If you've seen a new play in the past couple of decades, there's an excellent chance Paula Vogel had something to do with it.
Vogel has nabbed most of the awards a playwright can win, including a 1998 Pulitzer Prize for "How I Learned to Drive." But her influence in the world of American theater extends far beyond her own plays, including 1990's "The Baltimore Waltz" and 2015's "Indecent" (produced last year by the Guthrie Theater). For decades, at both Brown and Yale universities, Vogel was a charismatic teacher whose students and mentees scooped up Pulitzers and Tonys. They swallowed up Obie Awards and MacArthur "Genius" Grants like they were jelly beans.
Vogel is focusing on her own writing these days, though she still teaches the occasional master class. And she isn't the only influential teacher/playwright; the late María Irene Fornés and Mac Wellman are two other noteworthies.
But the new work coming from Vogel's former students is especially varied and staggering. Opening this week at Park Square Theatre in St. Paul, Jordan Harrison's "Marjorie Prime" is a 2015 Pulitzer finalist about a woman (played by Candace Barrett Birk) who is grappling with the early stages of Alzheimer's. Next up are Vogel protégés Steven Levenson, who co-wrote "Dear Evan Hansen" (opening May 28 at the Orpheum Theatre), and "Sweat" creator Lynn Nottage, whose "Floyd's" has its world premiere this summer at the Guthrie.
'She looks into your soul'
Like many plays by Vogel and her former students, "Marjorie Prime" is a highly theatrical piece with a strong point of view. There's a reason for that.
"I think she helps people see their work in ways they wouldn't have otherwise," said stage director and Playwrights' Center Associate Artistic Director Hayley Finn, who has watched Vogel's work in action at the Minneapolis center and also studied at Brown when Vogel taught there. "She's the opposite of didactic. It's really about, 'I'm seeing this in your writing and I'm really excited about it.' "
Sarah Ruhl, whose work has been produced locally by Jungle Theater ("The Oldest Boy") and the Guthrie ("Stage Kiss"), likens Vogel's teaching to telepathy.
"She looks into your soul and she says, 'These are the next 10 books you need to read, here are the next four plays you need to read, now go write 10 more pages,' " Ruhl told Pennsylvania's Reading Eagle newspaper. "She won't tell you how to edit your play. She won't tell you where your play needs to go. But she'll look at you with this piercing gaze and ask the most perceptive question that you had no idea needed to be asked."