World Premiere

May 8 – June 29, 2024

Take a remarkable trip back in time to witness this haunting story of climate change, migration, and family in the days leading up to a calamitous dust storm in 1930s Texas.

IT IS APRIL 1935 IN THE DUST-RIDDLED PLAINS OF TEXAS, and a family farm is struggling to keep afloat amidst a mounting series of ecological disasters. As Jesús, a farm worked with a secret, arrives in their midst, stubborn Pa refuses to believe his land is no longer viable, young Sunny dreams of a new life in bountiful California, and Ma has mysterious visions of the future. As everyone seeks respite from an increasingly uninhabitable environment, this powerful, atmospheric world premiere manifests a Dust Bowl beyond the familiar lore and viscerally confronts humanity’s disregard for nature in the days leading up to the infamous storm known as Black Sunday.

Black Sunday was developed through TimeLine’s Playwrights Collective—joining Brett Neveu’s To Catch a Fish (2018); Tyla Abercrumbie’s Relentless (2022, Jeff Award for Outstanding New Work); and Will Allan’s Campaigns, Inc. (2022) to become the fourth play developed through the Collective to receive a full production. Black Sunday received its first public readings as part of TimeLine’s First Draft Playwrights Collective Festival in December 2021.

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FIRST DRAFT FESTIVAL: Black Sunday

Saturday, December 4, 2021 at 8pm and Saturday, December 11, 2021 at 2pm

When coyotes kill off Ma’s chickens, it sets off a series of disasters in 1930s Texas in the days leading up to an infamous dust storm—the titular event known as Black Sunday. An ecological horror that explores the conflicts surrounding climate change, race, and gender.

The cast is still to be announced.
 

Thursday, June 3, 2021 at 6:30pm (CDT)

Go behind-the-scenes with TimeLine’s Playwrights Collective—Dolores Díaz, Kristin Idaszak, Osiris Khepera, and David Rhee—for a first look at the creative process for their new plays!

The Playwrights Collective supports a diverse group of emerging and established writers in a two-year residency to develop plays inspired by TimeLine’s mission. Throughout the pandemic, the group has met regularly via Zoom, reading scenes, asking questions, discussing challenges, and sharing progress. Learn more about the Collective …

Now you can see scenes from each of the new plays they have been writing over the past year, then engage in a discussion moderated by Literary Manager Ben Thiem about their inspirations, writing process, and working together through the Collective.

The plays are:

Black Sunday by Dolores Díaz. When coyotes kill off Ma’s chickens, it sets off a series of disasters in 1930s Texas in the days leading up to a dust storm. An ecological horror that explores the conflicts surrounding climate change, race, and gender.

Revenge of the Holy Virgin Martyrs as Told by Hrotsvit of Gandersheim and Her Time Traveling Amanuensis by Kristin Idaszak. Escaping from a toxic work environment and a predatory boss, Jordan takes an impromptu vacation—and accidentally travels back in time to the tenth century. Mistaken for a thief by the canny nuns who live in a medieval abbey, she joins their efforts to protect themselves from a lecherous local lord and becomes the assistant to Hrotsvit, the first female playwright in the Western canon. A feminist farce about rape culture, faith, and a world without the male gaze.

THE FIVE by Osiris Khepera. Five Black Male Witches enter a seemingly innocuous warehouse in Mobile, Alabama after responding to a mysterious invitation. Upon arrival, they are greeted by a glass of red wine, a finely crafted wooden table, and an AI that sets in motion a series of events that have potentially devastating consequences. The learning curve is steep, and the fate of time rests in the balance of their choices, even though they may be the last ones to find out what’s at stake.

the feet of God by David Rhee. An Asian American theatre company is forced to confront the history of Asians in America when they put on a controversial play. With the backlash of the pandemic on their heels, the theatre company must decide to keep the status quo or find their voice and shake up the established norms of Asians in America.