A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject.(March 2024) |
Melissa Leilani Larson | |
---|---|
Born | Hauʻula, Hawaii |
Occupation | Playwright |
Alma mater | Brigham Young University (BA) University of Iowa (MFA) |
Literary movement | Mormon literature |
Website | |
www |
Melissa Leilani Larson is an American writer and playwright based in Salt Lake City, Utah. Mormon literature critic Michael Austin described her as "one of the true rising stars of Mormon literature." [1] Producer Jeremy Long described her as the "best playwright in Utah." [2] Her plays commonly feature women in leading roles, and some center around the faith of members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).
Larson is from Hauʻula, Hawaii. [3] Her mother is Filipina and her father is of English and Swedish ancestry. She's one of two children, with one younger sister. [4]
Her family moved to Utah when she was twelve years old. [5]
She received a bachelor's degree in English from Brigham Young University (BYU) and an MFA from The Iowa Playwrights Workshop at the University of Iowa. She names Helen Edmundson, Sarah Ruhl, Richard Greenberg, Timberlake Wertenbaker, Lillian Hellman, and Oscar Wilde as some of her favorite playwrights. [3] Larson has contributed to LDS Church History's Saints: The Standard of Truth . [6]
Martyrs' Crossing, originally titled Angels Unaware, shows St. Catherine and St. Margaret influencing Joan of Arc through her resistance and martyrdom and was first produced in 2006 at BYU. [7] Genelle Pugmire at Deseret News named it as the best production of the year. [8] Fellow Utah playwright Mahonri Stewart [9] wrote that while Larson beautifully emphasized the humanity of Catholic saints, the chorus of historians was "redundant." He found the comparisons of Joan of Arc to Joseph Smith distracting. [10]
Larson won the 2009 AML award for drama for Little Happy Secrets, a play about a faithful young LDS woman who develops romantic feelings for her female roommate. In the award, AML called the play "a celebration of heartbreak." [11] In his blog, Brigham Young University English professor Gideon Burton [12] described the play as "[making] the problem of same-sex attraction [...] normal, that is, as credible." [13]
Larson's 2010 play A Flickering features a filmmaker and actress who are friends, and was set in the early 1900s during the silent film era. Critic Katie Roundy found the live piano music and title cards occasionally distracted from the main action, but that the play left her "wanting more." [14] A Flickering was a Trustus Playwrights Festival finalist. [15]
After a stage adaptation of Persuasion, BYU commissioned Larson's stage adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. [3] It won the 2014 AML award for drama, with the award text referring to the adaptation as "one of the most entertaining works by a Mormon playwright to date." [16] Salt Lake City Weekly gave Pride and Prejudice a "Best Modern Jane" headline, stating that Larson's adaptation felt "fresh without resorting to gimmickry." [17] At the Utah Theater Bloggers Association, the play was spotlighted in a 2014 roundup under "Excellent New Plays." [18] Barta Heiner directed both plays. [19]
Larson co-wrote a musical adaptation of Silas Marner called The Weaver of Raveloe in 2013, and the play was produced in 2014. [20] She is part of the lab for playwrights at Plan-B Theatre, which she joined around 2013. [21] [22] Pilot Program was her first play shown there. [15] Pilot Program centers around an imagined future where a faithful LDS couple is asked to practice polygamy. [23] At The Utah Review , reviewer Les Roka described it as "a compelling tableau of social messages and contemplation of religious identity that resonates with the depth of exploration suggested in the works of Henrik Ibsen, August Strindberg and Gerhart Hauptmann." [23] The play won AML's 2015 award for drama. [24]
Larson's 2016 play The Edible Complex was written for elementary school students and has actors taking on the roles of Larson's favorite foods. [25] The play addresses eating disorders. [26] Sweetheart Come was a 2016 O'Neill National Playwrights Conference semifinalist. The University of Utah's Daily Utah Chronicle critic Palak Jayswal wrote that the play "encourages empathy while breaking the stigma about isolation and unhappiness." [27] In City Weekly , Scott Renshaw called the play "a character study of mental illness," praising the play's unique set design, which used paper to outline and subvert the confines of the stage. [28] Writing for The Utah Review, Les Roka described Larson's script as "a fascinating, cogent interpretation of Emma Hauck’s story." [29]
Larson adapted Rabindranath Tagore's The Post Office for a theater collaboration between the Granite School District, Plan-B Theatre, Gandhi Alliance for Peace, and the United Nations Association of Utah. [30] She adapted the play for modern audiences and made the original twelve-man cast more gender-diverse; in Larson's adaptation, the three main characters are female or non-binary and other characters are adaptable to any gender. [31] [32] The production's director sought specifically to involve refugee students. [32] Roka wrote that Larson's script "flows with elegant, accessible symbolism." [30]
