Overview
ABOUT SOVEREIGNTY
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Mary Kathryn Nagle is an enrolled citizen of the Cherokee Nation and playwright. Her play Sliver of a Full Moon has been performed at law schools across the United States, and she has received commissions from Arena Stage, the Rose Theater, Portland Center Stage, Denver Center for the Performing Arts, Yale Repertory Theatre, Round House Theatre, and the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Sovereignty’s world premiere was at Arena Stage, 2018 and played at Marin Theatre Company, 2019; Manahatta’s world premiere was at Oregon Shakespeare Festival, 2018 and played at Yale Repertory Theatre, 2020. She served as the first Executive Director of the Yale Indigenous Performing Arts Program from 2015 to 2019.
Laurie Woolery is a director/citizen artist who works at theaters across the country including The Public Theater, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Yale Repertory, Trinity Repertory, Cornerstone Theater Company, and South Coast Repertory. Projects include the world premiere of Mary Kathryn Nagle’s Manahatta at both Yale Repertory and Oregon Shakespeare Festival and the world premiere musical of As You Like It co-created with Shaina Taub for the Public Theater. Laurie develops new work with diverse communities ranging from incarcerated women to residents of a Kansas town devastated by a tornado. She creates site-specific work ranging from a working sawmill in Eureka to the banks of the Los Angeles River. Currently, Laurie is the Director of Public Works at The Public Theater, former Associate Artistic Director of Cornerstone Theater Company and Conservatory Director at South Coast Repertory. Laurie is a founding member of The Sol Project and a 2020 United States Artist recipient.
TFANA acknowledges the Indigenous communities who tended to this land long before it was named Brooklyn. We stand by their descendants who endure repeated, often violent, efforts to remove Tribal Nations from their homes and suppress their languages and culture. Specifically, we would like to honor the Lenape and Carnarsie People, on whose ancestral homeland Polonsky Shakespeare Center is built. We make a commitment to rethink the stories we tell about our history and our sacred connection to each other.
TFANA’s digital programming is made possible by the Theatre’s Recovery and Revival Fund, which was established to alleviate the economic impact of COVID-19 on the Theatre, support its digital programming, productions, arts in education programs in the New York City Public Schools, the artists who are at the center of all we do, and ensure the safety of all who enter Polonsky Shakespeare Center. To support the fund, please click the link below.