News

Looking Back/Looking Forward

As has already been said by likely everyone you know, it’s been quite a year. I have been extraordinarily fortunate in many ways, especially because I’ve gotten to work with wonderful people on wonderful things. Some highlights:

  • My collaborator Joseph Amodei and I presented Packing and Cracking in-person in January with some of our favorite people (Caitlin Ayer, Rory Kulz, Aubyn Heglie; and thanks to Caden Manson and The Wild Project for hosting); then we moved it online to present it in April through the LaGuardia Performing Arts Center, in September through the Philadelphia Fringe Festival, and in October through UNC-Chapel Hill’s Process Series (and were joined by the wonderful Jacob Russell and Josh Kerry to help make that happen). Extra special thanks to the Center for Artistic Activism for supporting us through its Unstoppable Voters Project, and helping us to get featured on CBS. We’ll continue to work with C4AA to present a very different version of Packing and Cracking next year—the year that maps will be redrawn all across the country.

  • I started reworking How to Put On a Sock. The Drama League has been so exceptionally supportive of me over the past few years, and they awarded me their 2020 Beatrice Terry Residency to make that project even better than it was when I presented it at Carnegie Mellon in 2017. I’ll keep working on that well into 2021, and I’m very excited to do so.

  • I finally got to work with Clubbed Thumb through its Directing Fellowship program. AD Maria and Associate AD Michael are a dream, and it was amazing to learn from mentors Anne Kauffman, Daniel Aukin, and Laurie Woolery. First up for me in 2021 is presenting an in-person (!) experience for one audience member at a time at the Connelly (!), right after the presidential inauguration. I’m working with collaborators old and new to make this happen, and it feels incredible to be able to bring something into physical life right now. More on that soon.

I also got a few jobs that have brought me more joy and growth than I could have imagined: becoming the Special Projects Coordinator for C4AA and the Lead Project Manager for one of their current campaigns, Free the Vaccine. That work will continue into the new year, too. And I got to work again with long-time art crushes Aaron Landsman and Mallory Catlett, to help them put together their book on their project City Council Meeting, which is one of the first things I started working on when I graduated from college many years ago. Working on that book was also learning from reading that book, and I can’t wait for more people to be able to read it when it finally comes out.

I hope you’re all able to end the year with some kind of peace, and that I get to see you for the above and more soon. <3

Rachel Gita Karp
So many things!

The past few weeks have been a whirlwind!

Packing and Cracking happened at the Philly Fringe AND at UNC’s Process Series.

Read more about the latter here, and if you’re in NC, watch it on tv (!) from now through 11/3.

Packing and Cracking also got a huge grant through the Center for Artistic Activism’s Unstoppable Voters Project, which supports projects that celebrate voting rights and counter voter suppression. The other grantees are truly incredible—check them out!

I also started working for the Center for Artistic Activism as their Special Projects Coordinator and it has been a dream come true.

And I started working with another long-time arts organization crush: Clubbed Thumb. I’m one of their directing fellows for the year.

Yay!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! and also: VOTE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Rachel Gita Karp
"Packing and Cracking" in the Philly Fringe

I hope everyone is having an easy transition to fall! The fall is bringing tons of exciting things, and the first is that Packing and Cracking, my show about gerrymandering, is being presented through the Philadelphia Fringe Festival September 23, 27, and 30!

My co-creator Joseph Amodei and I are building off the version we brought online back in April and have brought along a ton of fantastic people to help: Aubyn Heglie, Joshua Kery, Rory Kulz, and Jacob Russell. Thanks to Kalyne Coleman, too, for helping us in our redevelopment.

I recently talked to my favorite people at The Drama League about the show, gerrymandering, and making performance about activism. Listen to it on Spotify here.

And get tickets to Packing and Cracking here!

Rachel Gita Karp
Free the Vaccine article for the Columbia Political Review

I wrote an article for the Columbia Political Review, a multi-partisan publication at Columbia University, about Free the Vaccine, its work around the world and at Columbia, and the need to fight for medicines access and equity. An excerpt about Free the Vaccine’s work and ethos:

Free the Vaccine quickly attracted over 300 volunteers from 29 countries. The volunteers were divided into smaller subgroups based on region. These subgroups are called Salk Squads, named for Jonas Salk, the medical researcher who discovered the vaccine for polio over sixty years ago. When asked who owned the patent on his polio vaccine, Salk famously replied, “The people, I would say. There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?”

Compare that to another excerpt, about Gilead’s recent announcement to charge thousands of dollars for the most promising COVID-19 treatment:

One of the most promising COVID-19 treatments, remdesivir, was developed with at least $70 million in taxpayer funding. Yet pharmaceutical company Gilead used a loophole to extend its patent on remdesivir (it reversed course after extreme backlash) and, after donating doses initially, has since set the cost for patients in the U.S. at several thousand dollars.

