Where:
Online event
Admission:
FREE
Categories:
Performing Arts, Social Good, Virtual & Streaming
Event website:
https://24hourplays.com/viral-monologues/
Via Vox:
The 24 Hour Play Festival is a popular event held by theater companies across the world, from Broadway to semi-professional to student-run. It’s something of a creative exercise for both playwrights and actors — a challenge that requires an original piece of theater to be written and performed within a 24-hour time limit.
In the throes of the coronavirus pandemic, however, gathering groups of actors and writers together to perform onstage is definitely a violation of social distancing. Not to mention that Broadway has shut down, as have numerous theaters, arts institutions, and college campuses all over the globe, making collaborative theater projects all but impossible right now.
Which is why the official 24 Hour Play Festival company’s surprise staging of the event is so exciting. From 6 pm Eastern on Tuesday, March 17, until 6 pm Eastern on Wednesday, March 18, the 24 Hour Plays Instagram account will be posting new monologues written by several popular writers and performed by a litany of famous actors. This version of the event is called the Viral Monologues, a series of new monologue that premiere every 15 minutes for the full 24-hour period.
Among the performers involved are David Cross, Hugh Dancy, Rachel Dratch, Tavi Gevinson, Denis O’Hare, and Patrick Wilson. Writers include Rachel Axler (New Girl, Parks and Recreation, Veep), Jesse Eisenberg (whom you may better know as an actor), David Lindsay-Abaire (Pulitzer Prize-winning play Rabbit Hole), and Simon Rich (a humor writer and novelist, and one of this writer’s favorites).
Archives of the performances will be available as saved Highlights posts in 24 Hour Plays’ Instagram Stories, and each one currently runs about three to five minutes in length. They’re all filmed on the actors’ smartphones, presumably from their homes, in keeping with social distancing guidelines; Dratch’s monologue, for example, is a tight close-up on the former Saturday Night Live actress with couch cushions behind her.