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Antoine Garth and Julie Queen in Erik Ehn’s operatic play,
Phrenic Crush, photograph by David M. Allen
Project Title: Phrenic Crush
Recipient Organization: San Francisco State University Department
of Theater
Lead Artist: Erik Ehn
Genre and Date Awarded: Performing Arts, April 1997
Premiered: July 31-August 2 1997,
Studio Theater, San Francisco State University; August 3 concert
performance, St. Boniface Church, San Francisco
Playwright Erik Ehn, composer Lisa
Bielawa, novelist
and epidemiologist Andrew Moss, director Christine
Säng, and
the San Francisco State University Theater
Department collaborated
to create an original opera about the natural and social history
of tuberculosis from the nineteenth century through its contemporary
outbreak among homeless populations in the United States and its
interaction with the AIDS epidemic in San Francisco.
The artists’ research included extended interviews with tuberculosis
patients in San Francisco’s Tenderloin and South of Market
(SoMa) and study of the history of the disease, including exploration
of its treatment in literature and in such operas as La Boehme. Phrenic
Crush premiered at San Francisco State University as a full
production and in a concert version at St. Anthony’s clinic
at St. Boniface Church in San Francisco’s Tenderloin District.
Proceeds from all performances benefited the clinic. Christine Säng
directed the production. A free public symposium, “The Soul
in Plague Time,” featuring members of the San Francisco Bay
Area medical and artistic communities—also was presented as
part of the project.
The piece was set in San Francisco, in and around
the single room occupancy hotels of the Tenderloin and SoMa. The
work’s growth
drew together San Francisco State University students and staff,
the local medical community, and hotel residents. Interwoven with
the play development process, Ehn directed a class at San Francisco
State through the Extended Learning program for which Phrenic
Crush illustrated the course content.
The project’s title came from a surgical intervention tried
against tuberculosis prior to the development of drug therapies.
Ehn explained, “Steps were taken to shut down infected areas:
wax was poured into the cavities of the lungs, ribs were removed
to prevent the lungs from expanding… the ‘phrenic crush’ severed
the nerves of the diaphragm, again to inhibit breathing. The craved
breath, the need for spirit, is at the center of our project.”
Erik Ehn had worked with Dr. Andrew Moss and
San Francisco General Hospital’s tuberculosis diagnosis and drug adherence programs
since September of 1995. Specifically, Ehn conducted extensive interviews
and delivered medication through a program operating out of the Sixth
Street Merchants and Residents Association. Dr. Moss served as a
mentor to Ehn and informed the students’ and the performing
ensemble’s investigations.
Erik Ehn and Lisa Bielawa, playwright and composer, viewed the writing
of the piece as a step in the evolution of an artistic partnership
that had begun with creation of the opera Vireo, The Spiritual
Biography of a Witch’s Accuser. Prior to their partnership
with San Francisco State University, in 1996 they had developed a
short sketch for Phrenic Crush, entitled “Ideas of
Good and Evil” at the University of Iowa, during the course
of a seven-week residency. This groundwork gave them a basic story,
and musical approach. That sketch then developed into an opera through
their collaborations with the medical community, the School of Creative
Arts at San Francisco State University, the Sixth Street Merchants
and Residents’ Association (particularly Paul Zenti and Heather
Long), and residents of the Tenderloin and SoMa. Ehn wrote, “Phrenic
Crush is about a community and must involve community as more
than a topic; it is of, and for the people of a place. We rehearse,
work in, and work with Tenderloin/SoMa; we seek to draw residents
into auditions, rehearsals and performances.” Among the project’s
many development steps, the script-in-progress was read to medical
staff of San Francisco General Hospital’s tuberculosis ward
at a surgical theater on General’s grounds.
Erik Ehn is the author of numerous plays and
musical theater works. His work has been produced at Sledgehammer
Theatre Company (San Diego, California), Undermain (Dallas, Texas)
Intersection for the Arts (San Francisco, California), BACA (Brooklyn,
New York) Lincoln Center’s
New Director’s Series (New York City), and many other venues.
Lisa Bielawa is a vocalist and the winner of two ASCAP Young Composers
Competition Awards (1995 and 1996). Her music for Phrenic Crush was
scored for continuo organ, percussion, violin, cello, and voices.
She noted of her approach to the music, “Among the various early
twentieth century diagnostic tools, which Erik and I discovered was
the method of ‘percussion of the chest.’ These musical
tie-ins are deeper than metaphor; they address some of the many ways
in which music inhabits the body and invests it with meaning.” Bielawa
added, “Musically these ideas and feelings express themselves
in a certain lyricism, brought out in the sonorous melodic tone of
the violin and cello and the use of melismatic vocal writing….
I’d like to create the sense that we are hearing the instrument ‘breathe’ under
the piece.”
