The latest chapter in the history of American theater is being written right now in Silverton.
The Silverton Theatre Mine is a nonprofit organization that is hosting its first full festival of new plays through Saturday. Founded last year after a tentative launch sponsored by Silverton’s A Theatre Group, TSTM co-founders Daniel Sullivan, Judy Graham and Matthew Vire convened and christened a new name. In July 2017, the group obtained a nonprofit status. The mission is to develop and enhance collaborative theater arts in the region.
TSTM’s June event is officially titled: “Watershed Abrazos: The Silverton Theatre Mine’s 2018 Mollie Mook-Fiddler New Plays Festival.” Mook-Fiddler, a beloved friend and colleague, died of cancer late in 2016, only a few weeks before her 43rd birthday.
After completing her bachelor’s degree in theater from the University of Colorado Denver and a master’s from the University of Iowa, Mook-Fiddler pursued an acting career in New York City. She also taught a children’s theater course at Columbia University, but returned to Colorado, where her passion for youth theater, new plays and community involvement blossomed. Locals may remember her stellar work at Durango High School directing Sarah Ruhl’s “Euridice” in 2011, many productions at San Juan College and a long-standing commitment to Marianne Fearn’s A Theatre Group in Silverton. When Fearn died in 2008, Mook-Fiddler took over as artistic director.
“Mollie became a fixture in Silverton,” Sullivan said. “And because of her, many of us who met Mollie in graduate school found our way to Silverton.”
Co-founder and now artistic director of TSTM, Sullivan said Mook-Fiddler’s dedication to collaborative theater inspired him and two colleagues to launch TSTM.
“Last year, Matthew Vire, Judy Graham and I hiked to one of Mollie’s favorite places: a waterfall up South Mineral Creek,” he said. “We talked about doing something more substantial than a scholarship in Mollie’s name. We decided to honor her by starting our own company – here in Silverton, here in the compelling beauty of this particular mountain town.”
The trio worked fast. By July 15, they obtained not-for-profit status, established a board, connected with playwrights, actors and directors who knew Mook-Fiddler and had some connection to Silverton. Sullivan spearheads the organization. Vire, an actor who met Mook-Fiddler while in graduate school in Iowa, is secretary of TSTM, and Graham, a visual artist who lives in Silverton, is treasurer. Board members come from around the country and include well-known Durangoan Leigh Meigs, a legal mediator, clinical social worker and budding playwright. It was Meigs’ play “Waterfall,” presented in 2017, that triggered the theme of this year’s festival.
Ten playwrights have been invited to present scripts. Sarah Syverson, co-founder of the popular Cortez-based storytelling program Raven Narratives, has been awarded a residency. Connections have been established with the Durango Arts Center, Fort Lewis College and San Juan College. DAC Applause Music Director Lauren Berkman will direct TSTM’s Youth Playwriting program. Two of the DAC’s recent 10-minute play festival will present in Silverton.
The general schedule features three or four plays per day, beginning in the afternoon. The newly revamped lower-level theater at the Grand Imperial Hotel seats 70 people, and tickets will be sold at the door. Single admission has been set at $10 per play, and a festival pass is available for $35.
Mook-Fiddler’s legendary effervescence and passion for what drama could do for a community clearly continued the legacy of Fearn. Now, TSTM launches a new chapter in Silverton’s remarkable cultural history.
Judith Reynolds is an arts journalist and member of the American Theatre Critics Association.
If you go
WHAT:
“Watershed Abrazos: The Silverton Theatre Mine’s 2018 Mollie Mook-Fiddler New Play Festival.”
WHERE:
Grand Imperial Hotel Theater, 1219 Greene St., Silverton.
WHEN:
2:30, 6:60, and 8 p.m. June 7-9.
TICKETS:
$10 at the door each performance, $35 festival pass, all readings access.
MORE INFORMATION:
For information and daily schedule, visit
.