It's hard to believe, but Philadelphia's
First Person Arts Festival -- a twelve-day-long theater gala known as "the only festival in the world dedicated to memoir and documentary art" -- is about to enter its thirteenth year.
The festival will run November 4 through 15 at four separate venues throughout the city; a portion of the schedule was released last week. The true-life stories shared onstage will come not just from prominent local performers, but also from a number of bold-name celebrities.
Actor
Kathryn Erbe of
Law and Order: Criminal Intent, for instance, will take part in an onstage reading of Eugene O'Neill's "Long Day’s Journey into Night," culminating in a frank audience discussion of themes germane to the play's content.
Yowei Shaw, who produces the year-old FPA
podcast, will present a live performance. The Obie Award-winning playwright
Dael Orlandersmith will stage a reading of her recent memoir, and celebrity chef
Marcus Samuelsson will host a dinner featuring recipes from his latest cookbook.
In short, as FPA executive director Jamie Brunson puts it, "There’s no other festival out there quite like it."
When Vicki Solot founded FPA in 2000, "she saw the rising interest in memoir and documentary art as a way to foster appreciation among diverse communities for our shared experiences," explains Brunson. Throughout FPA's history, "the festival has always had [a sense of] consciousness about it," she adds.
Visit the
FPA website for scheduling updates -- Brunson promises a few surprises as the festival date draws nearer -- and to purchase tickets once they become available.
Writer: Dan Eldridge
Source: Jamie J. Brunson, First Person Arts