Public Obscenities

Pre-Order   Ships Sep 24, 2024
Product Details
Price
$16.95  $15.76
Publisher
Theatre Communications Group
Publish Date
Pages
144
Dimensions
0.0 X 0.0 X 0.0 inches | 0.0 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781636702001

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About the Author

Shayok Misha Chowdhury is a writer and director based in Brooklyn. His play Public Obscenities, which he also directed, premiered in the spring of 2023 at Soho Rep in a co-commission with NAATCO. Misha was also awarded a Jonathan Larson Grant for his body of work writing musicals with composer Laura Grill Jaye; their most recent collaboration, How the White Girl Got Her Spots and Other 90s Trivia was awarded the 2022 Relentless Award.

Chowdhury is the creator of VICHITRA, a series of sound-driven, cinematic experiments, including Englandbashi, The Other Other, An Anthology of Queer Dreams, and In Order to Become, which he is developing into a live Carnatic opera.


Chowdhury is also a poet whose work has been published in The Cincinnati Review, Hayden's Ferry Review, Asian American Literary Review, Lantern Review and elsewhere. He has taught and directed at Stanford University, Brown University, New York University, California Institute of the Arts, Fordham University, Syracuse University, University of the Arts, Hunter College, Carnegie-Mellon University, and Williams College.

Reviews

"It is a testament to Shayok Misha Chowdhury's gifts as a writer that he is able to evoke as many themes, histories and possibilities as he does in Public Obscenities, and leave his audience not dazed or frustrated, but longing for even more... Chowdhury is a writer with great promise who, with Public Obscenities, may have found himself on the brink of greatness.." --New York Times

"An absolute stunner." --The Wrap

"One can walk away from Public Obscenities having experienced it not as a story but as the everyday texture of the characters' lives, and the thick tapestry of themes that Chowdhury weaves around them-- - about the difficulty of communicating and of love, about the struggles to overcome strictures of caste and gender and sexuality, about memory and loss, longing and belonging." --New York Theater