What's Happening!

  • THANK YOU FOR COMING TO SUMMERWORKS 2026

    Whether it was your first Summerworks or your 29th, we are so pleased you could join us. CLICK HERE for photos, essays and press 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!

  • SUMMERWORKS 2026 IS ALMOST HERE!

    Our annual line-up of three brand-new plays is approaching, featuring: TITANS by Jesse Jae Hoon, directed by Tara Elliott; DERANGEMENTS by Nadja Leonhard-Hooper, directed by Annie Tippe; and THE FAMILY DOG by Bailey Williams, directed by Tara Ahmadinejad.

    Running May 14 – Jun 30 at the Wild Project. TICKETS ON SALE NOW!

  • SUMMERWORKS 2025'S SOLD-OUT CRITIC'S PICK COLD WAR CHOIR PRACTICE RETURNS

    Tickets for Ro Reddick’s COLD WAR CHOIR PRACTICE are on sale now! The Summerworks 2025 Critic’s Pick, directed by Knud Adams, will return for an extended run co-produced by MCC Theater, Clubbed Thumb and Page 73. CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS & INFO

  • MEET OUR NEW GROUP COHORTS!

    A very warm welcome to the incoming writers and directors taking part in Clubbed Thumb’s Early-Career Writers’ Group and New Play Fellowship!

    Directors Terrence I Mosley, Liz Peterson and Hanna Yurfest will work on newly commissioned plays by Max Mooney, jose sebastian alberdi and Emma Horwitz respectively – stay tuned for a Winterworks announcement.

    And we’re looking forward to getting to know Alyssa Haddad-Chin, Doug Robinson, Dylan Guerra, Jan Rosenberg, Jen Diamond, Nadja Leonard-Hooper, Sarah Grace Goldman and Yulia Tsukerman in this year’s writers’ group!

  • THANK YOU FOR MAKING OUR GALA A GREAT SUCCESS

    Thanks to everyone who joined us to honor Crystal, Susannah, and Miriam, and to everyone who contributed to make it a truly special night.

    We were moved by the warmth and generosity in the room on Monday October 6th — lots of hugs, laughter and a even few happy tears. These three are the real deal and we are lucky to know them; we’re excited to keep celebrating them and working with them for many years to come.

    Actors are at the heart of what we do, and it’s not too late to support them with a gift to our 2025 gala! DONATE HERE

  • 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!

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFO & TO BUY YOUR PASS NOW

  • 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.

    Click here for photos, essays and a link to buy the play!

  • 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

  • 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

  • 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

A note from playwright Bailey Williams

I had the thought that I should write a play about a family with a dying dog. The dog can’t die, obviously, but the family can. But even as the family dies, one by one, all of our feeling will remain with its most natural container: the dog. We can love a dog full-throated, with no complicated feelings. A love for a dog is familial, but it is also romantic, and very, very spiritual. People are harder. They aren’t as cute. They have opinions.

Then I came up with a little challenge for myself. I like a little challenge. The challenge was to set the play during a very popular time to set plays: now. I don’t like setting plays now. Now poses two big problems that are also vortexes: phones and the president. You put a phone on stage and that’s it, all I can see is the phone. You mention the president on stage and a black hole opens up in everyone’s mind, which fills instantly with thoughts of the president. I honestly shouldn’t have even brought him up, because now this essay will be exclusively about the president, even if I never mention him again.

The dying dog would narrate, I decided, because a big shaggy dog had already appeared to me and told me he was a cowboy named after Johnny Cash. Fair enough, I told him. A lot of playwriting is learning how to entertain guests in your mind-palace. Johnny the dog was— is— a great guest. I started writing.

From these pages it became apparent that it finally had come time in my playwriting life to wrestle with the Big Boy, the behemoth of Our Theater: the Great American Living Room Family Dark Comedy Drama Play (Christmas Edition). Worse, it was shaping up to also secretly be a Memory Play.

Then, I had a six month joy ride/heart attack called writing, performing, and producing Two Sisters Find a Box of Lesbian Erotica in the Woods with my wife Emma, Rattlestick Theater, and New Georges. During this time, our cat died, my family dog died, and then a few other pets I’d known and loved died too. Had I killed these animals with my mind? Upon closing the show, I plunged into a depression wherein I ruminated endlessly on what would have happened had I decided, at someone unknown point in my past, to pursue a career in professional boxing. This was a new and entirely delusional thought. I could not shake it. I had done something irreversible with my life, which was get both a BFA and an MFA (why?) and volunteer to run a experimental theater festival. I was stuck.

I woke up at the Albee Barn in Montauk in November 2025. I sat down at a desk that was once his kitchen table. I contemplated the notion that I, a so-called experimental playwright, wanted to write a big American dark family holiday comedy play set in a living room with a couch starring a dying dog. Why? I opened up an application called “Pages” (kill me) and wrote my list of whys.

I am writing this play to try to capture what it feels like to go home as an adult.
I am writing this play to investigate how families do and do not change over time.
I am writing this play to reflect the uncanniness of aging without children, when the children remain the children and no children come to replace them.
I am writing this play to conjure more love and understanding for my own family, whose opinions I find difficult, sometimes reprehensible.
I am writing this play to exorcise my rage and betrayal at these reprehensible opinions.
I am writing this play to honor what animals can hold for us… which, if they could comprehend it, would be entirely too much for one creature to bear.
I am writing this play to mourn what I do not have in common with my family, and what I do, and the opportunities we have to connect that fail.
I am writing this play because I have complicated feelings about my family, and family in general, and I need to express them.

And that’s what the play is, hopefully. The play upsets me a lot but when I watch it, I think about how much I love my mom and my dad and my whole stupid family, and also how I want to kill them for their own good and for mine. And maybe one day I’ll have to, because they’ll be full of lumps and seizures and mushy meatballs. When that day comes, if it comes, I will hold their hands and watch their faces drain of themselves, because that’s what you do with family. And I’ll wonder, for the rest of my life, if I’ve done the right thing.