The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Best-voting-prov-2010

Adam Bock is a good listener

Talking the talk
By BILL RODRIGUEZ  |  December 19, 2008

 

 Bock_main
"I'M ALWAYS MANIPULATING LANGUAGE," SAID BOCK. 

When Adam Bock first came to Providence in the late '80s, after a friend told him there was this great playwriting teacher at Brown, he was busting with unstoppable aspiration. When Paula Vogel told him he had to start by studying acting and proving his writing skills, he agreed and eventually was accepted into her MFA writing program.

Theatre Review: The Receptionist

No, it's never been easy to discourage Bock. For example, in his third-grade Montreal classroom, he was cast as one of the oompa loompas in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

"I was not happy with that," he confesses, chatting animatedly at Trinity Rep before a rehearsal of The Receptionist. "So I went home and made my own version of James and the Giant Peach and made myself James. So we had two sort of rival theater companies in my third- and fourth-grade classes."

After that coup, the rest of his career might sound anti-climactic. The first play of Bock's that received serious attention was a decade ago, when an unknown in San Francisco; Swimming In the Shallows beat out plays from Berkeley Rep and ACT for a Bay Area best play award, though staged in a tiny, 50-seat gay basement theater, Theatre Rhinoceros. That primed the pump for further awards and successes. Moving to New York, where he now lives, his 2006 play Thugs won an Obie and paved the way for two plays to be staged there last year. Bock has written 13 so far. He is still going strong. Major Hollywood producer Scott Rudin is having him write a screenplay, the subject yet to be decided.

Bock, 47, is not sure why he stuck with plays rather than other kinds of writing. "I would try to write poetry, and I was a very bad poet. And I got exhausted writing fiction — because it's too long, you have to say everything."

But with plays you don't even have to bother saying "he said" and "she said." And besides: "I like spoken language. I'm very interested in that."

That fascination was locked in for good at a semester-long workshop after college (Bowdoin) at the O'Neill Theater Center, in Connecticut. "Anna Deavere Smith came in and taught us for three days," Bock says. "So that's where I first got interested in language, because she explained how she was capturing language by taping it and then playing it back through herself. She learned how to notate it so she could always come out the way it sounded. I got really charged up."

Paying close attention to how people talk, he began to notice how spoken language is so different from most talk on a page. "So many plays, I think, are actually written language that then the actor has to break up into their own pauses, or move through language to make it sound like spoken language?" he explains with a rising inflection that makes the observation sound like a question. "But what I'm interested in is what are the starts and stops of real language, and if I put them in to create drama, if there is a moment of drama, what happens to language? If I'm yelling at you, it doesn't come out sounding like a big speech, it comes out like a garbled mess — but you still understand the speech. That interests me very much."

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Behind closed doors, Rock n' Roll saves the day, Three-ring circus, More more >
  Topics: Theater , Entertainment, Culture and Lifestyle, Language and Linguistics,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
HTML Prohibited
Add Comment

Today's Event Picks
ARTICLES BY BILL RODRIGUEZ
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   CLASSIC DRAMA  |  March 17, 2010
    Theater classics are at a significant disadvantage: overfamiliarity.
  •   DOGGING IT  |  March 17, 2010
    There isn't much that's cuter than little doggies, except maybe kittens and babies, but try getting them to parade in a line.
  •   SAWADDEE THAI RESTAURANT  |  March 17, 2010
    Sometimes I think back to when there were no Thai restaurants in Providence.
  •   THE JOY OF RISK  |  March 10, 2010
    The solo performances of Michael Moschen have many elements to them: dance movement, juggling, theater, pantomime, the balancing and acrobatic skills of a circus artist, the illusion-making craft of a magician.
  •   PULLING THE STRINGS  |  March 10, 2010
    Bourgeois society has always been an easy target because it has always been such a broad one.

 See all articles by: BILL RODRIGUEZ

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2010 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group