August Wilson New Voices

The August Wilson New Voices (AWNV) National Program is a collaborative initiative led by August Wilson Legacy, LLC., in partnership with the Goodman Theatre and Gilded Road Productions. Inspired by the profound impact of August Wilson’s work, the program aims to introduce Wilson’s dynamic storytelling and cultural legacy to students across America, fostering a new generation of voices in theater.

AWNV is dedicated to creating access to theater education in every school, encouraging students to explore their own creative potential while connecting to the timeless themes of Wilson’s work—identity, resilience, and the power of community. Through immersive workshops, coaching, and nationwide competitions in both monologue performance and theatrical design, AWNV provides students with the tools to learn, grow, and express themselves, while also paying tribute to one of America’s most influential playwrights.

The program is designed to be a catalyst for change, breaking down barriers to arts education by providing resources, mentorship, and a platform for youth voices. The program’s reach, grounded in Wilson’s powerful narratives and characters, builds empathy, understanding, and confidence among participants, connecting students to their own histories and communities. As we work toward bringing August Wilson’s legacy to every school across the nation, AWNV fosters an inclusive environment that celebrates diverse voices, ensuring that Wilson’s work continues to inspire and transform young lives for generations to come.

Through this national network, we are not just creating performers and designers—we are cultivating storytellers, leaders, and advocates for the arts, each embodying the spirit of August Wilson’s legacy.

Manhattan Theatre Club (MTC) and TDF (formerly Theatre Development Fund) are thrilled to partner and produce the New York hub of August Wilson New Voices during the 2024-25 school year.

About August Wilson

August Wilson is the towering figure in African American dramatic literature and indeed one of the most important playwrights in American theatre history. His monumental Pittsburgh Cycle (or The American Century Cycle)—10 plays about the African-American experience, each set in a different decade of the 20th century—remains remarkable both for its ambition and for its achievement. Six of the 10 plays in the cycle won major awards, including two Pulitzer Prizes and a Tony. Wilson claims to have been influenced by the “four B’s”—blues music, the artist Romare Bearden, the Argentine fiction writer Jorge Luis Borges, and the African-American playwright Amiri Baraka. (He later added novelist James Baldwin and playwright Ed Bullins to the list.)

Wilson’s plays tend to be group portraits, rich depictions of the crosscurrents, tensions, and conflicts that affect and afflict the residents of Pittsburgh’s Hill District at varying moments during the 20th century. At the same time, vivid, idiosyncratic, memorable individual characters emerge from within these groups—the irrepressible Ma Rainey (Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom), the embittered, disappointed, but doggedly principled Troy Maxson (Fences), and the prophesying Stool Pigeon (King Hedley II), to name just a few.

Though grounded in realism, his plays can move towards the mystical (e.g., the self-playing piano in The Piano Lesson), the surreal (e.g., the ageless Aunt Ester who appears in several of his plays), and the lyrical. Wilson initially intended to be a poet, and his plays frequently contain long passages of heightened language. As noted, he was deeply influenced by the blues, and his characters’ speeches sometimes seem like musical numbers, employing vivid imagery and featuring repetitions of words and phrases.

His plays are far less overtly political than those of many of his African-American peers, including his acknowledged influencer Amiri Baraka. But they are all informed by the Black experience in White America. The white man is always just offstage, sometimes intentionally, sometimes inadvertently pushing and pulling social and economic strings to the detriment of the Black community and the individuals it comprises.

Against that background, Wilson’s characters strive to achieve, to realize their individual dreams and ambitions, even while acknowledging and sustaining their powerful ties to their families, neighbors, and communities. They often lift their heads above the daily reality of earning a day’s pay to take the broad and long view. No matter how difficult their immediate situations, Wilson and his characters remain aware of the importance of spiritual and social legacies, the power of shared values and experiences, and the possibility of a better future.

(Photo by Craig Schwartz.)

Monologue Competition

Eligibility

Any high school student who lives in one of the below areas can compete in the New York hub of August Wilson New Voices Monologue Competition:

  • In New York State: New York City, Dutchess County, Nassau County, Orange County, Putnam County, Rockland County, Suffolk County, Westchester County
  • In New Jersey: Bergen County, Essex County, Hudson County
  • In Connecticut: Fairfield County, Litchfield County, New Haven County

There is no cost to participate.

