it. That’s a different kind of workshop.

For this kind of workshop we wanted to work with actors who come in and read a part but also hear the whole play and want to talk about it and want to give to this process. Can you come into a room and be part of the collaborative effort around a discussion of what are you hearing in this play? How is that coming out of you? Did you get that off the page? What are the ways that you can help a playwright? Because that’s the gift, to help the playwright to hear the play they’ve written.

Go Here to Listen to the Complete Playwrights Union Podcast

Andrew Brian Carter, Rose Portillo, Tania Verafield, Alexandra Lee , Donna Simone Johnson – photo by Mallury Patrick

“O: A Rhapsody in Divorce,” written by Jami Brandli and directed by Jessica Hanna, runs at the Outside In Theatre in Highland Park through June 16. For more information and to purchase tickets go to Outside In Theatre (and use Discount Code PIE20)

Know a female or FPI-friendly theater, company or artist? Contact us at lafpi.updates@gmail.com & check out The FPI Files for more stories.

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New on the LAFPI Podcast: “What She Said” – Alyson Mead with Jami Brandli

Jami Brandli

December, 2018

Alyson Mead speaks with Jami Brandli about Greek mythology, theatrical mash-ups and manners in the time of Trump in her play Bliss: Or Emily Post is Dead!Moving Arts premiere at Atwater Village Theatre. (Her new play Sisters Three opens in LA on December 14th,  produced by Inkwell Theater at VS. Theatre.)

Listen In!

What conversations do you want to have? Send your suggestions for compelling female playwrights or theater artists working on LA stages to Alyson Mead at lafpi.podcast@gmail.com, then listen to “What She Said.”

Click Here for More LAFPI Podcasts

Women’s Voices Theater Festival: Getting a Piece of Real Estate

by Jami Brandli

For those of you who may not know, the two-month long Women’s Voices Theater Festival in the Washington D.C. area has officially begun. Over fifty of the region’s professional theaters (including Baltimore and northern Virginia) are producing over fifty world premiere plays written by over fifty female playwrights. This is an unprecedented event, and I am beyond thrilled to be one of the female playwrights to have my world premiere of Technicolor Life produced at participating theater REP Stage (which is producing an all-female season by the way). I also had the good fortune of being able to attend the invitation-only kickoff gala on the evening of Tuesday, September 8th at the National Museum of Women in the Arts. You can read about the seven originating theaters here, but I first want to give a huge, heartfelt shout-out to the festival’s producers, Nan Barnett and Jojo Ruf. Without these two rock stars, this monumental event would not be possible.

Here’s how my day went:

I arrived early in Washington D.C. with my director and co-AD of REP Stage, Joseph Ritsch. He had some meetings, which meant I had most of the day to myself. I decided to check out the collection at the National Museum of Women in the Arts since I knew that I’d be schmoozing and cocktailing later that night. I thought I’d spend about an hour there, but I wound up spending nearly three. Their all-female permanent collection is simply mind-blowing, as some of their paintings go as far back as the Middle Ages when women were not allowed professional training in the arts. Rather, a female artist was seen as a curiosity (why oh why would a woman want to create art?!). And if she did get any training, she received it from male relatives. These are female artists I have never heard of—Lavinia Fontana, Louise Moillon, Clara Peeters, Judith Leyster—and their paintings are absolutely stunning. As I moved from the Seventeenth Century to the Eighteenth to the Nineteenth, absorbing breathtaking landscapes and Vermeer-like portraits, I became angry. Strike that. I became really f’ing pissed. Women were still mostly excluded from professional training, and if they were accepted into an institution, they couldn’t study the naked human form until the end of the Nineteenth Century. Because of this patriarchal fear and ignorance, we—the collective human we—have been denied our female Renoirs, van Goghs, Picassos and so on. Because these female artists were denied their fair share of the art “real estate,” we have been denied paintings and sculptures that could have transformed individual lives and influenced cultures. Which brings me to…

Female playwrights’ fair share of the American theatre real estate.

Since the birth of American theatre in the 1750s, white male playwrights have successfully dominated the stage and won prestigious prizes with their white male (mostly straight) stories. This is fact. The more a culture sees and experiences a particular kind of story, the more it is considered the standard. This could be deemed as theory, but let’s get real here, this is fact. But I want to be clear. I’m not bashing the white male experience—so many plays that have moved and inspired me have been written by white males. (Our Town and Death of a Salesman kill me every time I read them.)  BUT the result of white male stories taking up all the prime real estate for the last 260 or so years is that all other types of American voices and stories have been marginalized. The only way for parity to be gained is to give the marginalized voices center stage for as long as it takes for them to no longer be marginalized. This is where the Women’s Voices Theater Festival comes into play. ALL of the theatre real estate is going to be given to female playwrights for the next two months. Which means our stories will be the standard. Yes, it’s for two months in the D.C. area, but the festival is getting national attention and there is great power in this.

As I left the National Museum of Women in the Arts and made my way back to the hotel, I kept thinking about this power and all the future possibilities it holds. One possibility is that the festival will be insanely successful and cause a ripple effect where twenty cities hold their own women’s voices theater festival over the next few years. This would then inspire ALL theaters to make the conscious effort to share the prime real estate in their upcoming seasons. But my dream? My dream is that ALL theaters will actually want to do this and there will no longer be a need for a women’s voices theater festival. I’m not sure if this dream will happen in my lifetime, but I know as sure as I’m typing this blog, I will proactively work toward making parity happen.

But back to the gala…

The night started with all the playwrights, artistic directors and other VIPs opening up the gala’s program and seeing Michelle Obama’s welcome letter. Alas, Ms. Obama, the festival’s Honorary Chair, couldn’t attend, but she was certainly there in spirit as you can see from my photo below.

Michelle Obama letter.9.8.15

Next, NPR’s Susan Stamberg interviewed the Tony Award-winning force of nature that is Lisa Kron. In case you missed it, you can watch it at Howlround TV. (Please note: You absolutely should watch this interview.)

Here are three of Lisa Kron’s gems from the interview:

“Unless you believe men are better writers than women, there’s an inherent bias. This isn’t a feeling women have. The numbers are there.”

“Women playwrights have the same authority to write about the world the way male playwrights have authority to write about the world. But we see the world from a different vantage point.”

“The definition of parity is that there will be as many bad plays by women as great plays…that women will produce great plays in the same proportion as everyone else.”

That last one really made me think. Because it’s the truth. As much as I hope for this to not be the case, there will be less than successful plays at the festival. But as Lisa stated, true parity means women should have the same opportunity to fail as well as to succeed.

After the interview, we all made our way into the main space of the museum where the rest of gala attendees were festively drinking champagne and eating creme brulee. They were waiting to celebrate us, our plays, and this revolutionary collective achievement to highlight female playwrights. I was filled with pure exuberance as it finally hit me. This festival is actually going to happen and history is about to be made! So I grabbed a glass of bubbly and celebrated with this fabulous group of women and men until last call…

And I would like to think that the spirits of the female artists in this museum—the ones who were denied to fully express their creative selves all those years ago—were celebrating with us, too.