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Rural, tucked-away places contain rich stories, but they鈥檙e not often found on stage in modern theater, playwright and Tony Award-nominated actor John Cariani told 91探花 performing arts students this week.

Cariani wrote聽Almost, Maine, a play told through nine stories about love and loss in a remote, fictional Maine town. 91探花 students performed the show in February; Cariani joined members of the cast and crew鈥攁long with others who had planned to put on 91探花鈥檚 spring musical,聽Urinetown鈥攙ia Zoom to talk about the play and his career in theater and television.

Small-town life hasn鈥檛 always been ignored鈥攑lays from the middle of the 20th Century depicted nuanced suburban and rural lives鈥攂ut political divisions seem to have created an 鈥渦s vs. them鈥 rift in American culture, with rural people often depicted unfairly as simple or ignorant in current media.

鈥淚鈥檝e figured out, kind of in the middle of my life, that I鈥檓 passionate about the way urbane, well-educated people treat rural people,鈥 Cariani said. 鈥淚鈥檓 from a small farm town in northern Maine, and that鈥檚 what I write about. We鈥檙e taught that where we鈥檙e from is bad. I鈥檓 just asking people not to forget that multifaceted, intelligent people live in rural America. Contemporary American art and culture do not represent multidimensional rural and working-class people.鈥

Almost, Maine聽is one of the most produced plays in the country, and it is a popular student production. It opened in 2004 in Portland, Maine, where it received critical acclaim, and has run internationally, as well as for two months as an off-Broadway production, where reception was more mixed.

鈥淚 wanted it to go to Broadway, and I was so excited for what was going to happen,鈥 Cariani told students. 鈥淣one of those dreams come true. But there鈥檚 a great quote in聽Hamlet: 鈥楾here are more things in heaven and earth than can be dreamt of in your philosophy.鈥 And that has been the case in my life. The things that I dreamt didn鈥檛 happen, but the things that have happened were better than what I could have imagined.鈥

When the pandemic started, work shut down for theater actors and crews; Cariani had been about to start performances of聽Caroline, or Change聽on Broadway when the coronavirus shut down New York theaters. Cariani wondered if there was a way he could make some meaningful contribution, and a teacher friend suggested he try to reach students who had recently performed聽Almost, Maine;聽the friend noted the challenges of teaching the arts remotely. 91探花 students asked Cariani questions about his script development, his use of humor, and the staging for the show, and he shared stories about the process of getting plays produced.

No one could have imagined the coronavirus pandemic playing out the way it has, Cariani said, especially the high school seniors who are missing in-person milestones. But the social-distancing measures during the pandemic do have a silver lining for creators: boredom. Great ideas occur to creative people in boring moments, he said, encouraging students to mine their quieter times for ideas. 鈥淕ive yourself time to daydream,鈥 he said.

Cariani has received numerous accolades including an Outer Critics Circle Award win and Tony nomination for his role as Motel the Tailor in聽Fiddler on the Roof, and an Outer Critics Circle Award nomination for his performance as Nigel Bottom in聽Something Rotten!聽He was on聽Law and Order聽for five years; other television appearances include聽The Blacklist, Homeland,听补苍诲听The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.

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