BC premieres new work by alumni playwrights
Two AVŐïËù College alumni playwrights will showcase their talents on campus this semester when their new work Cleveland Circle premieres at the Universityâs Robsham Theater ArtsCenter.
Featuring a cast of eight performers, the new work by 2023 graduates Aidan OâNeill and Lily Telegdy explores the web of human connections through the lens of 20-somethings living in AVŐïËù, in the titular neighborhood near BC. Cleveland Circle will be presented at Robshamâs Bonn Studio from March 21-24 as part of the RTAC/Theatre Department spring line-up.
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Lily Telegdy
âThe road to happiness is marked with jarring potholes and unexpected detours,â the playâs description states, as the protagonists âgrapple with lifeâs basic questions.â Some are as trivial as where to get a good cup of coffee. But others are troubling and complex: âWho am I really? What is the right thing to do? Is there life after 30?â
Though neither describe the playâinspired when they were undergraduates in part by the great unknown of life after collegeâas autobiographical, âthere are many traits about myself I see in the characters, and I share many of their fears about the future and being an adult,â Telegdy said.
OâNeill concurred. âThe overarching sense of âwhat to do nextâ is definitely true to our experiences. I lived in Cleveland Circle for two years during my time at BC; itâs a special place to me and it perfectly fit the transitory, circular nature of our playâ as a backdrop to the charactersâ stories, struggles, and connections.
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Aidan O'Neill
The duo were frequent collaborators during their undergraduate years as theatre majors. They began writing Cleveland Circle during senior year as their thesis project with Professor of Theatre Scott T. Cummings, who is directing the play. He first directed their work in 2022 as part of a âNew Voicesâ showcase of original plays. Â
âIâve developed a number of new plays at AVŐïËù College by students or former students, but this is the first time I am directing a play written by two people,â Cummings said. âItâs different. Itâs almost like there are three playwrights: Lily, Aidan, and the curious blend of their voices.â
Though Cummings describes them as very different people, âthey have symbiotic sensibilities,â he said. Â âAt this point, when Iâm working on the script, I donât remember who wrote what at firstâunless I come across a real Lily-ism or Aidan-ism. They definitely have distinctive senses of humor.â
âWorking with Scott again means so much to me,â Telegdy said. âEver since I met Scott, he has encouraged me as a playwright, and working on âNew Voicesâ was one of the most rewarding experiences. We started writing this play in an independent study with Scott, and he is as important to Cleveland Circle as either myself or Aidan.â
âScott was one of my favorite professors, biggest mentors, and a frequent collaborator,â OâNeill said. âHeâs still all of those things and a great friend as well, so itâs a joy to work with him. It wouldnât be happening without him.â
Of their continued collaboration, Cummings said: âIâve worked with each of them for years: two semesters of playwriting when they were sophomores, a year developing their separate one-act plays as part of âNew Voices 2022â in their junior year, a joint independent study in their senior year, and now work on Cleveland Circle when they are out in the world and confronting âlife after college.â Itâs a privilege to have sustained working relationships like this and to see them grow not just as playwrights but as people, too.â Â
Both are happy that Cleveland Circle will premiere on campus.
âIt makes me really excited that this play is premiering at a college,â Telegdy said. âIt feels right: that a play about whatâs itâs like to be a young person is first presented to young people, by young people.â
Added OâNeill, âItâs weird but very exciting to be coming back to BC and premiering this play. Since I just graduated in May, itâs certainly a bit of dĂ©jĂ vu, but I love and am so thankful for the BC theater community, so itâs pretty special.
âOne of my favorite parts of the whole Cleveland Circle process has been co-writing with Lily. You donât frequently get to co-write with someone and itâs been a very special collaboration with a great friend.â
Both are pursuing careers in theater: Telegdy, a drama teacher and technical director, focuses on theater for young audiences, and plans to continue work as a playwright; OâNeill has a job in events in addition to theater work as a long-term pursuit.
 For more information on the production, including performance times and ticket prices, see . For tickets, go to  or call the RTAC Box Office at ext. 2-4002.