Larson collaborated with Garrett Batty on the script for Freetown (2015), a movie about six Liberian LDS missionaries fleeing the country in the First Liberian Civil War. [33] [34] Freetown won the 2016 Utah Film Award for Best Feature Film [35] and the 2015 Ghana Movie Award for Best Screenplay. [34]
The film Jane and Emma (2018) focuses on the friendship between Jane Elizabeth Manning James and Emma Smith, examining racial issues in the early LDS church. [36] It appeared on a list of films that fulfilled ReFrame's criteria for gender-balanced and racially diverse films. [37]
Sales from the film's opening night were matched by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' foundation and the Bonneville Charitable Foundation and given as a donation to the NAACP Salt Lake Branch. [38]
Larson studied the journals of both women while writing the script, and stated that the film is "not about preaching to people. It's about these two women and their relationship." [39] Mariah Proctor at Meridian magazine wrote that the film "issues an invitation to a conversation" about the two women and their relationship to each other and the LDS Church. [40]
Fellow Plan-B playwright Eric Samuelsen reviewed the film in BYU Studies, writing that Larson's script "honors the history in which the story is rooted while fictionalizing when needed." [41] Camlyn Giddins also reviewed the film in the same publication, noting that while the climax seems forced, the film encourages introspection. [42]
Jane and Emma won the Feature Film award at the LDS Film Festival, as well as the Audience Award in the same category. [43] The film was also a finalist in the 2018 Narrative Film category at the Association for Mormon Letters. [44]
Martyrs' Crossing was an IRAM Best New Play. Standing Still Standing won a Mayhew award. Lady in Waiting was the winner of the Lewis National Playwriting Contest for Women. [15] Larson won the 2003 AML award for drama for Wake Me When It's Over. [45]
Larson received the Smith-Pettit Foundation Award for Outstanding Contribution to Mormon Letters in 2019. The award citation stated that Larson "offers herself as a witness to both the pain and faith of her fellow Saints when their obedience to God pushes them up against the limits of their endurance." [6]
Her plays Little Happy Secrets and Pilot Program were published together in a book called Third Wheel in 2017 by BCC Press. [46] Little Happy Secrets has been adapted into audio format. [3] [47]
Mitch Davis is an American film director, writer, and producer noted for his 2001 film The Other Side of Heaven about the trials and adventures of a missionary of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, John H. Groberg. His movies range from intense dramas to lighthearted, family-friendly comedies. He has written seven films, directed five, and produced three. He is from Escondido, California. He attended Brigham Young University (BYU) and the University of Southern California.
Margaret Blair Young is an American author, filmmaker, and writing instructor who taught for thirty years at Brigham Young University.
Douglas H. Thayer was a prominent author in the "faithful realism" movement of Mormon fiction. He has been called the "Mormon Hemingway" for his straightforward style and powerful prose. Eugene England called him the "father of contemporary Mormon fiction."
New Play Project was a non-profit organization founded in Provo, Utah, by four Brigham Young University students. As of 2024, it is no longer a functional organization. NPP was dedicated to writing and producing new plays to give emerging Latter-day Saint writers a place to produce their work while maintaining their standards and values. It primarily produced short play festivals, but occasionally took on larger projects. It is the first such organization to flourish in the area, and produced more than 70 original plays since its inception in 2006.
The Association for Mormon Letters (AML) is a nonprofit organization founded in 1976 to "foster scholarly and creative work in Mormon letters and to promote fellowship among scholars and writers of Mormon literature." Other stated purposes have included promoting the "production and study of Mormon literature" and the encouragement of quality writing "by, for, and about Mormons." The broadness of this definition of LDS literature has led the AML to focus on a wide variety of work that has sometimes been neglected in the Mormon community. It publishes criticism on such writing, hosts an annual conference, and offers awards to works of fiction, poetry, essay, criticism, drama, film, and other genres. It published the literary journal Irreantum from 1999 to 2013 and currently publishes an online-only version of the journal, which began in 2018. The AML's blog, Dawning of a Brighter Day, launched in 2009. As of 2012, the association also promotes LDS literature through the use of social media. The AML has been described as an "influential proponent of Mormon literary fiction."
The AML Awards are given annually by the Association for Mormon Letters (AML) to the best work "by, for, and about Mormons." They are juried awards, chosen by a panel of judges. Citations for many of the awards can be found on the AML website.
