May 4, 2018
Trash Mermaids, a new play by senior Miles Dupuis Carey, presented by Lewis Center for the Arts
A queer, ecological riff on a familiar tale
Photo caption: A cast member in rehearsal for the Lewis Center for the Arts’ workshop production of Trash MermaidsPhoto credit: Carmelita Becnel
What: Premiere of a new play, Trash Mermaids, a queer, ecological riff on a familiar tale in a workshop productionWho: Written by senior Miles Dupuis Carey, directed by Princeton alumna Catherine Andre, presented by the Lewis Center for the Arts’ Program in Theater When: May 10, 11 and 13 at 8:00 p.m. and May 12 at 2:00 and 8:00 p.m.Where: Donald G. Drapkin Studio at Lewis Arts complex on the Princeton campusTickets: Free and open to the public; seating is limited, first-come, first seatedFor more information: http://arts.princeton.edu/events/trash-mermaids/2018-05-10/
(Princeton, NJ) The Lewis Center for the Arts’ Program in Theater will present a workshop
premiere of a new play, Trash Mermaids, written by senior Miles Dupuis Carey and directed by
Princeton alumna Catherine Andre, on May 10, 11 and 13 at 8:00 p.m. and May 12 at 2:00 and
8:00 p.m. in the Donald G. Drapkin Studio at Lewis Arts complex on the Princeton campus. The
new work is a queer, ecological riff on the story of “The Little Mermaid.” An audience talkback
led by Assistant Professor of Theater Brian Herrera will follow the May 10 performance.
Admission is free, however seating is limited and on a first-come, first-seated basis.
Trash Mermaids tells the story of three young LGBTQ people navigating community, family,
identity, and desire—mirrored in an underwater trashscape where genderqueer merpeople build
their tails and their voices from the discarded objects and fragmented texts that sink down from
the normative human world above. The play explores identity formation, divisions between
different LGBTQ communities, and the simultaneous freedom and toxicity of remixing and
recycling cultural narratives that traditionally erase and marginalize.
Carey, an English major pursuing certificates in theater, environmental studies and gender and
sexuality studies, began working on Trash Mermaids last spring. Some of the inspiration for the
play came from a course he took in spring of his sophomore year "Performing the Planet," an
interdisciplinary course that brought literature, performance, and gender studies into an urgent
conversation about climate change. He was also influenced by a course with Assistant Professor
of Theater Brian Herrera, "Gender Crossings in American Musical Theater," a course cross-listed
in Theater, Gender and Sexuality Studies, and American Studies, and his participation in the
Princeton-Bread Loaf Summer Study program in Oxford for six weeks supported by the English
Department where he studied cultural and environmental definitions of waste in contemporary
theory, media, and art.
Other course work of note that relates to his senior thesis project include "Introductory
Playwriting" with Nathan Davis and "Intermediate Playwriting" with Lauren Yee and Naomi
Iizuka, one of Princeton's recent Roger S. Berlind ’52 Playwrights-in-Residence; "Introduction to
Musical Theatre Writing,” taught by Professor of Theater Stacy Wolf and Lecturers in Theater
Robert Lee ’92 and Randall Eng; and “Intermediate Screenwriting.”
Carey also studied with Tony-nominated lighting designer and Director of the Program in
Theater Jane Cox through the course, “Theatrical Design Studio,” and has also worked as a
designer with student theater groups Theater Intime, Princeton University Players, and as
designer and performer with Princeton Shakespeare Company. Design is a key component of the
production, creating the visual world of the story using salvaged plastic collected on campus.
Carey designed the costumes for the production and junior Annabel Barry created the immersive
recycled scenic design. A number of campus entities helped to accumulate the recycled materials
used in the production.
Last spring, Carey served as assistant director on a new senior thesis play by Edwin Rosales,
Princeton Class of 2017, Spring on Fire: A Guatemalan Story, directed by faculty member
Suzanne Agins. Through that production, he gained experience as an active collaborator in the
development a new play for its first production. Catherine Andre, the director and co-creator of this workshop production, first met Carey at
Interlochen Arts Academy, a fine arts boarding high school in Michigan. She graduated from
Princeton in 2017 with a degree in English and certificates in theater and humanistic studies. As
a freelance director in New York City, Andre is committed to shaping heightened texts into
visceral performances, emboldening female characters and interrogating a shared human
condition. More information about her work and upcoming projects can be found
at www.catherine-andre.com.
The all-student cast for Trash Mermaids includes seniors Jared Brendon Hopper and Jasmine
Wang, junior Chase Hommeyer, and first year students Daniel Benitez and Rosie Vasen.
Students taking on production roles in addition to Carey and Barry include Yechen Hu as
lighting designer, Zara Jayant as sound designer, Diana Chen as associate costumer, Nora Aguiar
as stage manager, and Nicholas Judt as assistant stage manager.
Faculty advisors on the production are Jane Cox for design, R.N. Sandberg on playwriting, and
Suzanne Agins on the development and production of a new play.
For more information on this event, the Program in Theater and the more than 100 other
performances, exhibitions, readings, screenings, concerts and lectures offered each year by the
Lewis Center for the Arts, most of them free, visit arts.princeton.edu.
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