Erik Ehn

Julie Queen and Antoine Garth in Erik Ehn’s operatic play, Phrenic
Crush, Photograph by David M. Allen
Plays include:
Ideas of Good and Evil, Beginner, Wolf at the Door, The Saint
Plays, Vireo (opera libretto: music composed by Lisa Bielawa), Clubhouse
Rules and A Capella Hardcore (musicals, with Chris
Kowanko), AOK (book and music), Porphyra (book
and music), Gravity’s Dream (book and music), Service
for the Dead, Sarajevo (oratorio with Kim Sherman), No
Time Like the Present (play and songs), Lover’s
Tongue (play and songs), Moira McOc (play and songs), Tailings,
Erotic Curtsies, Little Rootie Tootie, Saint Plays, Red Sheets, and
many others.
Productions Include:
Portland State (Maine); Addison Theatre Company (Addison, Texas);
Empty Space (Seattle, Washington), Wolf at the Door; Sledgehammer
(San Diego, California); Annex (Seattle, Washington); Intersection
for the Arts (San Francisco, California) Moira McOc and The
Saint Plays; BACA (Brooklyn, New York); The Chimera Festival
(Addison, Texas); Lincoln Center’s New Director’s Series
(New York City), The Saint Plays; Undermain (Dallas, Texas);
Two Roads (Los Angeles, California); Theatreworks (Tulsa, Oklahoma);
Teeny Feats (Austin, Texas), AOK; The Whitney Museum of
American Art (New York City), No Time like the Present;
Bottom’s Dream (Los Angeles, California); Erotic Curtsies (At
the A.S.K. Festival, Performance Series, Los Angeles, 1996); New
Arts Theatre Festival (Fort Meyers, Florida), Porphyra.
Publications
- “Three
Saint Plays,” Performing
Arts Journal, PAJ Press, New York, (June 1993)
- “Art Worker’s
Hostel: Towards a New Broke Vaudeville,” Theater Magazine,
New Haven, Connecticut (September 1993)
- “Eight
Saint Plays,” TheatreForum, University
of California, San Diego, California (October 1993)
- Beginner, Sun
and Moon Press, Los Angeles, California (November 1995)
- “Two
Altars,” Wordplays,
PAJ Press (October 1996)
Teaching
- Graduate
Students (visiting faculty), University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa
- Undergraduate
Students, Santa Clara University and San Francisco State University
- High
School English: Fordham Preparatory, the Bronx
- Playwriting
workshops: for the mentally ill homeless at the Julian Street
Inn (Santa Clara, California, 1994)
- Founder
and co-facilitator, Tenderloin Opera Company, St. Boniface Church,
San Francisco, California (1995- )
Professional Experience
- Literary
Manager, Berkeley Repertory Theater, Berkeley, California (1991-93)
- Dean
of Studies, NTWH (1988-90)
- Co-Artistic
Director, Thieves Theatre, New York, New York (1984-86)
- Chair,
Board of Directors, Intersection for the Arts (1993-96)
- Planning Committee, Santa
Clara University’s Institute on Justice and the Arts (1995-96)
Grants, Fellowships, and Commissions
- Ideas of Good and Evil, Partnership
in the Arts project at the University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa (1996)
- California
Arts Council Individual Artist Grant (1995)
- Gravity’s
Drain, Commissioned
by the Mark Taper Forum (1992)
- New
York State Commission on the Arts Commission Grant, California
Commission on the Arts for The
Saint Plays
- Mary
Flagler-Cary Commission, Service
for the Dead, Sarajevo
- New
York Foundation for the Arts Sponsorship Program for Vireo
- Member,
New Dramatists

Antoine Garth is watched by the Companions and the Monkey in
Erik Ehn’s operatic play, Phrenic Crush, photograph by David
M. Allen
Lisa Bielawa is the New York Foundation for the Arts 1996 Greg Millard
Fellow in Music Composition and the winner of two ASCAP Young Composers
Competition Awards (1995 and 1996). Projects at the time of Phrenic
Crush included Polybe’s Wish for amplified chamber
orchestra and voice, commissioned by the Albany Symphony’s “Dogs
of Desire” series; a 1996 Composers Commissioning Program Grant
from the American Composers Forum to write a solo percussion piece
for Lee Ferguson; Lux, for 13 instruments and soprano, commissioned
by the Bronx Council on the Arts for the Bronx Arts Ensemble (May
1997); and a symphonic wind piece for the University of Minnesota
at Moorhead Wind Ensemble.
As the winner of the 1995 Dale Warland Singers’ New Choral
Music Program national competition, she received a commission for
an extended work on the texts of William Blake. City Summer produced
her opera Vireo: The Spiritual Biography of a Witch’s Accuser,
a collaboration with Erik Ehn, in July 1997. A second music theater
piece with Ehn, Ideas of Good and Evil, was developed in
residency and produced at the University of Iowa in the spring of
1996 with support from the American Music Center. Other commissions
include several pieces for the San Francisco Girls Chorus; and a
ballet entitled Songs of Psyche, a collaboration with Juilliard
choreographer Carrie Nedrow, which was showcased at the International
Guild of Musicians in Dance conference in 1995.
