Deborah Savadge

FULL LENGTH PLAYS

The Allowance

Drama. 97 minutes. 3W, 2M

Catherine’s son, Tommy, has been nothing but trouble. Since he finished college, his parents and both of his girlfriends have done their best to help him, but they underestimated the extent of his problems. On Christmas Eve, Catherine makes a fateful change in his allowance.

A public reading was planned for March 2020.


Dark at the Center

Drama. 100 minutes. 2W, 3M.

The wife of a philosophy professor at an Ivy League school learns from a reporter that her husband has been arrested for molesting a boy he tutored and for trading in child pornography.  The play deals with the horror and complexities of facing  a serious allegation against someone you love and trust. The play tacitly invites the audience to choose sides a number of times as it unfolds.  Cast of 3 men and 2 women, minimal set requirements.

“My South Coast Repertory colleagues and I admired the way the play delivers the full horror of Jane’s series of experiences – first that her husband would be so accused, then that she would begin to believe that he might have done it, third that she is forced to choose between custody of her son and her marriage, and finally that she might have chosen a pedophile as a spouse. The play twists in the reader’s guts, and never makes the mistake of coming out and telling the reader whether Oliver is guilty.”
—Megan Monaghan, Literary Manager, South Coast Repertory, Costa Mesa, California

“I was truly haunted by it....It's quite a striking play....All kinds of original dramaturgical techniques focus us on perception.  The scenes early on, for instance, between Jane and Oliver that virtually repeat themselves.  Very exciting.  And then the last few pages, where the truth starts to become so much more ambiguous, are really shocking.”
—Austin Pendleton, Actor, Playwright, Director, New York City

“It is a compelling, disturbing, well-written play...A helluva play.”
—Eric Peterson, Artistic Director, Oldcastle Theatre Company, Bennington, Vermont

Winner: The John Golden Playwrighting Prize; Playwrights First Award; NJ TheatreFest Regional Playwriting Contest.
Finalist: The Susan Glaspell Prize; The Woodward/Newman Prize.
Reading: Julia Miles’ Reading Room at Schreiber Studio (Director: John Howard Swain); Centenary Theatre.
Production: Montclair TheatreFest, Montclair, NJ. Director: John Wooten. 


The Dog in the Dressing Room

Romantic Comedy. 85 minutes. 1W, 2M.

In this backstage, romantic comedy, Kira plays an actor who receives the gift of an adorable dog from Joel, the manager of the theatre where she is rehearsing. The unexpected gift upends her relationship with BFF Kevin, who thinks Joel is weird. As Kira grows fonder of Dog, she begins to question her co-dependent relationship with Kevin. Jealousies, games and secrets are uncorked along with the champagne. Guaranteed to make you laugh out loud.

The Dog in the Dressing Room was developed at Playwrights Gallery.


"Games, secrets, old wounds, stalking, a canine, and love play their parts in this smashing comedy....The Dog in the Dressing Room makes for a lovely summer surprise."  Glenda Frank, New York Theatre Wire

World Premiere: The Schoolhouse Theatre, Croton Falls, NY. 2018. Director: Bram Lewis. 
Publication: Monologue in Best Men's Monologues of 2018, Smith & Kraus


Falling Hard

Drama. 90 minutes. 3W, 2M.
 
Mr. D, a charismatic high school history teacher, is in trouble with Fran Royce, the principal, for playing favorites and for being “too friendly” with some of his students. Ignoring Dr. Royce’s warnings, he attempts to help Katie, a cheerleader, who has a crush on him and needs to escape an abusive relationship at home.  The senior class Washington trip reveals secrets and lies. Who will fall hard on Prom Night? And who's in for a hard fall?

Falling Hard was developed at Playwrights Gallery. An invitational reading is scheduled for late September, 2018.


Everything I’ve Got

Drama. 100 minutes. 3W, 1M.

