Tag: PDX theatre

  • Interview with Creator Melody Erfani on The Words Will Come

    Interview with Creator Melody Erfani on The Words Will Come

    By Alyssa Cokinis

    What if dyslexia were seen as creativity and not as a deficit? 

    The Words Will Come: Inside the Dyslexic Mind by Melody Erfani explores just that. This movement-driven piece follows Sheila, a young Iranian-American girl with dyslexia struggling in school. Movement, sound, projection, and language fracture onstage, translating Sheila’s mind for the audience in an immersive multisensory experience. Within the confines of her mind, Sheila finds an ally in fellow dyslexic Albert Einstein, and she starts to see her dyslexia as something creative and different that brings color to her life and learning. 

    I spoke with Erfani about how the piece was devised, her process, and her hope for audiences once they see the show. 

    Sivan Raz (Sheila) in The Words Will Come by Melody Erfani. Photo by Edison Koo.

    Alyssa Cokinis: How did the concept and themes for The Words Will Come emerge? 

    Melody Erfani: During COVID, I became curious about how my dyslexia affects my day-to-day life as an adult. Other than getting lost very easily, I don’t think about it much now the way I did when I was a kid. I read a book called The Dyslexic Advantage by Brock L. Eide and Fernette F. Eide, which explores the ways dyslexia allows people to see the world differently. I began to recognize how those strengths show up in my theatre work in how I think spatially, visually, and emotionally.

    Shortly after that, my niece Ella, who was eight at the time, began struggling in school. I was struck by how many of the same challenges still exist and how little has changed in 30+ years. It reminded me of a specific childhood memory, sitting in an English lesson on tenses or prepositions that made absolutely no sense to me. I remember looking over at another student’s paper because everyone else seemed to understand, and I didn’t. It felt like the teacher was speaking a completely different language, and I was on the outside looking in.

    That feeling of confusion, isolation, and trying to make sense of something that isn’t built for you became a central emotional thread in the piece. I wanted to provoke conversation about our learning systems, offer a sense of hope, and illuminate the richness and complexity of the neurodivergent experience.

    Cerra Cardwell (Lala), Sivan Raz (Sheila), and Getchie Argetsinger (Einstein) (left to right) in The Words Will Come. Photo by Edison Koo.

    Cokinis: This is the world premiere of the play after two development residencies (congrats!!). How has each residency shaped the trajectory of the piece?

    Melody Erfani: The piece began with an idea and a lot of research, but I initially felt stuck. I ended up creating my own mini writing residency, working with Jonathan Cullen, Rebby Foster, and Cynthia Petts. We met once a week over six weeks, and that process helped me through brainstorming, improvisations, and informal readings of the piece. 

    Those few scenes of material became the foundation for the HB Studio Residency in February 2024. That phase was a staged workshop where a rough draft of the script was developed further, collaborating with designers to add layers to the experience. We had four free public performances followed by talkbacks. Hearing directly from audiences helped me identify what was resonating and what needed to be reworked.

    Most recently, I was in the Alembic Residency, which focused more on allowing rehearsal space for exploration of physical movement. That was instrumental, especially since movement plays such a key role in the piece. Working with other artists and receiving feedback on the physical storytelling has helped clarify the narrative in a much more embodied way.

    Cerra Cardwell (Lala), Sivan Raz (Sheila), and Getchie Argetsinger (Einstein) (left to right) in The Words Will Come. Photo by Edison Koo.

    Cokinis: How does movement drive the story of your play and the relationships between characters, as well as their relationship to dyslexia? 

    Melody Erfani: Movement is used to express shifts in time, confusion, distortion, and moments of overwhelm or chaos. It allows us to move beyond literal storytelling and into a more experiential space. Rather than explaining what’s happening inside the main character’s mind, movement gives the audience a way to feel it alongside her. It creates a shared sensory experience, one that mirrors the nonlinear, sometimes disorienting, but also imaginative and expansive nature of dyslexia.