Read the article in full here! And sign on to support access and equity here!

Rachel Gita Karp
Wishing Columbia University Graduates Well with a Free COVID-19 Vaccine

One of my greatest sources of action and joy during this time has been my work with Free the Vaccine, a collaboration between the Center for Artistic Activism (C4AA) and Universities Allied for Essential Medicine (UAEM). Hundreds of us around the world are combining art and activism to ensure that whatever vaccine for COVID-19 is developed is sustainably priced, available to all, and free at the point of delivery.

This past week I worked with a few other participants based in New York to spread the word on Columbia’s campus. Here are the pictures:

And here’s how Free the Vaccine described our action:

Graduation is strange for the Class of 2020, with students celebrating graduation virtually, many of them far from their college campuses. The Ligers—our hybrid Lab focusing on Columbia University—realized they could stage a proper sendoff for the Class of 2020 that also doubled as a call to free the vaccine! Our activists went to campus and dressed the university’s famous statue of Alma Mater in a face mask, with a fake pill bottle labeled “Free The Vaccine” and a sash wishing her graduates well. They also added the message to various other campus landmarks, including Columbia’s lion mascot. The result was a striking action, and a sweet message for graduating students!

Read more about the Free the Vaccine and the need to ensure the coming vaccine is free here. And feel free to spread these images far and wide to help get the message out!

Rachel Gita Karp
The Drama League's Beatrice Terry Residency, plus!

I am thrilled to share that I am The Drama League’s 2020 Beatrice Terry Resident! The Beatrice Terry Residency supports womxn-identified artists who both write and direct their own work. I’ll be spending the residency re-developing my project How to Put On a Sock, which takes its audiences on an interactive sex ed tour of the United States.

Look at these fantastic fellow residents and fellows!!!

Look at these fantastic fellow residents and fellows!!!

The Drama League has been a supporter for a few lovely years now, starting with supporting my gerrymandering project Packing and Cracking through a First Stage Residency. I’m overjoyed to continue working with them on How to Put On a Sock through their outstanding Beatrice Terry Residency program.

Speaking of Packing and Cracking: our online presentation of the project last week through the LaGuardia Performing Arts Center was a huge success! It was great to be able to present the show despite our in-person version that had been scheduled for March being canceled. We created an interactive online experience that allowed our audiences to form a community and discuss the important issues around redistricting and gerrymandering. We’ll be presenting Packing and Cracking more in the coming months, either online or in-person, whatever is possible. As we say in Packing and Cracking, stay safe, stay healthy, stay engaged. And also: stay tuned!

Rachel Gita Karp
Moving Online

I hope everyone is healthy and hanging in there.

As the world moves online, I’ve been moving my performance practice online, too, and I am thrilled to share that my participatory project about gerrymandering, Packing and Cracking, will be presented online via LPAC at the end of this month. I was going to present Packing and Cracking through LPAC’s Rough Draft Festival at the end of March; of course, it had to be canceled. But my collaborator Joseph Amodei and I have transitioned the project into a participatory online one and are presenting it through LPAC and their new series LPAC in your Living Room.

We’re doing three performances: 4/22, 4/24, and 4/26. Tickets are very limited and available here. Grab them before they’re gone!

Rachel Gita Karp
March Madness

Tickets are now on sale for the two projects I’m directing that are coming up in March!

First is Town Hall by Caridad Svich at Barnard/Columbia, March 5-7. Tickets are here.

Second is Packing and Cracking‘s next iteration at LPAC’s Rough Draft Festival, March 26-28. Tickets are here. And a video of me talking about the project is here!

It’s such a joy to develop these projects and further my relationship with Columbia, my alma mater, and the team that’s been making Packing and Cracking for the past year+. I’d so love to share with you!

Rachel Gita Karp
Hello, 2020!

Amidst the holiday cheer and the end of the year, I’m gearing up for a ton of performances in early 2020!

First and foremost, Packing and Cracking, my performance project about gerrymandering, will be part of the SFX Festival, with a performance at the Wild Project on January 9 at 8pm. Artist driven and oriented, Special Effects (SFX) gathers experimental performance works by practitioners exploring contemporary issues. The theme of the 2020 SFX Festival is:

Rally.jpg

Asking: How do we combine difference? How do we assemble coalition? and what is the power of togetherness.

Tickets are available here!