A modern Gaslight. Lacey, a vulnerable young woman, lives with her wealthy grandmother in a Manhattan townhouse. She falls in love with Jahar, who rouses Nana’s suspicions. Jahar is well served by Rika, who agrees to pose as his sister.  Is Jahar slowly poisoning Nana? Jahar’s cons seem about to unravel when he and Rika abscond. Lacey’s pursuit of Jahar reveals a secret closer to home. 

Everything I've Got was developed at Playwrights Gallery.

Reading: Betsy’s Place, New York City. 


Addis Tarkington

Drama. 95 minutes. 2W, 2M.
 

Addis Tarkington is a successful historian. He is also a plagiarist and a fraud who cheats his way to success. The play centers on his relationship with his daughter, Cress, who learns of his transgressions and faces a decision: Should she expose her father or be part of a cover-up? 

The play begins with Cress Tarkington, daughter of famous Viet Nam War historian, Dr. Addis Tarkingon, speaking to an audience about her father. In flashback, we meet Addis, who is as much of a rock star as a scholar/historian can be. In scenes with his daughter and his assistant, he is revealed to be a plagiarist. Blumenson, Nadal and Kelegian are three minor historians from whom he has, as he says, “borrowed.” Slate, The New Yorker and NPR, in turn, out him, and we watch the effect this has on him and on his family. Daughter Cress and assistant, Jared, take up with one another and join forces to thwart Addis’ efforts to portray his offenses as “editing errors.” His wife, Nora, for years his best ally, leaves him. Jared and Cress produce a memoir that portrays Addis as both a charmer and a word thief. Cress and Jared’s direct addresses are revealed to be presentations to an audience of book buyers. Although the newly successful young authors attempt to make up with Addis, he snubs them.  Addis spirals downward. In a flashback, Addis is shown as a Phd. candidate, pleading with an academic committee for lenience, after being caught in an act of plagiarism.  Nora and Cress embrace at a memorial service for Addis.

Readings: Manhattan Theatre Club Studios; The Drilling Company; Julia Miles’ Reading Room.


Calling the Tune

Darkly Comic Drama. 89 minutes. 2W, 1M.

Greed. Loss. Envy. Aging. Family. Brother and sister clash over custody of JJ, their elderly mother…and her money. Based on an actual custody dispute between the son and daughter of an elderly, Philadelphia-area woman, Calling the Tune is a darkly comic drama of sibling rivalry. 

Michael wants to help JJ stay in her home in Medford, New Jersey.  When Myra brings her mother to assisted living in Houston, Texas, a battle ensues. Both would like to inherit a tidy sum. JJ has her own ideas, but by favoring her son over her daughter, she inflames an already fraught situation. And are her memory problems, ordinary age markers? Or is she sliding toward dementia?

Calling the Tune was developed at Playwrights Gallery.  

Readings: Julia Miles’ Reading Room; Center Stage, New York City; Playing With Food, Penguin Rep (Director: Joe Brancato); NuVoices; Berkshire Festival of Women Writers, Pittsfield, Mass; and others.


The Puppets’ Kitchen

Comic-Drama. 93 minutes. 2W, 1M.

Quinn, a struggling actor and stand-up comedian, and his wife, Lily, a fledgling television chef, meet Mia, an agent who seems at first to be their fairy godmother.  Mia conflates clients with family, driving a wedge between husband and wife. The young couple is further threatened by the arrival of a new housemate. Puppets Kitchen, takes on the uses and misuses of power, love and loyalty, and the strains of being an artist. Puppets – real and imagined – take part.

"The Puppets' Kitchen has the added Wow factor of its puppets—which can be elaborate or simple, but however they are fashioned, they will add surprise and theatricality to a surprising and theatrical script."  
—Janice Maffei, Literary Manager, The Schoolhouse Theater

“This is a wonderful play!”
—Lawrence Harbison, Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle

"Fine work. A captivating read. A page-turner. As with [Savadge's] previous work, we were compelled by the uniquely drawn characters and the ease with which [Savadge] intoxicates us into entering [her] world. The puppets provided an added and intriguing layer of theatricality."
—John Wooten, Producing Artistic Director, Premiere Stages


Death's Door

Thriller. 99 minutes. 3W, 3M.

