Success Stories
Creative Heights Society has proudly supported the following stage and screen productions:
2024• Dovetail Actors Studio • “ZORA!” by Laurence Holder
This play ignites the spirit of Zora Neale Hurston. A small-town southern girl who longed to go to school and embraced her financial disparities by enrolling in high school with one change of underwear, one dress, and one pair of shoes. In January 1925, with $1.50 in her purse and a dream, Zora moved to Harlem and became the first black woman to study at Barnard/Columbia University, rose to fame as a writer, helped pioneer the Harlem Renaissance literary movement, secured a Guggenheim Fellowship Award to study in Haiti, Jamaica and throughout the gulf coast and ultimately became one of the world’s greatest literary geniuses.
2024 • Stephen Sheffer • “Lean-To”
Lean-To is a full-length play about three strangers who meet in the forest and spend a night together in a rustic, lean-to shelter. When the trio comes together around the warmth of a campfire, the spark that ignites between them becomes too hot to handle. The trio fragments but not before they experience the joy of authentic connection. Lean-To tells the story of three characters who are looking for their path – the wild world around them & the wild world inside of them. The trio experiences the joy of authentic connection...but then things go too far.
2024 • Lubomir Rzepka • "Coney Island Nursery Rhyme"
Based on a true story set in the 1920s, the play follows the esteemed incubator-doctor, showman, and unofficial father of Neonatology, Martin A. Couney. In a time where a eugenics-focused medical culture refused to employ incubator technology, Martin A. Couney took it upon himself to save premature babies in his own incubators at a sideshow at Coney Island where funds were used to hire nurses and essentially create an unofficial hospital. We focus on Beatrice Winthrop, a woman from the American gentry who seeks Couney's assistance after giving birth prematurely.
The story is an homage to an important, peculiar, and nearly forgotten part of history. It is a reflection on the nature of truth and trust, and perhaps most importantly, it is a meditation on what it means to “do the right thing” and how doing the right thing isn’t entirely free of consequence.