Friday Apr 19

AlexanderMaggio Alexander Maggio is a recent graduate of UCLA’s School of Theater, Film and Television. LOST CAUSE, his M.F.A. thesis play, is a 2011-12 Alliance Theatre/Kendeda National Graduate Playwriting Competition Finalist.  His one-act plays have been featured in Aspen, New York, Santa Cruz, Houston, and Los Angeles.  B.A., Yale University.  More here.
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Alexander Maggio interview, with Kathleen Dennehy


What inspired you to write a play about 'living historians'- also known as Civil War re-enactors?
 
I’ve always been fascinated by the Civil War, but the real trigger was reading Tony Horwitz’s epic travelogue Confederates in the Attic.  Horwitz embedded with hardcore re-enactors on a Civil “wargasm” all over the South. Up until that point, I had no idea that grown men would spoon each-other in the dark as way of paying homage to a conflict that ended a hundred and fifty years ago. There’s something both endearing and disturbing about that kind of commitment, and I knew immediately it was a world I wanted to explore.
 

Have you ever been to a re-enactment?
 
I haven’t been to any battlefield re-enactments, but I have a vivid memory of a woman at Gettysburg interpreting the story of a nurse.  After the battle, she comforted a dying man by pretending to be his mother.  I was probably eight or nine at the time, but that story stuck with me, and formed the basis of Amy’s character in the play.
 

Do you see the re-enactors as people who are doomed to keep re-living the South's loss in the hopes that someday they might figure it out and  'win' the war?
 
There aren’t any pretensions of ‘winning,’ but I think some hope that by mourning and consecrating the Southern cause, they can preserve a positive narrative about the Confederacy.  They want that loss to mean something.
 

Or is it that you have an affection/interest in people who enjoy assuming identities of others- much in the way people do in Dungeons & Dragons?
 
I fall more in line with this point of view.  It’s hard not to love re-enactors; they’re imaginative and passionate and unafraid.  Personally, I prefer hiding in my room with my imagination, so I admire anyone who lives out their imagination in public.
 

Since you answered that you were more intrigued by the moral character of certain Southerners in their attempts to romanticize the Southern side of the war, what are your thoughts on the political implications of that?
 
The Sons of Confederate Veterans actually pledge allegiance to the United States of America before saluting the Confederate flag.  There’s nothing wrong with acknowledging positive elements of Southern society, but I do think that it’s fundamentally dishonest to pretend that the Confederacy didn’t exist for the sole of purpose of leaving the United States.  If you want to remember history, you have to accept all of it.  The good and bad.  You can’t pick and choose.
 

Clearly you did your Civil War research. Are you a research hungry writer, in that you like to find the restrictions in what is factually accurate or do you use research as a leaping off point to let your imagination fill in the blanks?
 
This is going to sound really weird, but research is actually my favorite part of any writing project.  I get to immerse myself in an exciting, meticulously detailed world. Sometimes it’s hard for me to start writing, because I’m afraid what I create won’t hold a candle to the real thing.  Of course at a certain point you have to let go.  Stories are driven by character choices, and characters are necessarily a creation of the imagination.  But those details definitely help me access the characters when I write.
 

Are you in any way a Civil War buff or were you mainly fascinated with people who have a strange fascination with the Civil War?
 
I’m definitely a buff.  Like a lot of little boys, I was fascinated with military history.  But my mother is from Massachusetts, and my father is from Texas, so it was probably inevitable that the Civil War would become my favorite.
 

The character of Connor is intriguing in that he may or may not be a deeply closeted gay man OR he's just someone determined to revere the past in ways that aren't exactly conducive to his mental health. What is your intention with the character of Connor? I ask as he is the only character in the play who isn't exactly redeemed or changed at the end of the play.
 
I wanted to use Conor to explore some of the contradictions inherent in Confederate politics.  When people dress up in costume, all sorts of things that are normally unacceptable suddenly become feasible.  Conor is deeply closeted, but when he’s re-enacting, he can rationalize homosexual relationships between soldiers as “historically authentic.” It’s no coincidence that Conor also sees no problem with running a minority outreach program for the Sons of Confederate veterans.  He can’t sort out where his own desires end and the truth begins, and that makes him dangerous.
 

Is this your first full-length play?
 
Lost Cause is my third full-length creation. It is, however, my first comedy.
 

What inspired you to become a playwright?
 
We experience the world through dialogue.  We don’t have close-ups or voice-over or omniscient narration. I think of all the mediums out there, theater is the one that most closely resembles real life.
 

Did you outline the play first?
 
Not really.  I just wound up the pieces and then watched them go.  Later on, I went back and developed a more coherent architecture.
 

What else are you working on?
 
I just finished a play called Perverse Incentive, a revenge story set in an obscure corner of the securities market called “traded life policies.”  Next, I’m hoping to write a play about the Pullman Strike of 1894.  It has some exciting parallels to the Occupy Wall Street movement, so I’m excited to sink my teeth into that.
 

Who are playwrights that influence or inspire you?
 
Sarah Treem was my first playwriting teacher and probably remains my greatest influence.  I’ve always been moved by her ability to probe complex moral issues with depth and accuracy. I like David Wiener and Stephen Karam for similar reasons; they’re playwrights who aren’t afraid to chase the big idea.
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KathleenDennehy Drama Editor Kathleen Dennehy is a NYU Tisch School of the Arts graduate who studied with John Guare, David Mamet, Anne Bogart. She is an essayist/performer: Sit N' Spin, Book Soup, Hatch, Tongue and Groove and her essays have been published in Fresh Yarn, Note to Self and Weston Magazine. Kathleen is the Creative Director of Naked Angels' Tuesdays@9 LA - a cold reading workshop for writers and she created the creative writing program at Hillsides, a school for foster and at-risk children. Under contract to re-write a screenplay for Rachel Davidson, at Laura Ziskin, Sony Studios, Kathleen is a writer/editor/consultant and the curator of MNWG- a long running writers group in Los Angeles.



All Connotation Press plays are presented online to the reading public. All performance rights, including professional, amateur, television and the rights of translation into foreign languages are strictly reserved. If you are interested in seeking performance rights to a specific work contact the Drama Editor, Kathleen Dennehy.