If
you thought that all great playwrights of the past were men, Lynn Marie Macy
would like a word with you. The actor, playwright, director, and theatre
historian will portray the eighteenth-century playwright Olympe de Gouges in
The Theater Project’s production of Lauren Gunderson’s The Revolutionists,
July 11-21 in West Orange, as part of Luna Stage's summer sublet program. Olympe
de Gouges (1748 –1793) was a French playwright and political
activist. She is best known for her writings on women’s rights and the
abolition of slavery. Macy’s
connection to De Gouges goes far beyond that of an actor to a role. She has
long been fascinated with women playwrights of past eras such as De
Gouges, who impressed her as “a woman ahead of her time” and “a
visionary.” Macy points out that not only did De Gouges write at least thirty
plays, she was also a political activist who was “fired
up by social justice and wrote extensively on society's ills.” De
Gouges promoted the rights of women, was one of France’s earliest
public opponents of slavery, and even proposed a program very much like
social security. Macy’s dedication to preserving the work of historical women
playwrights once led her to directing one of De Gouges’ plays, making it even
more striking that she will now portray the oft overlooked eighteenth century
female dramatist in a play by the current and widely produced feminist
dramatist Lauren Gunderson.
 As
an actor, Macy most recently appeared as Queen Alonsa in The Tempest
with Theater 2020 in NYC. She is also a Jane Austen fan and has adapted
two of the author’s works for the stage, most notably Northanger
Abbey, A Romantic Gothic Comedy, which had productions in New
York City and California. She is an active member of The Theater Project
Playwrights Group and a Resident Playwright at Theater 2020. And she is especially proud
of her role as Associate Producer and Resident Director of the On Her
Shoulders program at New Perspectives Theatre Company, a reading series
and database that celebrates the 1000-year history of women's
contribution to the theatrical cannon.The Revolutionists is a
comedy about four women living boldly through the French Revolution.
Playwright Olympe De Gouge, assassin Charlotte Corday, former queen Marie
Antoinette, and Haitian rebel Marianne Angelle hang out, murder Marat, lose
their heads, and try to beat back the extremist insanity in revolutionary
Paris. It is part of The Theater Project’s 2024 Summer Season, which
marks the thirtieth anniversary of the company. |