Jeanna and her attorney husband, Gil, are awaiting the birth of their first child when they discover that their across-the-hall neighbor in their Manhattan apartment has been murdered. Did the killer intend to kill Gil? They escape to the country, but they are pursued.

Reading: Miranda Theatre Company.
Workshop: Resonance Theatre Company.


State of the Art

A Stylish Backstage Comedy. 99 minutes. 2W, 2M.

Four actors go on the road: One on a high horse. One on the fast track. One on the wagon. One hanging on for the ride. Will Boy get Girl? Will the show move to Broadway? Will the glamorous leading lady find happiness...as a character actress? In a comic love letter to the theatre, actors seek love and find work.

Readings: Tri-State Actors Theatre of New Jersey, Resonance Theatre.
Publication: Monologue in Best Women's Monologues of 2018, Smith & Kraus


When Danny Comes Back for Us

An End-of-the-World Comic Drama. 97 minutes. 2W, 2M.

Two New York couples are weekending on an island off the coast of Maine in the shadow of lurking calamity. The play begins at the end of their holiday when the foursome discovers that something is terribly wrong. Flashback: to their arrival and to explore the ways in which they squander their emotional and physical resources in the days and nights that follow. Secrets are revealed.  

When Danny Comes Back For Us was developed at Playwrights Gallery in New York City. 

Readings: The Drilling Company for the League of Professional Theatre Women’s 30 Plays for 30 Years Festival (Director: Elaine Molinaro); The Cell Theatre (Director: Kira Simring).


Love and Work

Comedy. 90 minutes. 2W, 2M.

A collection of a dozen short inter-connected comedies for a cast of four.

Production: Woodstock Theatre Company (Starring: Melissa Hurst, Stephen Bradbury, Susan Greenhill and Jed Peterson).


Exit Wounds

Interconnected One-Acts. 80 minutes. 1M, 1W of middle age.

The Great Man
The Fall
Couple of Geckos
The Other Part
Grapes Business
For Old Times’ Sake
In the Game
What Next?


OTHER FULL LENGTH PLAYS:


Mad, Bad and Dangerous To Know
A Love Supreme
King’s Gambit



SHORT PLAYS


When We Get Her Home

Drama. 15 minutes. 1W, 1M.

Lynd returns to her hotel room in Changsha, China, to learn from her husband that the toddler they are adopting has disappeared.

Winner: Best Play, Audience Favorite, and Best Actor at The Turnip Festival at The American Globe. 
Productions:
The Drilling Company's Happiness Festival; Turnip Festival at American Globe, Parish Players, Thetford, Vermont.


The Edge of the Forest

Comic Drama. 30 minutes. 3W.

When Zina decides that it’s a good last day for her dotty mother, she packs a basket. Her sister just wants some of the poppy seed cake.

Productions: Woodstock Theatre Festival, Chip DeFaa Theatre Festival, Manhattan TheatreSource.


Are You Drowning? 

Comic Drama. 30 minutes. 1W, 1M.

Laurie and Greg have been married five years, a second marriage for each.  At their vacation condo, they bicker and feud and play tricks on each other. The games escalate. And who knows the rules?


After the Bows

Drama. 25 minutes. 2W, 1M.

It’s closing night for two actors who have just ended a successful run in a production of Miss Julie. Jules believes Jon is the love of her life, but for Jon their affair was just a showmance. A third character, Kristine, spins the evening in a different direction.

Winner: Audience Favorite, St. Croix Falls Theatre Festival, St. Croix Falls, WI.


The Unravelling: After She Died

Drama. 10 minutes. 3W.

A mother searches for an explanation in the death of her adult daughter, a dancer.  


Wedding March

Drama. 10 minutes. 2W.

A short take on the long trek to the altar and beyond.

