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The Language of Life

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

There’s this thing about theater-types: They see plays everywhere.

Actress Stephanie Satie was working at her “survival” job, teaching English as a second language to immigrants from the Middle East and Eastern Europe. She taught advanced students, the ones who needed conversational practice. In that classroom, while just trying to speak the language, Satie’s students began to tell their personal stories.

Satie remembered one woman in particular, an emigre from Russia who had been a miner. She talked about her helmet with the light on it, about going down into the dark tunnels, about how much she loved and missed being a miner.

A light came on over Satie’s head, too. Around her were not only students, but stories and characters. “The ground started shaking for me,” Satie said.

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She’s shaped those stories into “Refugees,” her solo play that opens Saturday at the Sweet Lies Theatre in North Hollywood.

In “Refugees,” Satie is not only the teacher, but also the students in an ESL class. In rehearsal last week, she dropped easily into the Russian accent of Larissa, a woman who took out a personal ad to find a husband who would be her passport to the United States. In Moscow, Larissa was a master of the divining rod--using a stick to divine information about invisible forces. “Unfortunately, there is not such a demand for my skill here,” Satie said, in Larissa’s deadpan voice.

Like Larissa, the characters in “Refugees” are inspired by real-life students, though many are composites of students from Satie’s seven years as an ESL instructor. When she started to put the pieces together, she called Anita Khanzadian, a director she knew who had worked on other non-narrative solo shows, in addition to critically acclaimed work with Interact Theatre Company. At first, Satie didn’t know if these wildly varied stories could be put together as a play.

“I sat down and listened to her do this wonderful material. I said it’s doable. It’s tough, but it’s doable,” said Khanzadian.

Rather than perform it as a series of monologues, they have structured “Refugees” like a class, weaving the discussions and tales together. Real-life experiences such as Satie’s always feed into your craft if you’re an artist, Khanzadian said. “Here she does something responsible and grown-up, and she comes back with material.”

Satie, a member of Theatre 40, is, in a small way, a refugee herself. She got a grant from the Cultural Affairs Department of the city of Los Angeles to perform “Refugees”--but it required that she perform the work in the city. Theatre 40 is in Beverly Hills.

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So Satie trekked over the hill to North Hollywood, which, unless the secessionists have their way, is still part of the city of Los Angeles. In September, she will also present the work at Cal State Northridge.

* “Refugees” at the Sweet Lies Theatre, behind the Bitter Truth Theatre, 11050 Magnolia Blvd., North Hollywood. Saturdays at 8 p.m.; Sundays at 2 p.m. Through July 19. $10. (818) 755-7900.

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Youth Springs External: At the Falcon Theater in Burbank, the Blank Theatre Company is in the midst of its sixth annual Young Playwrights Festival, one of the few competitions--if not the only one--that produces the work of young writers ages 12 to 19.

Daniel Henning, artistic director of the 8-year-old Blank Theatre Company, modeled the program after the New York Young Playwrights Festival, which continues to give awards but no longer stages the plays. He envisioned it as a California contest, but they’ve drawn submissions from across the U.S. In addition to a staged reading, the young writers are assigned a mentor to help with rewrites. The nine winners came from California, Oklahoma, Florida and Pennsylvania.

For Diana Sherman, 19, of Granada Hills, this is the second time her work has been chosen. Last year the Blank staged a one-act, and this year she has an evening of three one-act plays produced under the title “Nightingales.” Under the direction of Stuart Ross, the creator of the popular “Forever Plaid,” “Nightingales,” which follows members of the same family from the 1920s to the 1950s, had a workshop production/staged reading Wednesday and will have another one tonight.

Sherman, who just finished her sophomore year at Scripps College, started writing at age 14. She took a drama class at Granada Hills High School and was bored with the scenes they were doing--so she wrote her own. Now she’s studying English at Scripps, and next semester will study literature and theater in London.

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“They’re very nurturing” Sherman said of the Blank.

Henning allows that part of the reason to have a young playwrights festival is selfish: If there aren’t any writers, the actors, directors and producers won’t have anything to do. But he has found it satisfying far beyond that.

A few years ago, he got a letter from one of the contest winners after they had staged his one-act play. “When he sat there and saw his play, it was the first play he had ever seen in his life. He’d read them, of course, but never seen one. For me, that’s a reason for keeping this festival going into eternity.”

* “Nightingales,” at the Sixth Annual Young Playwrights Festival, tonight at 8 at the Falcon Theatre, 4252 Riverside Drive, Burbank. The festival concludes June 25. $10. (818) 955-8101.

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Wing Winds Up: Open barely six months, the Falcon Theatre--owned by Garry Marshall--is already a hopping venue. In addition to the Young Playwrights Festival, it has also played host to “The Wing: New Theater Taking Off,” another festival of new work to come out of the Mark Taper Forum’s play-development programs.

Running since March, and presented in association with the Falcon and DreamWorks SKG, The Wing kicks into high gear for its final two weekends. Friday through Sunday, plays by the Blacksmyths--the group of African American playwrights--will get readings, including “Growing Up Different” by Ken Cosby, “N*gg*rnazi” by Thurman Matthiesen, “The Giver” by Kim Dunbar, “Peep” by Kira Arne, “Babylon” by Nina Bunche Pierce and “Furlough” by Christina Ham.

The Wing festival winds up June 27 with the Annual Summer Chautauqua, put on by Other Voices, the group of writers with disabilities.

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The day includes a colloquium titled “Dialogue of Difference: Is Unity Possible in Diversity?”; the play “The History of Bowling” by Mike Ervin; a lecture demonstration called “The Politics and Art of Wheelchair Design” by Ralf Hotchkiss; and a reading of “Gimp Moon” by Cheryl Marie Wade.

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