Ari Roth


Ari Roth is an American theatrical producer, playwright, director and educator. He is the Artistic Director of the Mosaic Theater Company of DC. From 1997 to 2014 Roth served as the Artistic Director of Theater J at the Washington, D.C. Jewish Community Center. Over 18 seasons, he produced more than 129 productions and created festivals including “Locally Grown: Community Supported Art,” “Voices from a Changing Middle East”, and Theater J's acclaimed "Beyond The Stage" and "Artistic Director's Roundtable" series. In 2010, Roth was named as one of the Forward 50, honoring nationally prominent “men and women who are leading the American Jewish community into the 21st century.”
In December 2014, Roth was dismissed as the Artistic Director of Theater J. Hundreds of noted figures in the world of American theater contested his termination; Tony Kushner called it "an act of political censorship." Specifically, it was said that Roth was fired due to his protesting the DCJCC cancelation of Theater J's “ Voices from a Changing Middle East”. The DCJCC denies that Roth's termination was political. Immediately following his departure from Theater J, Roth founded the Mosaic Theater Company of DC in December 2014.

Life

The son of German-born refugees of the Holocaust, Roth was born and raised in Chicago, where he graduated from the University of Chicago Laboratory High School. He studied playwriting at the University of Michigan with Milan Stitt and Kenneth Thorpe Rowe. Based on his playwriting, he received two Avery Hopwood Awards for Drama, the first in 1981 given by Arthur Miller, a noted UM alum and playwright.
Roth is married to Kate Schecter, the CEO and President of World Neighbors. They have two daughters.

Teaching career

From 1988 to 1997, Roth was a lecturer for the University of Michigan's English and Theater departments, teaching playwriting and dramatic literature. He later taught in the Department of Theater Arts and the Genesis Institute at Brandeis University, and was an adjunct professor at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. Roth has been a visiting professor in the Carnegie Mellon University School of Drama graduate program in Dramatic Writing, and a visiting writer at George Washington University.
Since 2006, Roth has taught a course in political theater in Washington, DC, for University of Michigan’s “Michigan in Washington Program," University of San Francisco's "USFinDC Program" and University of California Berkeley's “Berkeley Washington Program”.

Artistic Director of Theater J

As Artistic Director of Theater J, Roth produced over 129 mainstage productions, including 44 world premieres, and 150 staged workshops and readings. He was credited since taking over in 1997 with leading Theater J to “national prominence as a home for edgy, politically charged plays – and for nurturing risky new works.” The theater is a program of the Washington DCJCC with an Actors' Equity Small Professional Theatre Tier 7 Contract and membership in the League of Washington Theatres, Theater Communications Group, Cultural Alliance, and the Association for Jewish Theatre.
He was described has creating a “rare mix of professional polish, thoughtful dramaturgy and nervy experimentation - all in a spot just far enough off the New York radar for a playwright to relax” has helped to make Theater J the “premier theater for premieres.” It produced new plays ranging from Joyce Carol Oates’s The Tattooed Girl and Wendy Wasserstein’s Welcome to My Rash and Third, to Robert Brustein’s Spring Forward, Fall Back, Neena Beber’s Jump/Cut, and Richard Greenberg's Bal Masque. In addition to season offerings, Roth led Theater J to become known for its discussion programming, Beyond the Stage. Peter Marks has described the Theater J post-show discussion format as “a chance to digest and puzzle out en masse, in an entirely exhilarating way.”

Mosaic Theater Company of DC

Founded by Roth in 2014, Mosaic Theater Company of DC is dedicated to creating independent, intercultural, uncensored, socially relevant art. In 2017, Mosaic received the 2017 John Aniello Award for Outstanding Emerging Theatre Company from the Helen Hayes Awards. Past productions include: Jay O. Sanders’ Unexplored Interior, Motti Lerner's After The War, and Tearrance Chisholm's Hooded, Or Being Black For Dummies, along with the American Premieres of Izzeldin Abuelaish's I Shall Not Hate, Shay Pitovsky and Shahar Pinkhas’ Promised Land, and Hanna Eady and Edward Mast's The Return.

