Philadelphia Young Playwrights accepts about 700 scripts written by junior and high school students for its programs throughout the year, including the New Voices Festival of script readings and the one-day SaturPLAY event of family-friendly play readings. Lu’s script rose to the top of the pile for a full-scale production.
“I didn’t know this was Katie’s first play until I met her, but the timing and the way the words flow, for me, stood out,” said Donovan Hagins, PYP’s resident producer who also sits on the selection committee.
“The brouhaha — with the racial tension I’ve seen on the news toward Asian Americans because of what the person who was president of the United States at the time liked to spew and people believing it — I found it saddening,” he said. “But Katie’s play — it was inspirational to me as well as a lesson well-learned. As an African American man, I am familiar with racial strife.”
Lu drew from some of her own experiences to inform “Pandemic.” In a scene where Esther and a classmate are studying together, unwelcome questions arise about her family’s nationality. Even after Esther explains she is a fourth-generation American, her classmate wonders if she has any ties to Wuhan, where the coronavirus outbreak is believed to have originated.
Lu said she wanted the play to explore different facets of prejudice.
“There is the outward, aggressive verbal prejudice, physical abuse, and more commonly found microaggressions and subtle hints in dialogue that have racial prejudice behind it,” she said. “There is also internal prejudice, where you are struggling to reconcile your own identity, and you may reject your heritage because of internal prejudice.”
Lu said she is not only new to playwriting, but new to theater, generally. Her first exposure to live theater was a previous PYP’s New Voices Festival at Temple University, which inspired her to write her own plays. She had only just started to see plays when the pandemic shut down theaters.
After her experience writing and producing “Pandemic,” Lu said she wants to keep going. She does not yet have an idea for a new play, but has every intention to keep writing.
You can listen to “Pandemic” online through Feb. 28.