What's Happening!
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YOU'RE INVITED TO THE CLUBBED THUMB GALA
On Monday, October 6th 2025 at the Etsy Headquarters in DUMBO, Clubbed Thumb will be honoring Crystal Finn, Susannah Flood and Miriam Silverman.
These three actresses are at the very heart of what we do — as individual artists and as exemplars of their craft. Where would Clubbed Thumb be without actresses like them — and without these actresses specifically?
Crystal, Susannah and Miriam have been integral to our work for the last 15 years, and we are thrilled to announce we’ll be celebrating them at our gala this fall. CLICK FOR MORE
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THANK YOU FOR COMING TO SUMMERWORKS 2025
Whether it was your first Summerworks or your 28th, we are so pleased you could join us. CLICK HERE for some photos and essays from this season.
We’ll be spending the summer incubating and planning for the fall, but we have lot of news to share, so watch this space!
In the meantime, we’re pleased to announce that our outgoing board chair will match donations up to a total of $25,000 to support future remounts of Summerworks shows (like this season’s Deep Blue Sound). He wants us to keep it up – and so do we! CLICK HERE TO JOIN THAT EFFORT
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ANNOUNCING SUMMERWORKS 2025
Due to overwhelming demand, we’re adding performances this year – but Summerworks shows always sell out, so lock in your seats with a pass!
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THANK YOU FOR A GREAT RUN!
Spending the last two months with Deep Blue Sound has been a joy and a balm. We are deeply proud of the work, and humbled by the talent and dedication of this company of artists.
The show played for six sold-out weeks and we added as many shows as we could – but sadly, we closed this weekend. Thank you to the over 4,000 people who came to visit our island. And thank you to all the artists, staff, funders and friends who made it possible. This was a special one.
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APPLY TO CLUBBED THUMB'S 25/26 NEW PLAY DIRECTING FELLOWSHIP
New play directors who have worked at least three years outside of an educational setting, and who plan to be in NYC September 2025 through January 2026, are welcome to apply for the fellowship by completing the form HERE – applications due April 1st!
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NOW PLAYING: DEEP BLUE SOUND
Our “devastatingly beautiful” production from Summerworks 2023 returns for a limited engagement, in residence at the Public Theater. Now playing! CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS
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WINTERWORKS 2025 HAS COME TO A CLOSE
Thank you to the hundreds of people who joined as at Playwrights Downtown for the 10th annual Winterworks. We were so proud of the work these amazing artists made — and we managed to cram everyone in to share it. Congratulations especially to Directing Fellows Iris McCloughan, NJ Agwuna and Laura Dupper – read more HERE
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NOW ACCEPTING SUBMISSIONS FOR THE 10TH BIENNIAL COMMISSION
This year we lost one of our great comic dramatists: Christopher Durang. We’ve been reflecting on how powerful and much-needed savage humor like his is in a world like ours today. So, for the 10th Biennial Commission, please consider his work, especially from the 1980’s. Applications are due March 20th, 2025. Read more and submit yours HERE
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ANNOUNCING A RETURN ENGAGEMENT OF SUMMERWORKS 2023'S DEEP BLUE SOUND
We are thrilled to announce that Deep Blue Sound – which ran to sold-out houses at Summerworks 2023 – will return for five weeks this winter. After a wildly successful run of Grief Hotel earlier this season, we are excited to return to The Public Theater with another Summerworks hit. CLICK FOR TICKETS & INFO
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THANK YOU FOR MAKING OUR GALA SUCH A SUCCESS!
Monday night’s Gala, celebrating our dear friends and collaborators dots, was beautiful, moving and very fun. Thank you to everyone who attended, performed, volunteered, donated and otherwise supported this very special night.
See photos from the event on our Instagram (and tag @clubbedthumb if you’re posting your own)!
At the event, we raised funds in honor of dots to help us better support the designers in our community – and we happily exceeded our goal. But there’s no such thing as a late donation! If you’d like to contribute to the fund, click HERE
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OUR NEW ANTHOLOGY - ON SALE NOW
We’ve been eager to put out a second anthology since Funny, Strange, Provocative was published in 2007, and the last year finally provided us with the time to take on this long-awaited project. We are thrilled to announce that Unusual Stories, Unusually Told, published by Bloomsbury/Methuen, is now available!
