The Prison Studies Group
presents:
Theater Behind Bars:
A conversation with Brent Buell
Thursday,
April 7 at 4:30pm – GC Room 5409
CUNY
Graduate Center · 365 Fifth Avenue · NY NY 10016
Theater
producer and director Brent Buell volunteered for ten years with the non-profit
organization Rehabilitation Through the Arts, directing theater in several New
York medium- and maximum-security prisons. There his productions of plays,
ranging from John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men to three original works by
prisoners, have earned praise from critics, including from The New York
Times. His Breakin’ the Mummy’s Code premiered at Sing Sing
and was the subject of a feature article in Esquire by bestselling
author, John Richardson. His experiences provided the basis for his
chapter “Drama in the Big House” in the book Performing New Lives, Prison
Theater by Jonathan Shailor.
A
passionate prison activist, Buell has used theater to educate people about the
more than 2.5 million human beings this nation has locked behind bars. He
took the creative and directorial helm on From Sing Sing to Broadway,
which premiered at Playwrights Horizons in NYC—starring eight men who had been
incarcerated. He teamed with three former prisoners to write and produce Wood
Bars for the opening of John Buffalo Mailer and Tom Kail’s Back House
Productions.
He is
currently directing Iyaba Ibo Mandingo’s unFRAMED. His company, Doing Life
Productions is co-producing the show with Double Play Connections and TONY
Award-winning executive producer, Jane Dubin. Website: http://www.unFRAMEDthePlay.com.
Brent will
be speaking about his experiences as a prison volunteer, will show clips from
some of the films he’s made inside prisons, and will address current issues
facing prison reform activists. He says, “I love theater. I think
that it is one of the most powerful forces for social change that exists.
For ten years I’ve witnessed how magnificently theater—just theater, no
therapy, no sociodrama, no psychological agendas—can touch and renew the human
spirit—even in the darkest of prisons. It’s the greatest single gift my
art has given me. I am sure that other approaches have their place, but
for me the process of theater is all that is needed to touch and begin to
transform anyone.”
The Prison
Studies Group is a chartered organization of the Doctoral Student Council at
the CUNY Graduate Center. To join the listserv, please email prisonstudiesgroup@gmail.com.