There are two options for high school students to participate:

  • Participate in an August Wilson Day of Learning on either Saturday, December 7, 2024 or Sunday, December 15, 2024 to gain new performance skills and learn about August Wilson’s life and work; attend a one-on-one monologue coaching on January 11, 2025; and prepare for the Preliminary Audition on February 1, 2025
  • Select an approved monologue and prepare independently for the Preliminary Audition on February 1, 2025
August Wilson Day of Learning

August Wilson New Voices high school participants electing to participate in the August Wilson Day of Learning will attend a one-day workshop on either Saturday, December 7, 2024 or Sunday, December 15, 2024. Led by MTC Teaching Artists, participants will learn about the life and work of August Wilson and practice a series of theatre games, acting exercises, and script analysis techniques. Students also will have the opportunity to have a one-on-one monologue coaching session with a Teaching Artist on January 11, 2025. Participants will leave the August Wilson Day of Learning with a monologue in hand and the tools needed to prepare for the Preliminary Audition scheduled for February 1, 2025.

August Wilson Day of Learning will take place at Manhattan Theatre Club’s Creative Center in Midtown Manhattan. Participants will be provided breakfast and lunch. Capacity is limited.

Independent Competitors

High school students may forego the August Wilson Day of Learning, instead selecting an approved monologue and preparing on their own for the Preliminary Audition scheduled for February 1, 2025. Capacity is limited.

Competition Process and Dates

Pre-Competition Dates

  • Open Houses: November 9, 2024 or November 11, 2024
  • Deadline to Register for August Wilson Day of Learning: November 14, 2024
  • August Wilson Days of Learning: December 7, 2024 or December 15, 2024
  • Deadline to Register as an Independent Competitor: December 13, 2024

Competition Dates

  • Preliminary Auditions: February 1, 2025
  • Semi-Final Auditions: February 8, 2025
  • The top 20 scoring competitors from Semi-Finals will perform at the New York Finals on March 3, 2025
  • The top 3 scoring competitors from the New York Finals will receive cash prizes
  • The top 2 scoring competitors from the New York Finals will proceed, expenses paid, to the National Competition in Pittsburgh, PA scheduled for April 26-29, 2025
Approved Monologues
  • Students will select and perform a 1-3 minute monologue from one of the ten plays in August Wilson’s American Century Cycle.
  • Only monologues provided by August Wilson New Voices are approved for the competition.
  • Absolutely no text changes can be made to the monologue. The monologues must be performed as written in the below PDFs.

Approved monologues: Fences
Approved monologues: Gem of the Ocean
Approved monologues: Jitney
Approved monologues: Joe Turner’s Come and Gone
Approved monologues: King Hedley II
Approved monologues: Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom
Approved monologues: The Piano Lesson
Approved monologues: Radio Golf
Approved monologues: Seven Guitars
Approved monologues: Two Trains Running

Scoring Rubric

Competitors will be adjudicated by a small panel of theatre educators and professionals using a rubric which includes ratings for:

  • Energy and physical presentation
  • Characterization
  • Connection to text
  • Lines/Memorization and Focus
  • Vocal presentation and projection
  • Understanding of text
  • Partnering

How to Participate

Attend an Open House

We invite high school students and their families to learn more about the August Wilson New Voices Monologue Competition at one of our upcoming Open Houses. Please fill out this form to register. You’ll receive an email with additional information one week prior to the event.

Register for August Wilson Day of Learning

High school students who want to participate through one of the August Wilson Days of Learning should complete this form no later than November 14, 2024. Please note that capacity is limited. We will conduct a lottery in the event that we receive more registrations than available slots. All registrants will be notified of their status on November 18, 2024.

Register as an Independent Competitor

High school students who plan to select an approved monologue and prepare for the competition on their own should complete this registration form no later than December 13, 2024. Please note that there are a limited number of Preliminary Audition slots. We will conduct a lottery in the event that we receive more registrations than available Preliminary Audition slots. All registrants will be notified of their status on December 20, 2024.

Questions?

Please email any questions or inquiries to [email protected].