Film Adaptation: Wedding March (Director: Nadia Talel). Release date: Fall, 2018.


A Couple of Brownies

Comedy. 10 minutes. 1W, 2M.

Finalist: The Heideman Award, Actors Theatre of Louisville.


The Right Number

Contemporary Romantic Comedy. 10 minutes. 1W, 2M.

Hooking up, telling the truth, and pizza. A comedy that answers the question: What is the real difference between men and women?

Publication: Best Short Plays, Smith & Kraus.
Productions: Cherry Lane Theatre, NYC; American Globe Theatre, NYC.


Dim Sum

Black Comedy. 10 minutes. 2W, 2M.

Publication: Playscripts.
Production: New World Stages.


Playing the Winner

The fifty-first shade of gray. 20 minutes. 1W, 2M.

A young man comes to call for Gwen, who costumes herself for a fairy-tale romance. They plan to escape for an idyllic holiday. Unexpectedly, her husband appears, erratic and menacing. Gwen playfully demands that photographs be taken. The young man urges a quick departure. The play takes a dark turn.

Playing the Winner was developed at Playwrights Gallery.

Reading: Pittsburgh New Works Festival


The Favor

Drama. 15 minutes. 2W, no longer young.

It seems like a glorious day at the beach to Suze, but Daisy’s plan will change that.

The Favor was developed with the guidance of Austin Pendleton.

Productions: DFAP, Dubuque, Iowa; American Globe, NYC; Parish Theatre, Thetford, VT.
Finalist: The Turnip Festival at American Globe Theatre.


Mood Indigo

An Unromantic Comedy. 10 minutes. 2M, 2W.

A trio of musicians await the arrival of the singer. She has a surprise.

Reading: The Drilling Company.
Finalist: The Heideman Award, Actors Theatre of Louisville.
Production: Whiskey Radio Hour, Chicago, August, 2018.


The Grapes Business

Backstage Comedy. 10 minutes. 1W, 1M.

The leading lady demands that her co-star promise never to do that thing with the grapes during the key, pivotal scene of the play, ever again.

Productions: Delaware Water Gap Jazz Festival,  Woodstock Theatre Company Benefit Byrdcliffe, Woodstock, NY.


Not Really

Comic Drama. 7 minutes. 2W, teenagers.

Publication: Best Short Plays for Teenagers, Smith & Kraus.


After Words

A Black-Tie Comedy. 10 minutes. 1M, 1W.

Reading: The Astaire Awards Benefit.
Production: The Old Church Theatre, Branford, VT.


The Other Part

Drama. 10 minutes. 1W, 1M.

The Other Part was developed at Playwrights Gallery and with the guidance of Austin Pendleton.

Production: Parish Theatre, Thetford, VT (Starring: Faith Catlin).


Rise Up

Political Comedy. 10 minutes. 1W, 1M.

A couple discovers that Donald Trump is president and urges the audience to Rise Up.

Rise Up was developed at Schoolhouse in the City.

Production: Irondale Theatre Festival, Brooklyn, NY (Starring: Ginger Grace, James Pendergast)


For Old Times' Sake

An Unromantic Comedy. 1M, 2W.


OTHER SHORT PLAYS


After the Lights Are Out
Airport
Applaud Our Sport
Aren’t You Dying to Get Out of Here?
At First We Were Friends
At the Window
Best Offer
A Break in the Rehearsal
Breakfast to Madness

Couple of Geckos
The Fall

Hot Milk
In the Game

Jiggity Jig
Just Desserts

Kate and El
Objects in Mirror May Be Closer Than They Appear
PTA Mums
Quintin and Charlean
The Robot and the Scientist

Same Difference

Suffize It to Say
Three Women at the Doma
Touch My Neck

What Am I Saying?

What You Wish
Why Do You Always Bring That Up?


WORKS IN PROGRESS


Middlemarch

An adaptation of the classic novel by Mary Ann Evans (AKA George Eliot).


And Then I Lost It

A collection of monologues for three women.