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    Streep Loves Bird

    Beloved Texas author wins prestigious competition funded by Meryl Streep

    Cynthia Neely
    Sep 8, 2015 | 4:42 pm

    Meryl Streep is anything but a sore loser. When Patricia Arquette won what could have been Streep’s Oscar for Best Supporting Actress at this year's awards ceremony, Magnificent Meryl gave her a passionate standing ovation.

    Maybe it was Arquette’s acceptance speech about gender inequality in Hollywood that set Streep’s cogs in motion, leading her to create and generously fund The Writers Lab, a screenwriting competition for women over 40 that will take place mid-September at Lake George in New York.

    Women writers from all over the country jumped at the chance to have their screenplays considered and more than 3,500 entries poured in. Twelve writers were selected.

    You may have heard of one of the winners — she’s Austin’s Sarah Bird.

    An award-winning columnist for Texas Monthly, Bird has written nine novels (Above the East China Sea is the 2015 Seattle Times Best Book of the Year); she’s been voted Best Local Author four times by readers of the Austin Chronicle; has been inducted into the Texas Literary Hall of Fame; and has written screenplays for Paramount, CBS, Warner Bros, National Geographic, ABC, TNT, and independent producers.

    To have accomplished all this, of course, Bird has to have been around a while. At 65, she is the affirmation of what actress Patricia Arquette indicated in her Oscar acceptance speech — a woman who must battle age and gender discrimination despite her proven talent.

    Winning script

    The script that earned Bird’s place at the Lab is Daughter of a Daughter of a Queen. It’s based on the true story of an unconventional hero of the western frontier, Cathy Williams (1844-1892), who was the only woman to serve with the Buffalo Soldiers.

    It must be a good script, damn good in fact, to warrant accolades from high-caliber industry judges solicited by the contest presenters: New York Chapter of Women in Film and Television (NYWIFT); IRIS; and the Writers Guild of America, East. Members of these groups have written, directed, produced, acted, costumed, cast, edited, and scored for productions on big screens and small, around the world. Streep herself is a member of NYWIFT.

    In an email interview that began while Bird was vacationing in Vancouver, I jokingly asked if the great actress herself notified Bird of her win.

    “Ha! No, Meryl Streep did not take time off from being the Queen of Modern Cinema to ring me up,” she said. “I was at a family reunion in Estes Park, Colorado when the finalists were notified, but they couldn’t reach me because I hadn’t had cell reception for several days.

    “The third day of the trip we trekked to a scenic vista high enough or clear enough that my voicemails were downloaded. I had several telling me I’d been selected and asking me to call immediately or lose my spot.”

    While there’s been no mention of whether Streep will make an appearance at the Lab or not, Bird says the actress’s participation has already been colossal and game-changing. “On the strength of her name, female screenwriters have been featured, not just in entertainment news, but in publications from The Guardian to El Mundo.”

    Bird confirms that it’s much harder to be an older screenwriter than an older novelist and that The Writers Lab addresses the double discrimination that women face in Hollywood.

    “I was 40 and had had a movie made when I actually started going out to LA for gigs. The overage frat boys whom I met in abundance at pitch meetings had no idea what to make of a female of my advanced age. The crinkling when I walked into a room was the sound of many dinkies shrinking. I started out reminding them of the first wife that none of them wanted to think about. When I fell into the dreaded Mom Zone, I was done.”

    First film experience

    It’s a wonder that Bird didn’t give up on screenwriting after her first film (based on her novel The Boyfriend School) didn’t turn out to her satisfaction. (A screenwriter is rarely involved with a film’s production or even allowed on set once the script is in the hands of the director. The original story can change dramatically in the process — and not always for the good.)

    Though there was a bidding war for her script, the final film, starring Shelley Long and Steve Guttenberg, was “fairly forgettable,” she says.

    It was at that premiere that Bird decided to return to novels.

    The seed for her current prize-winning screenplay, however, was sown back in the late 1970s.

    Daughter of a Daughter of a Queen is based on the true story of Cathy “Cathay” Williams, a slave freed by the Civil War who made the momentous, inspiring decision to reach for a better life by disguising herself as a man and becoming the only woman to ever serve with the legendary Buffalo Soldiers.

    “I did a bit of research, but, back in those pre-Internet days, I could find no further information about Cathy and assumed the fabulous story was apocryphal.”