    Theatre, for me, is the right medium for that because it’s inherently collaborative and immediate. The audience is right there, breathing the same air as the actors. There’s something about that shared space – the vibrations, the breath that creates an experience you can’t replicate elsewhere. It allows the audience not just to observe, but to physically and emotionally enter the world of the play.

    Sivan Raz (Sheila) and Getchie Argetsinger (Einstein) (left to right)  in The Words Will Come.
    Photo by Edison Koo.

    Cokinis: What are you most excited about with this next iteration of The Words Will Come

    Melody Erfani: From the beginning, the design elements have always been an essential layer of the piece. Even while writing, I was imagining how projection, sound, and movement would interact with the story. While our budget is modest (and there are always limitations that come with that), the design team we’ve assembled is incredibly creative and thoughtful. I’m excited to see how their artistry deepens the world of the play and transforms it into a more immersive, multi-sensory experience.

    Cokinis: What do you hope audiences walk away thinking or feeling?  

    Melody Erfani: Empathy. Children between the ages of 7–12 often struggle the most with dyslexia. Our education system is so heavily rooted in reading that if a child struggles to read, it impacts every subject. One challenge compounds another, and many kids end up feeling left behind. There are sobering statistics around students not graduating and the school-to-prison pipeline, where a significant portion of the incarcerated population have learning differences.

    Sivan Raz (Sheila) and Getchie Argetsinger (Einstein) (left to right)  in The Words Will Come.
    Photo by Edison Koo.

    At the core of it, I want audiences to leave asking: how can we better see, support, and advocate for these kids? And how can we begin to shift the narrative from deficit to difference?

    There’s also a thread of hope in the piece, embodied in the character of Einstein. He represents possibility. He’s someone widely recognized as a genius, and he was dyslexic. Even as a child, knowing that gave me a sense of hope that there was another way to think, another way to be, and that difference could be a strength.

    Performance Details

    THE WORDS WILL COME: Inside the Dyslexic Mind
    Created and directed by Melody Erfani

    When: June 4–28, 2026
    Thursdays–Saturdays at 7:30 PM
    Sundays at 2:00 PM

    Where: Shaking the Tree Theatre
    823 SE Grant St
    Portland, OR 97214

    Run Time: Approximately 90 minutes

    Tickets: $30 with limited Pay-What-You-Can tickets available

    Tickets available at: www.lesshakespeareco.org


    Alyssa Cokinis is a writer and theatre artist from Iowa, currently living in the Pacific Northwest. She is also the founder and editor of some scripts, which just published its sixth issue!

  • Review: Beginnings and Endings by Sarah Lynn Brown at Bag&Baggage Productions (Portland, OR)

    Review: Beginnings and Endings by Sarah Lynn Brown at Bag&Baggage Productions (Portland, OR)

    written by Alyssa Cokinis

    After delaying opening night due to ice and snow, Beginnings and Endings by Sarah Lynn Brown, directed by Melody Erfani, opened at Bag&Baggage Productions in Hillsboro (just outside of Portland) on February 16, 2025. Bag&Baggage describes the show as “continuing its tough love affair with Shakespeare,” though it more than continues–the show is overall a wonderful success and tribute to the Bard.

    Beginnings and Endings is actually two one-act plays by playwright Sarah Lynn Brown that have little in common with each other. However, Erfani’s smart framing of the shows as two museum exhibits, reflected in everything from Kyra Sanford‘s scenic design down to the actors serving as museum tour guides at pre-show, sets the audience up well for what to expect in the coming two hours.

    Actor Signe Larsen in deep, distraught contemplation. Photo by Casey Campbell Photography.

    The first act is a rousing adaptation of Richard III aptly titled Richard 3³, which sees all three actors tackle the iconic role and other lead and supporting roles from the original play. This conceit, along with Erfani’s direction, lead to an eerie and exciting switching of the role. In this way, we see a more multi-faceted Richard than if a single actor was playing him: Signe Larsen gives a more gruff and intimidating performance of Richard, Jacquelle Davis leaves us hanging on the edge of our seats, and Mindy Mawhirter’s rendition shows us Richard’s full power of manipulation. When the three are onstage together, speaking and moving as one Richard, Erfani’s direction shines and draws us in completely to Richard’s inner world.