In it you’ll find seven Clubbed Thumb plays that span 18 years of our history, as well as essays and interviews about the work, and the often atypical processes that led to their productions.
Read more about the book and get your discounted copy (and our first anthology) HERE
The Thousand Selves You’ll Never Save: On Coach Coach
By Liza Birkenemier
Culturally, we’re addicted to growth. We’re fixated on becoming. We claim to want to be accountable to others while staying available to our own desires, if we know what those are. This agenda may appear to be practically simple and morally inarguable, but Coach Coach looks—shockingly!—at our aim toward self-improvement with suspicion.
Describing her proprietary Action Audit at the beginning of the Coach Coach retreat weekend, venerated Dr. Meredith Martin proclaims, “Your thoughts drive your feelings, your feelings drive your actions, which then create results. Easy, right?” Right? We’ve all been reminded through every medium that we can change our realities by changing ourselves. It’s not easy: we’re frustrated, wounded, panicked by the definite violence of the world, but what we need is to ground ourselves in the present moment, take a deep breath, and focus in.
With practice, we might allay our anxieties of catastrophe, or at least put them off for an hour. Getting ahold of our thoughts, we may be able to control our feelings. We’re unstoppable, or will be, as soon as we feel better. The external realization—the visible result—is only possible after we’ve completed the internal labor.
Isn’t there grit in asking ourselves questions?
We “look” inside and find anomalies. Some of our preferences don’t align with our tastes; some habits are residue from past selves; some longings are startlingly idiopathic, plainly disastrous.
What we are, upon rigorous inspection, might be more split than we expected, divided by time and action, even tone. The person who took care of a friend in distress couldn’t possibly be the person behind on her utility bills, or the person who committed murder. We’re not what we were; we’re not what we were when we were when we were drunk, or hungry, or in love. We weren’t acting like ourselves. We’re not what we will be either, but we must be something. There is, of course, a present. We’re somewhere right now. We’re someone right now, aren’t we?
“I’m forgetting who Margo is to me,” says Margo, “because we have been together too long.”
At the beginning of the script, Bailey quotes Susan Sontag’s Notes on Camp. “Camp sees everything in quotation marks. It’s not a lamp, but a ‘lamp;’ it’s not a woman, but a ‘woman.’”
It lends a creeping sensation that in this vibrant, stressful play, the thoughts are “thoughts,” the feelings are “feelings,” and the results are “results.”
“It’s shocking, how you think you know what you’re thinking but you’re not thinking that at all. You’re thinking something totally different,” Ann reflects.
Is Coach Coach positing a theory on the self as the “self?” I get the hilarious, despairing, world-bending experience of reflecting on the act of self-improvement as fundamentally Camp.
If results are “results,” then what is the point? What is the point of thinking better in order to feel better in order to do better? What if we only “do?” What if we never “matter?”
Coach Coach, where coaches coach coaches and murder murderers, invites us to imagine quotation marks around our own “roles” here, and maybe our own “existences.” “…when a person or a thing is ‘a camp,’” Sontag writes, “a duplicity is involved. Behind the ‘straight’ public sense in which something can be taken, one has found a private zany experience of the thing.” We’re silent witnesses to the effects of longing and ambition. We’re getting a “private, zany experience” of surviving entropy; we’re surviving it together. Unlike Dr. Meredith Martin, Margo, Velma, Cornelia, Ann, and Patti, we get to stay safe as the assumed stability of personal narrative deteriorates. The abounding double identities negate us: watching, we’re brutally, happily un-coached. We’re learning that maybe we should simply attempt to tolerate the hunch that we’re strangers to ourselves. Coach Coach gives us the vital (but luxurious) experiences of looking out, daring to make deadly the impulse to look in.
As we watch the breathtakingly uncanny moments arise and disperse themselves through Coach Coach, the performance of the self isn’t only refracted through the performance of theater here; there’s something more sinister going on. The duality—the duplicity—that haunts us from the first moments of Coach Coach isn’t necessarily an exploration of tone but an examination (castigation) of our essential self-perception. “What are you doing here?” Patti asks of the split being—literally or metaphysically—of her husband. “I live here,” he tells her. “He has no idea what is going on,” she explains to us, directly to us. “And neither do I.”