A work by a New York City-based playwright about two sisters, one of whom is programmed with artificial intelligence, has won the 2022 .
鈥淢atthew Libby鈥檚 Sisters is a terrific piece of dramatic work that makes us think about the emotional dimensions of the intersection of lives and the digital,鈥 says Dan Rockmore, director of the at 线上赌场 and a professor of math and computer science.
Libby is an actor and playwright based in Brooklyn, New York, and a 2022-2023 Dramatists Guild Foundation Fellow.
Six additional plays were selected as finalists: The Many Wondrous Realities of Jasmine Starr-Kidd by Stephen Brown, omniHappy by Alex Dremann, The Bergerac Simulation by Mora V. Harris, Singularity by Minh-Anh Day, Of Solitude by Amanda Keating, and Underdrown by Derek Lee McPhatter.
Established in 2018, the annual Neukom playwriting award considers plays and other full-length works for the theater that address the question, 鈥淲hat does it mean to be a human in a computerized world?鈥 The award is a partnership between the Neukom Institute, the , and Northern Stage, based in White River Junction, Vermont. This year鈥檚 winner comes from a shortlist of seven plays selected from 141 submissions.
Sisters chronicles the life of Matilda and her AI sister Greta. The story explores what lies at the core of family dynamics, artificial intelligence, the finiteness of existence, and, ultimately, humanity. Libby鈥檚 seemingly modest portrayal of this extraordinary pair of sisters through fragments of their dialogues creates tender, ambivalent, yet explosive chemistry, challenging the audience to ponder every single exchange in the sisters鈥 lives.
鈥淢y work has long been interested in the question of what鈥檚 innately human in an increasingly technological world, so I鈥檓 thrilled and honored to have found collaborators at Neukom and Northern Stage who are driven by the same question,鈥 Libby says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a play about the finiteness of human life when put up against the infinity of the technology that we create and shape.鈥 Sisters is the type of writing that Libby has always wanted to take on: it is 鈥渟mall, but huge鈥攊ntimate, but epic,鈥 he says.
Libby鈥檚 award includes a $5,000 cash prize and one weeklong workshop at Northern Stage during the 2022-2023 season. The workshop, directed by Aileen Wen McGroddy, resident director of the BOLD Theater Women鈥檚 Leadership Circle at Northern Stage, will culminate in two public readings of the play by the full cast. The first will take place on the 线上赌场 campus at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 12, in Filene Auditorium located in Moore Hall. Northern Stage will host the second reading at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 13, at the Byrne Theatre in the Barrette Center for the Arts in White River Junction.
鈥淭he topic of this play means a lot to me personally, even more so over the past couple years,鈥 says Libby, who studied cognitive science and creative writing at Stanford and received an MFA in dramatic writing from New York University鈥檚 Tisch School of the Arts, where he was awarded the Chair鈥檚 Award for Distinguished Achievement. 鈥淭o have an opportunity that allows me to develop it, and to continue figuring out how its idiosyncratic form translates into 3D space, is beyond invaluable. Gratitude doesn鈥檛 even begin to describe it.鈥
鈥淲e are thrilled to support the development of this beautiful and daring play that asks in both form and content what it means to be human,鈥 says BOLD associate artistic director Sarah Wansley. 鈥淪o many stories about the future of AI are centered on male characters. Matthew鈥檚 choice to place two women at the heart of this investigation and explore their relationship over decades is as fresh as it is theatrically compelling.鈥
鈥淲e are delighted to see the explosion of interest in the Neukom award,鈥 says Rockmore, creator of the award program. 鈥淚t is so exciting to see the thoughtful, creative work that is being sent in response to the call and gratifying to be able to support this work at the nexus of the arts, humanities, and computation.鈥
The Neukom Institute for Computational Science is dedicated to supporting and inspiring computational work. The Literary Arts Awards is part of the Neukom Institute鈥檚 initiative to explore the ways in which computational ideas impact society.