Plays

In 1989 Roth was commissioned by Arena Stage to write a play based on Peter Sichrovsky’s widely acclaimed book of interviews with the children and grandchildren of Nazis. Entitled Born Guilty, Roth's dramatic adaptation follows Sichrovsky as the Austrian Jewish journalist interviews children of Nazi and SS officials.
Born Guilty was first performed in a workshop production at The Scene Shop in June of 1990. The play had its world premiere in 1991 in the 683-seat Arena. It was directed by Arena's Founding Producing Director, Zelda Fichandler, during her 40th season. The play was nominated for the 1992 Helen Hayes/Charles MacArthur Award for Outstanding New Play. It was published by Theater Communications Group's "Plays in Process" imprint that same year.
After further readings at Manhattan Theatre Club, Born Guilty had its Off-Broadway premiere in 1993 at the now-defunct American Jewish Theater. Jack Gelber directed a cast including Zach Grenier, Greg Germann, Lee Wilkof, Victor Slezak, Maggie Burke, Jennie Moreau, and Amy Wright. The New York Times called the play a “searing drama” and the production enjoyed a sold out, extended run.
Born Guilty had its Midwest premiere at Chicago's A Red Orchid Theatre in 1994. The production, directed by Shira Piven, later moved to the Famous Door Theatre Company at Jane Addams Hull House for an extended seven-month run, and received widespread critical praise. Since then, Born Guilty has enjoyed more than 40 national productions and a radio broadcast by L.A. Theatre Works as part of its “Chicago Theatres on the Air” series.
Theater J’s 2002 DC revival of Born Guilty was nominated for the Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Resident Play; the director of the play, John Vreeke, was nominated for Outstanding Director. Excerpts of Born Guilty were featured on WFMT Chicago's The Studs Terkel Program and NPR's All Things Considered. It is featured in The Best Stage Scenes of 1993 and was published by Samuel French, Inc. in 1994.
A sequel to Born Guilty, The Wolf in Peter is based on the political career of Peter Sichrovsky and his controversial partnership with Jörg Haider, leader of the Austrian Freedom Party. In this sequel, we follow the Adapter as he sets off for Europe to discover why Schirovsky would align himself with such a controversial figure as Haider, who is often associated with anti-semitism.
The sequel premiered in 2002, when it was produced in repertory with Born Guilty at Theater J.
The play was developed further at Playwrights Theatre of New Jersey and Jewish Theatre of Austria, and produced in repertory in 2007 at Atlanta's Jewish Theatre of the South. In 2010 it was presented as a staged reading in New York at the Museum of Jewish Heritage by the Epic Theatre Ensemble and directed by Blanka Zizka, artistic director of the Wilma Theatre.
In 2013, Roth debuted a prequel to these two plays, "Andy and The Shadows" at Theater J, in a production directed by Daniella Topol. "Andy" focuses on a young filmmaker, the son of Holocaust refugees on the South Side of Chicago. Set in 1984 and loosely autobiographical, the protagonist grapples with questions of remembrance, history and identity that are touched upon in "Born Guilty" and "The Wolf in Peter." Originally developed as Giant Shadows, the play was recipient of the first Helen Eisner Award for Young Playwrights given by the Streisand Center for Jewish Culture, and presented as a reading at L.A. Theatre Works ; Victory Gardens Theater ; and the American Jewish Theatre. In 1988 Evan Yionoulis directed readings of Giant Shadows for New York Stage and Film and New Arts Theater. A revised version of the play was presented in 2011 as part of The Born Guilty Cycle: A Trilogy for The Theatre Lab in Washington, DC, and read at The National Theater.
These three plays now make up The Born Guilty Cycle: A Trilogy. In 2011 the Theatre Lab presented The Cycle in a student/professional workshop at Washington's National Theatre. Delia Taylor and Shirley Serotsky directed.