    Actor Mindy Mawhirter (C), back to viewer and arms raised, with actors Jacquelle Davis (L) and Signe Larsen (R) flanking and looking on. Photo by Casey Campbell photography.

    As the actors break in and out of scene, Abby Weinman’s simple costume design paired with Karen Wingard’s props design and Sanford’s scenic design assist the audience along in character changes… and the projected title cards help a lot too, telling us which characters are in scene with one another and where they are. I would be remiss if I didn’t mention how much I loved the eerie sound design of Ash in this show: they perfectly captured the dark political tone of the show with bass reverberations and haunting musical echoes. Overall, Richard 3³ is an exciting, tightly-packed adaptation of the original that stays true to the story’s original intent while subverting classical Shakespearean production expectations.

    Actors Signe Larsen and Mindy Mawhirter clanking root beers onstage in Femme Endings. Photo by Casey Campbell Photography.

    The second act, Femme Endings, deviates away from storytelling in iambic pentameter (though we certainly get a rhythm and grammar lesson in the show) as the three actors take on a large part of diving into the psyches of Shakespeare’s tragic ladies (and also Joan of Arc and Twelfth Night‘s Olivia–interesting choices), as well as “the Dark Lady,” one of Shakespeare’s sonnet muses. This interactive show tears down the fourth wall as actors directly ask the audience for feedback with a coin toss, invite audience members onstage for thumb wars, and even traverse into our ranks to look for mementos in our pockets. These moments keep it fun and lively in between feminist deconstruction of some of the Bard’s famous female characters like Ophelia and Gertrude from Hamlet, Juliet from Romeo and Juliet, Lady M from Macebeth, and many others.

    Erfani’s direction and the actors’ quick instincts are what propels the piece forward, as the writing itself doesn’t totally resolve the women’s grievances with their endings and instead acts as both therapy sessions and rants in a supposed afterlife. Still, the script has a charming and meaningful conceit. Femme Endings is an enjoyable, modern take on Shakespeare’s ladies and how many of them deserved better–including in their line count compared to male characters. (Like WOW, Will. Really?)

    Actors Jacquelle Davis, Mindy Mawhirter, and Signe Larsen. Photo by Casey Campbell Photography.

    That said, I couldn’t help but notice that Brown needs to update the definitions of “bisexual” and “pansexual” when we get to Olivia of Twelfth Night‘s monologue on her queer identity and how her Shakespearean ending should be considered tragic (the latter of which I don’t disagree with–Twelfth Night is very gay and should end with Viola and Olivia, just saying). According to lgbtqiacounseling.com,

    Pansexuality: A pansexual person is someone who has the potential for emotional, romantic, or sexual attraction to people regardless of their gender identity. This includes potential attraction to individuals who identify as male, female, transgender, genderqueer, nonbinary, or any other gender.

    Bisexuality: Bisexuality refers to the potential to be attracted—romantically and/or sexually—to people of more than one gender, not necessarily at the same time, in the same way, or to the same degree. This definition, popularized by bisexual activist Robyn Ochs, suggests that bisexuality includes a wide spectrum of attractions.

    It’s important to note that the term doesn’t imply attraction only to two genders (male and female). Despite what the “bi-” prefix might suggest. Instead, it recognizes that there are more than two genders.

    Keeping these definitions in mind, the script’s definitions feel antiquated. This does not detract from the whole performance but is worth mentioning for the future of script development.

    Overall, Bag&Baggage Productions and Erfani’s show vision absolutely deliver on two fast-paced, wildly different one-acts that pay tribute to the Bard. Go get your fill of scheming royals and feminist rewriting; see the show now until March 8th in Hillsboro, Oregon (right outside of Portland)!


    Alyssa Cokinis is a writer and theatre artist from Iowa, currently living in the Pacific Northwest. She is also the founder and editor of some scripts. alyssacokinis.com

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