Right after that, I’ll be diving into rehearsals for Town Hall by Caridad Svich at Columbia/Barnard’s Theatre Department, with performances March 5-7. And right after that, Packing and Cracking will have two more engagements: 1) In Queens through LPAC’s Rough Draft Festival, with performances March 26-28, and 2) in Pittsburgh through Carnegie Mellon Libraries’ dSHARP Gerrymandering Series, with a performance March 31. (And all the while, it’s also being developed through Anonymous Ensemble’s Avant Gardens Residency, which provides rehearsal space through July.)

More on March performances soon, but for now, be sure to buy tickets to Packing and Cracking at SFX here!

Rachel Gita Karp
Happy Fall!

The late summer and early/current fall have been full of development (despite them not being full of website updates)! Towards the end of August I had a residency at the beautiful Irondale to continue developing my play It’s in the Bag. It was fantastic to get to rework the play, which looks at the forgotten history of women who’ve run for president, more specifically within the landscape of the 2020 election. I re-teamed up with media designer SooA Kim and actors Lily Ganser and Roma Scarano, and I got to bring in actors Jimmy Brewer and John Ford Dunker. They all made magic happen.

Some magic thanks to SooA and Irondale’s architecture

Some magic thanks to SooA and Irondale’s architecture

Some magic thanks to Irondale’s shelf of mugs

Some magic thanks to Irondale’s shelf of mugs

I’ve also been continuing to develop my gerrymandering project, Packing and Cracking, following the success of its first showing through The Drama League’s First Stage Residency. My collaborator Joseph Amodei and I recently shared a selection of it through a Gerrymandering Series organized by Carnegie Mellon’s Libraries, and we’re working on sharing it across the northeast in Spring 2020—stay tuned!

I’ve also been gearing up to return to my alma mater and direct Caridad Svich’s beautiful play Town Hall at Columbia/Barnard’s undergraduate theater department in the beginning of next year. I’ve gotten a wonderful slate of designers to work with me; we’ve just started dreaming about the design and the ideas are already so exciting.

And I’ve been writing grants! Did you know I write grants? You can read all about that here.

Rachel Gita Karp
Drama League and PlayPenn

The past few weeks have been awash in wonderful work!

Audience members interacting with North Carolina and its many maps in Packing and Cracking at The Drama League

Audience members interacting with North Carolina and its many maps in Packing and Cracking at The Drama League

On Wednesday, I put together the first public showing of Packing and Cracking through The Drama League’s First Stage Residency, along with core collaborator Joseph Amodei and facilitators Kalyne Coleman, Roma Cutinho-Scarano, Ryan Dumas, Madison Fae, David Jackson, Rory Kulz, and Yaron Lotan. The showing was a huge success! Thank you to the very many of you who attended!

(Sometimes you have too much fun in a rehearsal room to remember to take pictures!)

(Sometimes you have too much fun in a rehearsal room to remember to take pictures!)

At the end of last month, I had the pleasure of directing a reading of Meghan Kennedy’s Buffalo Bill or How to be a Good Man at PlayPenn. I had a wonderful cast of Philly actors, including Campbell O’Hare, Scott Greer, Trevor William Faye, Nancy Boykin, Matteo Scammell, and Donovan Lockett, and exceptional leadership and support from Artistic Director Paul Meshejian and Associate Artistic Director Michele Volansky.

And now I dive in to continuing to develop It’s in the Bag with an eye to putting it up before the 2020 election! There will be a reading at Irondale August 22 at 8pm; use the Contact tab on this site to reserve a seat.

Rachel Gita Karp
Maps in PA and around the USA

This past week, two things happened related to my gerrymandering project, Packing and Cracking

Our winning map!

Our winning map!

1) My collaborator Joseph Amodei and I won a map-drawing competition sponsored by Draw the Lines PA, a statewide civic education and engagement initiative that empowers everyday Pennsylvanians to draw their own congressional district maps. We won the Spring 2019 Adult West PA division and are now entered to win the entire state competition! Read all about our submission here and read about the other inspiring submission winners here. Thanks to Draw the Lines for its support!

2) The Supreme Court decision for Rucho v. Common Cause, the case that Joseph and I went to back in March, was released, and it deemed that federal judges cannot step in to correct partisan gerrymandering. There’s still hope to be had at the state level, based on state constitutions and various state reforms. But the decision was a major blow to the ability of our country to have fair elections, with Justice Kagan dissenting “with deep sadness.” Read more about the decision here.

Want to learn and feel even more? The Drama League showing of our work-in-progress Packing and Cracking is coming up on August 7 at 8pm. Reserve your spot here.

Rachel Gita Karp
Graduation, Prague Quadrennial, the TONYs, and More!

Last month I graduated from Carnegie Mellon University with an MFA in Directing! Immense congratulations to all of my fellow graduates who inspired me and taught me so much over the past three years.

The two graduates of CMU’s John Wells Graduate Directing Program: Philip Wesley Gates and me!

