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Segal Center World Voices Festival

Sat, May 03

|

New York

Come celebrate new work by renowned, international theatre artists

Segal Center World Voices Festival
Segal Center World Voices Festival

Time & Location

1 more dates

May 03, 2025, 3:00 PM – 9:00 PM

New York, 365 5th Ave, New York, NY 10016, USA

Guests

About the event

The Segal Center presents our annual World Voices Festival: a three-day festival showcasing the work of renowned, international theatre artists!


World Voices will feature five readings of new plays in translation, staged in collaboration with NY-based directors and performers. This year's playwrights hail from Norway, Ireland/the UK, Greece, and South Korea.


MAY 1

Works by Kaite O'Reilly (Ireland/UK)


MAY 3

The Blood of the Souls the Night Reaps by Christos Panagiotakis (Greece)

Almost Human by Kathrine Nedrejord (Norway)


MAY 5

Highway 7 by Haeyoul Bae (South Korea)


Stay tuned for more information and announcements.


Artists:



Haeyoul Bae is a playwright from South Korea. Works include: Highway 7; Stir-Fried Memories with Vienna Sausages; Here, Once, Gaga; Once Upon a Time, There Was an Asian Small-Clawed Otter Living in Seoul City; Temple of April; Saving the Goat; 1994, 2014, and the Space in between; Magnolia Balloon; Dogs Without Masters. Awards include: 2021 Byuksan Culture Awards, Play Award; 2022 Donga Play Awards, Best Play; 2024 New Play Contest by National Theatre Company of Korea, Excellence Award; 2025 Lee Yeong-man Theatrical Awards for Playwright.



Photo by Fartein Rudjord
Photo by Fartein Rudjord


Kathrine Nedrejord is a playwright and author from the indigenous Sami community in Norway. Nedrejord is especially interested in exploring hierarchies, colonialism and the relationship between the victim and the perpetrator in her works. For her first play Brent jord (*Scorched Earth) she was nominated for the Ibsen Prize in 2015. In 2018 she became the first female playwright in residence at the National Theatre in Oslo. Stagings and readings of her plays have been done in several countries like France, Luxembourg, Germany, Sweden and Finland as well as Norway. She has written and published twelve books in Norway. Her novel Forbryter og staff (*Criminal and punishment) was nominated for the prestigious Nordic Council Literary Award and was recently staged at the Det Norske Teatret. Her latest novel Sameproblemet (*The Sami Problem) has won the Brage Literary Award as well at the Oktober award, and are set to be published in six other countries. 



Kaite O’Reilly is a multi-award winning playwright and dramaturg, who writes for radio, screen and live performance. She is known internationally for her pioneering work in Disability culture. Prizes include the Peggy Ramsay Award, Manchester Theatre Award, Theatre-Wales Award and the Ted Hughes Award for new works in Poetry for Persians (National Theatre Wales). She is a two time finalist in the International James Tait Black Prize for Innovation in Drama (2012, 2019) and The Susan Smith Blackburn Prize. She was honoured in the 2017/18 International Eliot Hayes Award for Outstanding Achievement in Dramaturgy for developing ‘Alternative Dramaturgies informed by a Deaf and disability Perspective’. She was associate dramaturg for National Theatre Wales and production dramaturg/narrative director for Rambert’s Peaky Blinders dance theatre, The Redemption of Thomas Shelby, currently touring. Kaite’s plays Atypical Plays for Atypical Actors and The ‘d’ Monologues are published by Oberon/Methuen/ Bloomsbury. International work includes the 2018 Unlimited Commission And Suddenly I Disappear: The Singapore/Wales ‘d’ Monologues, a collaboration between Deaf and disabled artists and Something Wonderful, inspired by lived experience of disability in China. Her plays the 9 fridas and The ‘d’ Monologues had their Korean premiere in Seoul, 2021. Her first feature film, The Almond and the Seahorse won the Special Jury’s prize at Dinard Film Festival. Featuring Rebel Wilson and Charlotte Gainsbourg, it was released in the UK in 2024. She is currently part of the writers’ lab at Royal Opera House Covent Garden and developing a television series with a disabled female protagonist.


Christos Panagiotakis was born and raised in Antiphilippi, Kavala, a village at the foot of Mount Pangaion in Greece. A graduate of the Drama School "Karolos Koun” Art Theater (1986), he worked in theater as an actor until 1997 and acted in the cinema and television series. As a writer he published the poetry collection Acrobat at the Edge of Time (2018). Later he published the first part of his trilogy, based on fifteen-syllable verse, entitled, The Blood is of Souls that the Night Reaps (2020), and the second part, entitled The Centrifugal (2023). The Executioner (2023) is the third part of the trilogy - a tribute to the homonymous fifteen-syllable verse known since the 10 th AD and popular in traditional Greek folk songs. Some of his poems have been set to music. At present he is working on his first novel.









This event is supported by the Norwegian Consulate General in New York.

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© 2023

Martin E. Segal Theatre Center, The CUNY Graduate Center

365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10016-4309 | ph: 212-817-1860 | mestc@gc.cuny.edu

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