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  1. Sep 3, 2018 · Directed by Niegel Smith at the Flea Theater, Geraldine Inoa’s bracing and intense new play “Scraps” is about lives cut short by police violence, and the cataclysmic harm those killings do ...

  2. Unbound by the conventions of the Western (white) canon, Inoa’s theatrical possibilities seem limitless. "She has a curiosity about what a play can be," said IAMA co-artistic directors Katie Lowes and Stefanie Black via email. "She plays with traditional structure, but isn’t afraid to flip a story on its head if that’s what a play needs.

  3. A new vibrant era in African American playwriting seen in Geraldine Inoa and Dionna M. Daniel’s latest by Charles McNulty, Theater Critic. Control of black bodies is a longstanding theme of our national narrative.

  4. Aug 24, 2018 · Geraldine Inoa explores the traumatic aftermath of a police killing in Scraps. ---. Ever since the Black Lives Matter movement came to prominence after a white police officer fatally shot Michael Brown, there has been a rash of searing plays about how law enforcement victimizes African American men ( Pass Over at Lincoln Center Theater, Kill ...

  5. Feb 13, 2018 · By Olivia Clement. February 13, 2018. Geraldine Inoa. Brooklyn-based playwright and activist Geraldine Inoa is the first recipient of The Rhimes Unsung Voices Playwriting Commission from...

  6. theflea.org › shows › scrapsScraps – The Flea

    Geraldine Inoa is a writer living in Los Angeles. She currently writes for AMC’s The Walking Dead. She is an alumnus of The Public Theater’s Emerging Writers Group and the inaugural recipient of The Rhimes Unsung Voices Playwriting Commission. Her plays have been developed at the Atlantic Theater Company and the Labyrinth Theater Company.

  7. www.offoffonline.com › offoffonline › 2018/9/1Scraps — Off Off Online

    Sep 6, 2018 · Geraldine Inoa’s Scraps runs through Sept. 24 at the Flea Theater (20 Thomas St. in Manhattan). Evening performances are at 7 p.m. Thursday through Monday; matinees are at 3 p.m. Sunday. For tickets and information, call (212) 352-3101 or visit theflea.org.

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