The two graduates of CMU’s John Wells Graduate Directing Program: Philip Wesley Gates and me!

Then in the beginning of June I headed to Prague to attend the Prague Quadrennial, where the design for my show How to Put On a Sock was featured.

HOW TO PUT ON A SOCK at the Prague Quadrennial

HOW TO PUT ON A SOCK at the Prague Quadrennial

While there, I got to bask in the glory of The Waverly Gallery winning a TONY award!

In July I’ll be going to North Carolina to do research for my gerrymandering project, Packing and Cracking, and then directing a workshop of Meghan Kennedy’s haunting new play Buffalo Bill or How to Be a Good Man at PlayPenn’s 2019 New Play Development Conference. The summer is just getting started!

Rachel Gita Karp
Awards!

Me accepting the WCDAC Award in the Philip Chosky Theater

The past few days have brought very exiting award news.

Over the weekend, I was honored to win CMU’s West Coast Drama Alumni Clan’s Award for 2019, given to “deserving'“ graduate and undergraduate students who are completing their studies in the school. It was an extra-special honor for my frequent collaborator Aaron Landgraf to win the award, too.

AND, this morning, the Tony Award nominations were announced, and The Waverly Gallery was honored with TWO (!): Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play for Elaine May and Best Revival of a Play. Congratulations to all involved and to the many friends who were also honored!

Rachel Gita Karp
Looking to the Future

In just over one month, I’ll be graduating from Carnegie Mellon!

In the time I have left, I’m focusing on two projects that I’m making with fellow CMU students: one about robot futures that I’m making with Michal Luria, a PhD candidate in the Human-Computer Interaction Institute; and one about gerrymandering that I’m making with Joseph Amodei, an MFA student in the School of Drama’s media program.

Michal and I will be sharing our in-progress work in Pittsburgh, May 16-18, through Carnegie Mellon’s CS+X grant, which funds collaborations between computer science and the arts.

Joseph and I will be sharing our in-progress work in New York on August 7 through the Drama League’s Directors Project.

And—I’ll be continuing to develop It’s in the Bag this summer at the Irondale in Brooklyn.

More details to come about all of this, and more. Watch this space!

Rachel Gita Karp
Happy Closing to "It's in the Bag"!

It’s in the Bag had its highly-praised run this past week, with our closing performance yesterday. An immense thanks to all involved: my actors: Lily Ganser, Will Harrison, Sam O’Byrne, Roma Coutinho-Scarano; my designers: Angela Baughman, Frank Blackmore, Jessica Cronin, SooA Kim, Shawn Nielson; my dramaturg Emma McIntosh; my stage manager Kyrie Bayles; and my production manager Vanessa Ramon.

More pictures coming soon!

Rachel Gita Karp
‘A Woman, Just Not That Woman’: How Sexism Plays Out on the Trail

Tech has begun for It’s in the Bag, and the piece keeps getting more and more relevant.

Case in point, another recent New York Times article: “‘A Woman, Just Not That Woman’: How Sexism Plays Out on the Trail.”

Few Americans acknowledge they would hesitate to vote for a woman for president — but they don’t have to, according to researchers and experts on politics and women and extensive research on double standards in campaigns. Reluctance to support female candidates is apparent in the language that voters frequently use to describe men and women running for office; in the qualities that voters say they seek; and in the perceived flaws that voters say they are willing or unwilling to overlook in candidates.

Read the full article here, and get tickets for It’s in the Bag, playing February 20-23, here.

Rachel Gita Karp
Paving the Way

I’m deep in rehearsals for my thesis, It’s in the Bag, a time-bending look at the time-forgotten lineage of women+ who have run for President of the United States.

The piece reaches into the black hole of history and excavates nine women+ who have run for President or Vice President, telling parts of their stories, and especially the media’s various responses to them. It’s been fascinating to research these women and find the similarities—and sometimes find exactly the same words used by them or about them—across time.

One such example appeared to me earlier today. In a New York Times piece, a political science professor was quoted as saying:

Although Hillary Clinton didn’t become the first woman president, she paved the way for Americans to start thinking about it.

This immediately brought to mind Elizabeth Dole, who considered running for president in the 2000 election. When she pulled out of the race in 1999, she spoke along the same lines:

I think what we've done is pave the way for the person who will be the first woman president. And I'm just delighted at what has happened because I feel like we’ve really made a great contribution.

How much did she? How much did Hillary? The current election cycle will help us find out.

In the meantime, It’s in the Bag runs February 20-23 at Carnegie Mellon University. Tickets are available here. It’s a suggested show according to this Pittsburgh February Theater Guide. Don’t miss it!

Rachel Gita Karp