Other plays

"Life in Refusal" was first written as a one-act entitled Proverbial Human Suffering, this won the 1988 Helen Eisner Award for Young Playwrights from the Streisand Center for Jewish Culture. The full-length version of Life in Refusal was commissioned by the Foundation for Jewish Culture and premiered in 1988 at Performance Network Theatre in Ann Arbor, Michigan. It had its mainstage debut at Theater J in 2000; Wendy C. Goldberg directed. Life in Refusal was nominated for the Charles MacArthur Award for Outstanding New Play in 2001, and published by Samuel French, Inc. in 2003. It was anthologized in Ellen Schiff and Michael Posnick's 9 Contemporary Jewish Plays.
Oh, The Innocents was first produced as a one-act entitled Private Lessons at the Circle Repertory Company Lab; Michael Greif directed. Its eventual second act was presented as the one-act The New Veil in 1988 at The Ensemble Studio Theatre's OctoberFest. The first full-length version of Oh, The Innocents was produced by GeVa Theatre as part of its 1990 “Reflections: A New Plays Festival.” It won the Clifford Davie Award for New Plays. Joe Mantello directed a cast that included Josh Brolin, Peter Birkenhead, and Cordelia Richards.
Roth made his Washington directorial debut with Theater J's 2004 production of Oh, The Innocents, which included ten new original songs penned by the playwright. Oh, The Innocents is featured in The Best Men’s Stage Monologues of 1990, and was published in 1996 by Samuel French, Inc.
Commissioned by Manhattan Theatre Club with a grant from the National Federation of Jewish Culture in 1994, Goodnight Irene was extensively workshopped at MTC; Victory Gardens Theater; Atlantic Theater Company; HB Playwrights Foundation; the University of Chicago; and University of Michigan. Gilbert McCauley directed its 1996 world premiere at Performance Network Theatre in which Peter Birkenhead and Tim Rhoze starred. Goodnight Irene was produced at Theater J in 1998 and staged by the Hypothetical Theatre Company at the 14th Street Y in 2001.
Expanded from one-acts originally produced by HB Playwrights Foundation, Love and Yearning in the Not-for-Proftis and Other Marital Distractions was workshopped at Ojai Playwrights Conference ; New Dramatists; and Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company before its 2001 premiere at Theater J. Sarah Fox's performance in Theater J's production was nominated in 2002 for the Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress, Resident Play. Love and Yearning comprises four one-act plays: Prelude to a Crisis ; The Professor and the Whore; Terminal Connection ; and Love and Yearning in the Not-for-Profits.
An adaptation of Anton Chekhov's The Seagull, The Seagull on 16th Street was produced by Theater J in 2009. John Vreeke directed a cast featuring Naomi Jacobson, Alexander Strain and Jerry Whiddon.
A reexamination of Clifford Odets’s Waiting for Lefty written by Roth with Adam Mckay, Adam Phillips, and Shira Piven. Still Waiting was produced alongside Waiting for Lefty during Theater J’s 1997-98 Season, Roth’s first as Artistic Director. Recent one-acts for various festivals include Staff Meeting and The Great White Undulating Orb In The Bed Between Us. Roth has been a member of the Dramatists Guild of America since 1987 and was a founding member of the HB Playwrights Foundation Writers Unit from 1993 to 2007.

Controversies

In 2000, Roth launched a festival entitled “Voices from a Changing Israel” in conjunction with the 4 week run of David Hare’s Via Dolorosa based on the playwright's experiences interviewing Arabs and Jews on a visit to Israel, the West Bank and Gaza in 1998. Four staged readings were presented alongside Hare's play, including Israeli playwright Motti Lerner’s play, The Murder of Isaac, which "grappled with the 1995 assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin." Other Festival readings that fall included Israela Margalit's "Night Blooming Jasmine," Joshua Ford's "Miklat," and Ford's adaptation of Amos Oz's "In The Land of Israel." In 2007, Roth expanded the embrace of the series, renaming it “Voices from a Changing Middle East.”
He also founded the Peace Café in 2000 with Mimi Conway, a Theater J council member, and friend Andy Shallal, to complement performances of "Via Dolorosa." This was to "get people talking about Middle East issues and to find common ground between Jews and Arabs." Shallal joined Theater J's council and was its first and only Arab member. In his 2012 article, “Heated Dialogue,” in American Theatre Magazine, Lonnie Firestone wrote that Roth had sometimes generated controversy by his choices even though he led Theater J to become “one of the most prolific producers of Israeli-oriented drama in North America.”
In 2011, Theater J produced the United States premiere of Return to Haifa, adapted by Israeli playwright Boaz Gaon from a novella by Palestinian author Ghassan Kanafani. It was considered too sensitive a topic by some American theaters, dealing with the expulsion of Palestinians at the time of Israel's War of Independence. For this production, Roth commissioned an Arabic translation for the conversations between the Palestinian couple. The show was presented in Arabic and Hebrew with English surtitles... The talkback sessions were held with different panels of scholars, artists, and activists, a total of 44. , a local group formed to protest the play criticized it as anti-Israel and appealed to a major donor to cut off funding. It also objected to the Peace Cafe. The JCC decided to move the Peace Cafe off-site, and it is hosted by Andy Shallal's Busboys and Poets.
In 2012, members of COPMA attended readings intending to debate. Roth believes that theater addressing issues in the Middle East is important to broadening discussions. He has said he is attracted to the topic of “bridge crossing” between Jews and non-Jews from his own background. “It stems from my work as a playwright and as the child of Holocaust survivors.” Roth says, “The black-Jewish dialogue, because of my own upbringing on the South Side of Chicago, is extraordinarily personal to me, too. The encountering of Palestinians and the dialogue between the Jew and the Arab has grown out of those same impulses—the commonality of experience.”
In December 2014, Roth was terminated as Theater J's artistic director. Over 100 artistic directors of U.S. theater companies published an open letter denouncing his termination by the JCC of Washington, D.C. The open letter, signed by leaders of companies including Lincoln Center Theater and Public Theater, Chicago's Steppenwolf Theatre and Washington's Shakespeare Theatre Company, stated that “it is absolutely clear that Roth was fired because of the content of the work he has so thoughtfully and ably championed for the last two decades.”

Directing