    Nearly a decade later, Bird attended a childbirth class taught by Pamela Black, who additionally was an elementary school teacher. Ironically, Black had been researching Cathy Williams, too, as she felt students at her predominately black school didn’t have enough heroes. “Pam shared the information she had gathered and insisted that I had to write a book about the amazing woman who had made such a singularly courageous choice,” remembers Bird.

    At that time though, Bird felt no one but an African-American had the right to tell Williams' story. “So, I put the story aside and concentrated on bringing another amazing character, our son Gabriel, into the world.”

    Williams' story continued to haunt Bird. She felt generations of girls should have grown up knowing this inspirational history. “Still, I couldn’t put aside the feeling that I was not the one to write it,” she recalled. “Then, one evening, I had dinner with a remarkable friend, Emily Tracy-Haas, screenwriter, opera singer, visual artist, who has access to realms that many would call psychic. As we were eating, she asked if someone close had died recently.”

    Though no one had, her friend couldn’t shake a feeling. Reluctantly, she told Bird, “There is someone, a woman, trying to contact you. I see her standing behind you. I can’t tell what she wants but ... I see silver doors opening up at the top of your head almost as if you’re opening yourself to her.”

    Bird asserts that, “Those who know me will attest that I am among the least woo-woo of people, but that message seemed pretty clear and undeniable. Though I thought I had abandoned screenplays, in that moment I realized that, in order for Cathy’s story to reach the girls who needed it most, I had to write it as a screenplay. There followed an experience that was the closest I’ve ever come to automatic writing.

    “The screenplay opened lots of doors for me, silver and otherwise, and earned many writing assignments in both feature films and television. Sadly, though, the belief at that time was that the cross-over audience which had supported Roots no longer existed.” (Roots was a hugely successful 1977 TV mini-series that dramatized a slave’s ancestry from enslavement to liberation.)

    By the time Bird felt she could tell the Williams story she had turned 60. “I wanted to follow her life from the Civil War, to her posting out West, to her final years running a boarding house in Colorado. I wanted to experience being a woman in the ultimate man’s world. And, though this is a bit woo-woo, I felt Cathy wanted that as well.”

    The Writers Lab will give Bird an extraordinary opportunity to get her script made into a film. She will be mentored by professionals who know a thing or two about the business: Kirsten Smith (Legally Blonde, Ten Things I Hate About You), Jessica Bendinger (Bring It On, Aquamarine), Gina Prince-Bythewood (Secret Life of Bees, Beyond the Lights), Caroline Kaplan (Time Out of Mind, Personal Velocity), Mary Jane Skalski (Win Win, The Station Agent), Lydia Dean-Pilcher (The Lunchbox, The Reluctant Fundamentalist), and Meg LeFauve (Inside Out, The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys).

    Help from Pantheon

    In addition, Houston’s Pantheon of Women is working towards getting the screenplay produced. (The organization produces and presents film and television that change the way women are perceived by men and the way women perceive themselves.)

    “Pantheon of Women has been incredible,” says Bird. "Like Meryl Streep, they are devoted to putting more female faces and female stories on-screen. The principals, Alicia Goodrow, Donna Cole, and Deborah Kainer, are phenomenal entrepreneurs who have put together an entire business plan. They are currently interviewing directors and casting directors.”

    With so many professional women acting as a driving force behind Bird, it looks like neither age or gender will stand in her way this time. Streep has created a nuclear fission.

    I asked the writer what would she say if she could sit across from Streep over tea — or beer or bourbon — and she replied, “Thank you, you have done more to focus attention on the dearth of women’s stories being told by women writers than anyone else has in the 30 years since this imbalance became an issue.”

    Meryl Streep has funded The Writers Lab, a screenwriting competition for women over 40 that will take place mid-September at Lake George in New York.

    12 Meryl Streep Golden Globes fashion January 2015
    Photo by Paul Drinkwater/NBC
    Meryl Streep has funded The Writers Lab, a screenwriting competition for women over 40 that will take place mid-September at Lake George in New York.
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    your attention please

    Houston Grand Opera names Rice alum James Gaffigan its next music director

    Tarra Gaines
    Nov 6, 2025 | 9:00 am
    ​Houston Grand Opera names James Gaffigan as next Music Director
    Photo by Claire McAdams
    Houston Grand Opera names James Gaffigan as next Music Director

    Opera lovers in the audience for the Houston Grand Opera’s magnificent season opening production of Porgy and Bess didn’t know it, but they were hearing HGO’s future. James Gaffigan, the acclaimed conductor of the performance will no longer be called an honored guest to the company and our city; instead, he’ll make the Wortham Center his new home.

