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RADIOTHEATRE’s H.P. Lovecraft Festival 3: A New Kind Of Classic Ancient Horror Storytelling

by Stephen Tortora-Lee on May 1, 2012

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Lovecraft Festival

Lovecraft Festival (Photos by Aaron Pachesa Photography)

THE OLDEST and strongest emotion of mankind is fear,

and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.  

- H.P. Lovecraft, Supernatural Horror In Literature

When I think of Howard Phillips (H.P.) Lovecraft’s Weird Stories I think of very intelligent people, facing the unknown. An unknown that is not known for a reason, as if we as human beings had evolved a blindspot to these things in order to protect our sanityand allow us to keep functioning as a society – especially after the world turns out to be different than we had ever imagined it. The truly alien nature of the entities that cross the paths of the protagonists (as opposed to “heroes”, as they rarely have a resounding victory) of these stories reminds us of the fragments of dreams we might have which don’t make sense, but disturb us greatly for reasons we don’t quite understand.

RADIOTHEATRE has taken Lovecraft’s stories in this 3rd edition of their regular Lovecraft Festival, and made them more horrific by performing them as a radio play – where we are forced to believe the unbelievable because the story is being told to us aloud – instead of just letting us process the strange visions of Lovecraft only in our heads.  Unlike most of Lovecraft’s stories, which are generally written in the style of a tortured lone soul chronicling his story, the tales being told are split into 3 voices (or in the case of The Horror On Martin’s Beach, a town) so there is always someone we can truly connect and sympathize with – even as the monstrous consumes them (and us) with fear.

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Playwright Eric Sanders Explains It All

by Karen Tortora-Lee on January 28, 2009

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Eric Sanders is many things: a prolific playwright, a producer, and a lover of the horror genre.  With his upcoming play, The Wendigo, he takes the old tale written by Algernon Blackwood and brings it to the stage.  I sat down to talk with him about his career, his upcoming play, and his thoughts on theatre.

KTL: Eric, thanks for taking some time to chat with me today.  Before we get into your latest play, The Wendigo, I wanted to talk about DEWEY’S NIGHTMARE: The Library Play Challenge which was a process where people were blindfolded, set loose in a library, had to pick a book at random and then had one week to come up with a play based on the book.  Your play was called Mangina.  I have to ask, was it about what it sounds like it’s about?

ES: The cool thing about doing Dewey’s Nightmare is that the books were all random and very arcane, really one-of-a-kind books.  I wound up getting a yearbook from a small New Jersey State School from 1982 and I had to write a play based on it.  I was trying to just absorb it all … and I saw a picture of this sad looking girl, sort of looking off into the distance.  On another page there was this picture of a jock.  I just pictured the two of them having an end-of-year conversation about a failed relationship.  The twist is that he’s a hermaphrodite.

How that came out of seeing those two photos, I don’t know.  I’d be horrified if they saw the play!  Not that they would ever know it was based on their pictures.  So yeah, that’s what Mangina is.

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