The Writing Life: An Interview with Mark Perry
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By Paul Newell
An
interview column on NCPA (North Carolina Playwrights Alliance) members.
(Taken from the NCPA Newsletter, April 2006 edition)
At age
35, Mark Perry has worked professionally as an actor, a playwright, a
director, a teacher, and a producer. His play A Dress for Mona and
his one man show On the Rooftop have toured to or been produced in
roughly 40 cities, combined. In 2005, he was awarded an NC Arts Council
Playwriting Fellowship, and for the last few years has been a playwright
in residence for the NCTAE Playworks Program in Wake County schools, as
well as a visiting lecturer teaching playwriting at UNC, Chapel Hill.
Anyone who knows Mark or his work is aware that he approaches theater from
a decidedly spiritual perspective. And in talking with him, one thing
becomes clear: When it comes to the potential of playwriting to affect
lives in positive ways, especially young lives, the man is a believer.

Mark Perry in his one-man show, On the Rooftop with Bill Sears
PN: Mark, I know from seeing On the Roof Top
and reading about A Dress for Mona that your work is heavily informed by
your beliefs as a Baha’i. What would you say are the main things about
the faith that attracted you to it?
MP: Well, I’d have to say it’s the belief that all religions are valid,
that no one faith is above or better than any other one. For me, it raises
the question, what about all the other people out there? I mean, if there
is a God, would he send his messengers through just one faith or one
people and one time, or all faiths and all peoples, and many times?
PN: You know there are some who would call that blasphemy.
MP: Sure, but I think as the human story shows pretty clearly, it’s when
we think our way is right, our answers are right, or our needs come
first, and everything else comes second that we get into trouble. So it
isn’t a matter of thinking Baha’i is better. That would be going against.
PN: What would you say it shares in common with other faiths?
MP: Baha’is believe that we are fundamentally spiritual beings going
through a human, material experience, and how we deal with that
experience has consequences for us in the next life, which makes it a lot
alike other world religions, in that sense.
PN: You’ve said that you were first exposed to Baha’i at an early age
through your stepfather. Was it an easy transition for you?
MP: Not at all. Any religion means there’s going to be boundaries and
borders on you. And as a teenager you certainly don’t want that! (laughs).
But then when I went to Africa for six months on a youth service project.
It really opened my eyes to the idea that where I’d come from, America,
was not the end all and be all of thought. My time in the Kalahari
Desert, encountering African Baha’is in the villages there—it was amazing.
PN: How would you say your faith informs your writing?
MP: Well, I can’t remove it from me, but I’m certainly interested in
stories that are not explicitly Baha’i. No, I’m not interested in taking
kitchen sink drama to its natural conclusion, but I am interested in
probing how different cultures view each other, how people negotiate this
material world we’re in, how and why people have conflicted spiritual
understandings or purposes, this kind of thing.
PN: In On the Rooftop you have the main character, Bill Sears, a performer
from the 1950s. Just as television is just taking off and he’s looking at
a very successful future with his children’s show, he has this faith
calling, and it’s turning everything upside down in terms of his life
priorities. It’s seems like a prime example.
MP: Yes, it’s all based on a real person. It’s about someone dealing with
that crossroads moment—is he going to go with the path of least resistance
and do the financially secure, socially acceptable thing, or is he going
act on a higher need he’s being confronted by. For me, it’s the kind of
real dilemma I think we all face at some point in our lives, in one way or
another. It’s what I want to get on stage, but I’m not a master at doing
it yet, Paul. I’m really not.
PN: Why do you say that?
MP: Well, it’s a moral dilemma and that’s very uncomfortable territory for
a lot of playwrights. Moral plays can all too easily be boring plays. But
I know there’s drama there. It’s just a matter of finding a form to tell
it in.
PN: What are some examples of plays with strong moral themes that you
think are successful?
MP: I’d say Arthur Miller’s plays. Death of a Salesman—this idea of a man
at the end of his life who has to deal with the fact that he’s lied his
way through his life. We don’t want to be like Willy Loman, just like in a
somewhat similar way, we don’t want to be Scrooge. And there are examples
from Chekhov and Shakespeare, certainly. Any play that’s sincere with its
subject can have moral overtones.
PN: And what about spiritual overtones?
MP: Well, that’s the thing I often found missing. What about the people
that are dealing with spiritual issues? What about people like me? I think
there are more people in the world who are like me in this sense with than
who are not. But it wasn’t a viewpoint I was seeing in plays and that’s
one of the reasons I wanted to be a playwright.
PN: Let me ask you about your experience as a playwriting teacher. Among
other things, for the last few years you’ve been involved in Playworks.
What’s that all about?
MP: Well it’s a program that NCPA and NCTAE (North Carolina Theater Arts
Educators) have put together with support from the NC Arts Council. It
puts playwrights in high schools or middle schools for three-week periods.
The idea is to work with kids as they develop their own plays. Pieces are
selected for a school-wide showing, then a county-wide showing. And
finally, nine plays from around the state are chosen for a festival that
UNC Greensboro produces.
PN: You’ve been in the Wake County schools. How has that been?
MP: It’s been pretty amazing. You come in as the outsider, as this
“playwright,” and you ask the kids to do these simple exercises and
because you’re this new guy coming in, they go along with it. And some
wonderful things come out of it. Sometimes they’re spitting out the latest
TV garbage, but more often it’s very personal, funny, dramatic stuff. You
know how powerful playwriting can be, Paul, I don’t mean as therapy, but
in the sense of getting these kids heard, as opposed to telling them where
to go and what to do all the time.
PN: I know you think that this is one of the more important areas for NCPA
to be focusing on. Why?
MP: We should be looking towards the future in playwriting. Folks are
getting older. No matter how hard we try to affect our usual audiences,
they’re already grown. But kids are trying to find out who they are. This
is why a program like Playworks is so crucial. Transformation happens with
these kids, Paul. I’ve seen it happen. It’s like they’re awakened to their
underlying nature, which is a creative nature, which is an intelligent,
expressive nature. It’s wonderful! Our work when we’re not writing should
really be about raising up these kids up to express themselves through
theater. Theater is unique that way. You don’t need a lot of money to do
it. There should be a Playworks program in every school.
PN: Is there anything you’d like to say to the NCPA members?
MP: Well, I think NCPA is great, just in the fact that it exists. The
thing about playwrights is that we long for that alone time to do our
writing. And for those of you who are committing and keeping NCPA going,
I’d say you’re either avoiding your writing or your sacrificing some of it
for the benefit of all, and if that’s the case, because nothing goes
forward without some sacrifice, you’re all going to be blessed in all the
worlds of God for doing it. (laughs)
