Born and bred in the Twin Cities area but now living in California, Lee Blessing is an award-winning playwright who annually returns to Minnesota for work and family. His latest play, "For the Loyal," was inspired by the sexual abuse scandal at Penn State University. It premiered Friday at the Illusion Theater in Minneapolis. We caught up with Blessing last Monday as he flew into Minneapolis for rehearsals.
Q: Welcome back to Minnesota. When were you last here?
A: We always come for Christmas. My wife, [playwright] Melanie [Marnich], has family in Duluth. And I grew up in Minnetonka. Plus, I come every year in the spring for a workshop at the Playwrights' Center. I lived in New York for 12 years and now I'm in L.A., but Minnesota is in my heart.
Q: Did you always know that you wanted to be a playwright?
A: I was 13 or 14 when the Guthrie came to town. That was a powerful event for me. I fell in love with theater and, from that point on, wanted to be an actor. I wrote poetry. I even went to Iowa for grad school as a poet. But five years later, I emerged as a playwright.
Q: What caused the change?
A: The more I wrote, the more I realized the kind of writing I did lent itself better to theater. I was never good at metaphors. But dialogue came extremely easy for me. And narrative, too.
Q: And you have written a play a year ever since?