Ms. Bielawa was born in San Francisco, where she began her music
education at home with her parents, composer Herbert Bielawa and
keyboardist/early music scholar Sandra Soderlund. At Yale University,
where she received her B.A. in 1990, Ms. Bielawa studied composition
with Martin Bresnick, Jonathan Berger, Jan Radzynski, and Michael
Tenzer. Ms. Bielawa tours internationally as the vocalist in the
Philip Glass Ensemble; recent recordings with Glass on the Nonesuch
label include the complete Einstein on the Beach and Music in
Twelve Parts. As a solo vocalist, she has performed and recorded
with the quartet Toby Twining Music, the Anthony Braxton Tri-Centric
Ensemble, and the Albany Symphony Orchestra in the premieres of works
by Daugherty, Lang, Ince, Levin, Braxton, and Torke.
RESUME HIGHLIGHTS
Director/Choreographer
Lincoln Center Theater Directors Lab Director
- Theme for Five Voices, playwright
Tania Myren, The Salon, Lincoln Center Theater Director Lab
- Fire-Eater, reading,
playwright Brighde Mullins, Lincoln Center Theater Directors
Lab
- Fishes, playwright
Diana Son, director Jessica Kubzansky, Mark Taper Festival of
New Works
- Vagabond Queen, composer
Edward Barnes, Los Angeles Music Center Opera
- Queen of Swords, playwright
Judy Grahn, HIP Productions, Hollywood Moguls, Los Angeles
- Monkhood in Three Easy
Lessons, Japan American Theater, Franklin Furnace, Highways,
Chicago Institute of Arts School, N.A.M.E. Gallery
- Lament of the Bacchae, Highways,
Los Angeles, California
- Dancing at Lughnasa, Singular
Productions, director Allison Liddy, Ivy Substation, Los Angeles
- Elektra, by Ezra
Pound, directed James Burke, Ivy Substation, Los Angeles
- Ms. Julie, directed
Rob Urbinati, The Salon, 78th Street Theater
Film and Video
- The Music Box, directed
by Susan Scanlon, Sundance Film Festival
- Nariobe, video
performance work, Hampshire College, Massachusetts
- USC/AFI
Films and a few Karoke Videos, directed by Charles Otte, James
Burke, Michael Confer, Revelstoke Films
Performance Work – Direction and
Performance
- Off-off
Broadway, Solo Performance Series, Flaming June: A Woman Stuck in a Painting, HERE
Tiny Mythic, New York City
- Dance
Artist Series, Flaming
June: A Woman Stuck in a Painting, Fountain Theatre, Los
Angeles, California
- Burning the German Candle, San
Francisco, California
- The Voice Dance, Hollywood
Playhouse
- Lah Lah NYah NYah: Opening
Islands, Theater/Theater
- Temptations: A Minor
Fate, Ohio Theatre New York City, and the American Living
Room
- “Presenting
Artist Series,” Rituals of Romance from a Valkyrie Point of Death, Project
III, New York, New York
- Collaboration
with Randolyn Zinn, Sunday in the Park with George
- House
of ARTthieves, Performance Company
Acting – Representative Work
- Goose and TomTom, David
Rabe, directed Charles Otte, West Coast Premiere, Los Angeles
- Goose Amid the Revolt,
Rik Pagano, Odyssey Theatre, Los Angeles, California
- The Crab Piece, One
Dream Theatre, New York City
- Winter’s
Tale, Rebecca
Holderness, The Salon, New York City
- Baal, Brecht,
directed by Charles Otte, Callboard Los Angeles, Ohio Theater,
New York City
- Chautauqua Festival, directed
by Michael Kahn, Pierre Lefevre, Rebecca Guy
- Illusion Theatre, director
Michael Robbins, Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Biker
Chick Flicks, “A&E
Biography,” USC, AFI Films
Awards/Honors/Grants
- Drama
League New Works Grant (1996)
- Williamstown
Boris Sagal Directors Fellowship, Finalist (1995)
- Drama
League Directors Project Finalist (1995)
- Djerassi
Resident Artist Program Award, San Francisco, California (1995)
- Los
Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions/New Langton Arts Grant (1995)
- CCF
Grant (1994)
- Cummington
Artists Residency, First Alternate (1993)
- “Up
and Coming LA Choreographer,” If
the Shoe Fits, sponsored by Gene Kelly (1992)
- Dramalogue
Awards for productions (1993, 1995)
Teaching Positions – Physical Acting
- Directors
Fellowship, University of Waikato, New Zealand (1997)
- Circle
in the Square Professional Program, New York City (1996)
- Five
year guest artist workshop residencies, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore,
Pennsylvania
- Guest
Artist, American Academy of Dramatic Arts, University of Southern
California
- Ballet
instructor, University of Minnesota
- Guest
artist in dance and theatre department, Harvard/Westlake School
- New
York City and Los Angeles public schools

Antoine Garth and Julie Queen are menaced by a Bird in Erik Ehn’s
operatic play Phrenic Crush, photograph by David M. Allen
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