Interview with professor, poet, director Anne Elezabeth Pluto
Anne
Elezabeth Pluto is
Professor of Literature and Theatre at Lesley University in
Cambridge, MA where she is the artistic director and one of the
founders of the Oxford Street Players, the university’s Shakespeare
troupe. She is an alumna of Shakespeare & Company, and has been a
member of the Worcester Shakespeare Company since 2011. She was a
member of the Boston small press scene in the late 1980s and is one
of the founders and editors at Nixes Mate Review. Her chapbook,
The Frog
Princess,
was published by White Pine Press (1985), her eBook Lubbock
Electric,
by Argotist ebooks (2012), and her chapbook Benign
Protection
by Cervana Barva Press (2016). Recent publications include: The
Buffalo Evening News,
Unlikely
Stories:
Episode IV,
Mat Hat
Lit,
Pirene's
Fountain,
The
Enchanting Verses Literary Review, Mockingheart Review, Yellow Chair
Review, Levure Litteraire – numero 12, The Naugatuck River Review,
and Tuesday, An Art Project.
I had the pleasure to speak with Pluto on my Somerville Media TV
show, Poet to Poet Writer to Writer.
Doug
Holder: In your collection Benign
Protection
you seem to be a master of absence. The absence of your late parents
as defined by their “things.”
Annie
Pluto: This is sort of my homage to grief, with the death of my
father and mother. I had all these things that came from their
rent-controlled Brooklyn apartment. I was writing poetry about my
father, and when my mother was dying I wrote poetry about her too.
The “things” from the apartment represented them. When I would go
back to Brooklyn-- I always stayed with friends who were close by to
my parents' apartment. So I would walk to their street, but I would
never go down it. I didn't want to see the building. Too painful. So
I evoked my grief and my parents' stories in my work.
DH:
Tell me about your parents.
AP:
Well my father had a fascinating life and it was referenced in one
of the poems in the collection. My parents were Russian but they
lived in Poland. My father was separated from my mother because he
was in the Polish Army during World War ll. He wound up as a
prisoner in a Soviet camp. He also saw action in Egypt and Italy.
Eventually he moved to Canada. And my mother was there. She had
thought he was dead. Eventually they married in Toronto. After a
waiting a year they came to America.
DH:
I know that your are the director of the Oxford St. Players, that is
connected to Lesley University. How does your role as a poet mix with
that of the theater.
AP:
They dovetail. Theater is very group orientated—you work with
people. It is very interconnected. Obviously as a professor and
director I am in charge of many things. With poetry you pullback.
You are with yourself. I need that time too.
DH:
You studied at the University at Buffalo in the 70s. I was up there
at that time too. I also know Mike Baskinski—the former curator of
the small press collection there. What was the lit scene like when
you were there?
AP:
It was very friendly. It wasn't competitive like New York. I would
say people were more interested in helping each other out. I had a
lot of mentors. My first collection was published by a Buffalo press,
White
Pine.
I studied with Robert Creeley and Irving Feldman. Creeley was very
straight forward. He would get very annoyed if students didn't do
their reading. I remember he would deliberately close this large
literary tome and dismiss the whole class. I had the privilege to
read with Creeley as well.
DH:
You were also part of Shakespeare & Company directed by Tina
Packer.
AP:
Yes. I was always involved with theater. I did a lot of theater as a
little girl in Brooklyn. There was a NYC Board of Education radio
show at the time. I was in high school then. I would participate in
these staged readings they would have. Working with Tina Packer was
great—very challenging. I always wanted to be an actor but my
parents wanted me to do something more practical.
DH:
You were also involved in the small press scene in Allston, MA., a
section of Boston.
AP:
Yes. I had sent my work to a magazine called, Oak
Square.
Eventually I met the editor Philip Borenstein. I became involved
with the lit mag. Eventually I became the Poetry Editor. Around this
time Michael McInnis—( a founder of the Nixes Mate Press), opened a
bookstore in Allston. I lived right around the block from it.
Allston had a lot of zines. It was a very do-it-yourself scene. It
was married to the Punk Rock scene —that was very Allston-centric.
Years later, Mike, Philip and I started Nixes Mate and the rest is
history.
No comments:
Post a Comment