    HGO announced on Thursday, November 6, that Gaffigan will serve as the fifth music director in its 70-year history, leading the company alongside general director and CEO Khori Dastoor. He replaces Patrick Summers, who announced last year that he would step down as artistic and music director at the end of the 2025-26 season.

    When Gaffigan begins his term as music director designate for the 2026-27 season and then assumes the full role of music director in the 2027-28 season, he won’t find Houston an unfamiliar landscape. Though originally from New York, Gaffigan once lived here while earning his master’s degree from the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University.

    After his time at Rice, he quickly rose to international superstardom in both symphonic and operatic circles. He has conducted some of the greatest orchestras around the country, including the New York Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and many others. In Europe he has taken the podium at the London Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin, and more.

    In 2011, he made both his HGO and American operatic debut with the company’s production of The Marriage of Figaro. He has also become a very welcome guest conductor for national and international opera houses, including the Metropolitan Opera, Bayerische Staatsoper, Opéra National de Paris, Lyric Opera of Chicago, and more.

    For the past several years, he has made a home in Europe serving as the general music director of Komische Oper Berlin, and he recently completed his fourth and final season as music director of the Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía in Valencia, Spain.

    Even with such a strong global presence, this Rice Owl continues to migrate back to Houston, guest conducting the Houston Symphony several times. Last year, he lead the first-ever performance by the HGO Orchestra at the annual Eleanor McCollum Competition for Young Singers Concert of Arias.

    Gaffigan’s ties to Houston are so strong that back in 2011, CultureMap’s own society king and classical music expert, Joel Luks, pondered if Gaffigan might be an excellent candidate for Houston Symphony director upon Han Graf ’s retirement. Luks, who attended the Shepherd School at the same time as Gaffigan, lauded the maestro’s sense of musical timing, charisma, and spirit.

    \u200bHouston Grand Opera names James Gaffigan as next Music Director

    Photo by Claire McAdams

    Houston Grand Opera has named James Gaffigan as its next Music Director.

    “He seems to understand music-making in a macro level, presenting a cohesive interpretation, while allowing musicians freedom of expression,” described Luks, also noting Gaffigan’s ability to connect with musicians and audiences, alike.

    It turns out Luks’s prediction for a musical directorship for Gaffigan was only off by 14 years and about a theater district block, the distance from Jones Hall to the Wortham Center.

    “I always knew that the first post I would take in the United States as music director had to be the perfect fit,” Gaffigan said in a statement. “All the boxes needed to be ticked. As I considered which institution, which city, and which community aligned with my dreams and goals for an American institution, I found HGO to be my ideal partner. In my opinion, HGO is the most exciting opera company in the United States. It is rare to find such a healthy institution, with tremendous potential, and a solid foundation on which to build.”

    Gaffigan went on to reminisce that he has admired HGO since his early twenties.

    “When walking into the building, I get a sense of community and excitement for our art form and the importance it has in our lives. I feel the same from the people in the greater Houston area. Houstonians want great art. Under Khori Dastoor’s leadership, the company has flourished, and it has become clear to me that the sky is the limit. I can’t wait to return to this city and start our thrilling new chapter together.”

    Dastoor sings similar praises for Gaffigan.

    “To welcome James Gaffigan back to Houston, and to HGO, as our new music director represents the fulfillment of an ambitious dream,” stated Dastoor. “This fall, Houston audiences have had the incredible opportunity to witness his passion, electric energy, and mind-blowing artistry at the podium. I am overjoyed that today’s leading American conductor — who embodies a new generation of music-making at the highest level — has chosen to invest fully in this company. James was steeped in the art and culture of Houston on his way to finding phenomenal international success. His return is both a testament to our city and a reflection of HGO’s ascendance as a force in the global opera industry.”

    For those wanting to get a taste of that passion and energy Gaffigan will bring to his role as Houston Grand Opera music director, he conducts Porgy and Bess November 7 and 9.

    performing-artshouston grand operajames gaffigan
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