Review Fix chats with writer Casey Wimpee, who discusses his new production, “Butcher Holler Here We Come.â€
Trapped in a 1973 Virginia coal mine, the show is lit only by the actor’s headlamps and they set the action around the audience. The show has been said to fuse the horror of The Shining with the tension of Mamet’s American Buffalo.
Butcher Holler plays July 24 through August 2nd at The Tank. For more information on the production. click here.
Review Fix: What was the inspiration for this production?Â
Casey Wimpee: The inspiration came from a night I spent living in Austin 10 years ago. I ate some ketamine with a girlfriend, and we listened to Loretta Lynn til sunrise, so naturally the idea of a telling some trippy coal mining story just stuck with me. Specifically, being trapped in a mine as analogous to being trapped in one’s own mind, and all that dissociation and sensory deprivation, but with a Dolly Parton soundtrack.Â
Review Fix: What’s your creative process like?
Wimpee: I do a lot of research. In Butcher’s case, it was mostly period stuff about Appalachia in the ’60s- Irene McKinney, Louise McNeill, Breece Pancake. On the subject of coal mines, the best writers are almost always women, because of their ability to perceive and process and express such complex emotional and physical conditions in their community, when the men in their families are all busy dying underground.
Review Fix: What makes you different from other playwrights?
Wimpee: I didn’t do college. I like to tell folks I wrote my first play in jail, which isn’t true- I’d penned a couple scripts before that. But the year I spent in jail, which happened to coincide with the year most of my friends were graduating, was edifying in ways no creative writing program could have touched. Â Â
Review Fix: What makes this production special?
Wimpee: I wrote the script for the Cincinnati Fringe, and since then we’ve taken it on the road to many other cities. But we all live in NYC, and have yet to produce it here, so it’s immensely satisfying to finally bring it all back home, and share it with friends.
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