Thomas C. Christensen is an American cinematographer, film director, and writer best known for his work on films related to the history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, including Joseph Smith: The Prophet of the Restoration, Gordon B. Hinckley: A Giant Among Men, 17 Miracles, and Ephraim's Rescue. He has made films about the Martin and Willie handcart companies who traversed the plains toward the Salt Lake Valley in late 1856. Christensen is also a member of the American Society of Cinematographers.
Maureen Ursenbach Beecher is a historian and editor of the history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She studied at Brigham Young University (BYU) and the University of Utah. She worked in the History Department for the LDS Church from 1972 to 1980, and became a professor of English at BYU in 1981 while continuing her work in Mormon history at the Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for Church History. She published a popular book of Eliza R. Snow's writings.
Steven L. Peck is an American evolutionary biologist, poet, and novelist. His literary work is influential in Mormon literature circles. He is a professor of biology at Brigham Young University (BYU). He grew up in Moab, Utah and lives in Pleasant Grove, Utah.
Eric Roy Samuelsen was an American playwright and emeritus professor of theatre at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. He is considered one of the most important Mormon playwrights. He won the Association for Mormon Letters (AML) drama award in 1994, 1997, and 1999, and was AML president from 2007 to 2009. In 2012 he received the Smith–Pettit Foundation Award for Outstanding Contribution to Mormon Letters.
James Arrington is an American stage actor, director, playwright and scholar. His plays are about the people and culture of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Irreantum is a literary journal compiled and published by the Association for Mormon Letters (AML) from 1999 to 2013, with online-only publication starting in 2018. It features selections of LDS literature, including fiction, poetry, and essays, as well as criticism of those works. The journal was advertised as "the only magazine devoted to Mormon literature." In its first years of publication, Irreantum was printed quarterly; later, it was printed twice a year. A subscription to the magazine was included in an AML membership. Annual Irreantum writing contests were held, with prizes for short stories, novel excerpts, poems, and nonfiction awarded. The journal's creators, Benson Parkinson and Chris Bigelow, sought to create a publication that would become a one-stop resource where companies interested in publishing LDS literature could find the best the subculture had to offer. They also hoped Irreantum would highlight various kinds of LDS writing, balancing both liberal and traditional points of view.
Dendō: One Year and One Half in Tokyo: A Missionary Memoir is a graphic novel missionary diary written by Brittany Long Olsen while she was a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Japan. It is the first published missionary diary in graphic novel form, and won the Association for Mormon Letters (AML) award in 2015 for comics. After returning from her mission, she scanned and edited it, before self-publishing it after being rejected by traditional publishers. Dendō received good reviews, praising Olsen for her wit and spirituality. It was purchased and displayed by the L. Tom Perry Special Collections at Brigham Young University (BYU).
Morag Shepherd is a Scottish-American playwright, screenwriter, producer and director.
Jean Barrus Bingham was the 17th Relief Society General President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from April 2017 to August 2022.
Garrett Batty is an American film director, writer, and producer known for his film The Saratov Approach. He is a graduate of Brigham Young University and a native of Park City, Utah. He is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and his films are part of Mormon cinema, but with a more general audience. He has written, directed, and produced four full-length films, including Freetown (2015) and Out of Liberty (2019), and will begin work on a fifth in 2020. For Freetown, he was awarded the 2015 Ghana Movie Award for Best Screenplay alongside Melissa Leilani Larson.
James Goldberg is an American historian, playwright, poet, and writer. He has Jewish, European, and Punjabi ancestors, and his grandfather, Gurcharan Singh Gill, was the first Sikh to join the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He attended Otterbein University briefly before transferring to Brigham Young University (BYU), where he completed his undergraduate work and earned a Master of Fine Arts degree. He was an adjunct professor at BYU.
Nothing Very Important and Other Stories is a collection of interconnected short stories written by Béla Petsco and self-published in 1979 with illustrations by his friend Kathryn Clark-Spencer. The stories are about missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints working in Southern California. Signature Books reprinted the book in 1984 under their Orion imprint. Petsco wrote the stories for his master's thesis at Brigham Young University (BYU). The book won the 1979 Association for Mormon Letters award for short fiction. The stories were adapted for theater and performed in 1983, but without BYU's endorsement.
Béla Petsco was an American writer who was the author of Nothing Very Important and Other Stories, a collection of connected stories about missionary work in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was born to Hungarian immigrants and grew up in Queens in New York City. He converted to the LDS Church after watching the film Brigham Young. He served an LDS mission in the California South mission.