led by guides to Site-specific
theatrical performances
at LACMA after-hours.
Michael fights his way back
to life after a series of
inexplicable strokes,
he discovers…
The mission of Moving Arts’s MADlab
is to foster new and producible scripts
by creating a…
ROBERT MENNA has worked as a playwright, director and dramaturg on over 100 plays…
HOWARD HO is a playwright, composer, and Ovation Award-nominated sound designer based in Los Angeles. His play…
Emily Fernandez is a professor at Pasadena City College where she teaches composition and creative writing. She received her MA in…
AMY DELLAGIARINO is a playwright and screenwriter whose work has been produced in LA, New York, and Chicago. Her play…
Called “The tiny Silver Lake theatre with an enviable reputation,” Moving Arts is dedicated to the production of original works. Founded by Lee Wochner and Julie Briggs in 1992, Moving Arts has produced many world, national, West Coast and Los Angeles premieres. Moving Arts began as a 22-seat venue in the Silver Lake area and quickly grew to become a resident artist company that includes actors, directors, producers, designers and playwrights.
Since 1992, Moving Arts has continuously produced adventurous new plays in a variety of venues across Los Angeles, ranging from traditional theatres such as [Inside] the Ford in Hollywood and the Los Angeles Theatre Center, downtown to nontraditional spaces such as the Natural History Museum and the parking lot across from Disney Hall, showing a remarkable versatility and commitment to the craft of theatre.
“Moving Arts is an exhilarating, enriched welcoming for offbeat, unusual new plays which otherwise may not be produced.”
“Moving Arts has won bucketloads of awards but more important, their projects generate enough buzz to graduate into larger theaters.”
“Moving Arts has been consistently garnering attention and acclaim for its steadfast loyalty to original works.”
“Critics and adventurous playgoers have acclaimed them for producing new plays which offer something special in a black-box theatrical environment.”
“…Why we should stop watching sitcoms and go to the theatre more often.”