Men We Love: Matt Gould & Griffin Matthews
Click here to read the article: http://www.cocoecomag.com/matt-gould_griffin-matthews.html
Creative Activism on a Rainy Night
Check out this awesome blog about our latest performance in the beautiful hills of Hollywood! Thanks to our amazing supporters for this!
http://www.talesofordinarymagic.com/2012/04/27/creative-activism/
Hometown coverage of the Richard Rodgers!
Matt’s hometown paper celebrates the Richard Rodgers Award! Check out the article here:
SCV NEWS
Witness Uganda Wins 2012 Richard Rodgers Award!
New York, February 8, 2012 – The winner of the 2012 Richard Rodgers Awards for Musical Theater was announced today by the American Academy of Arts and Letters, which administers the Rodgers Awards.
Witness Uganda by Matt Gould and Griffin Matthews
Witness Uganda was awarded a staged reading.
The intent of the Richard Rodgers Award is to nurture talented composers and playwrights by enabling their musicals to be produced in New York City. Former award recipients include Maury Yeston, Nine; Jonathan Larson, Rent; Julie Taymor and Elliot Goldenthal, Juan Darien; Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty, Lucky Stiff; Jeanine Tesori and Brian Crawley, Violet; and Scott Frankel, Michael Korie, and Doug Wright, Grey Gardens. Since 1980 seventy works have received Rodgers awards.
This year’s jury included Stephen Sondheim (chair), John Guare, Sheldon Harnick, David Ives, Richard Maltby, Jr., Jeanine Tesori, and John Weidman. Richard Rodgers, elected to the Academy in 1955, endowed these awards in 1978. The awards provide financial support for productions, studio productions, and staged readings of original musicals, by nonprofit theaters in New York City.
Check out the article here:
PLAYBILL
Broadway World
Gould and Matthews Decline Invitation to Speak at Pepperdine
Dear President Benton and Pepperdine University,
When my writing partner Griffin Matthews and I were invited to curate a master class at Pepperdine University regarding our musical work, Witness Uganda, we jumped at the chance to share what we’ve learned with the future trailblazers of the American Theatre. We’ve performed all over the world, spoken at commencements, school assemblies, business conferences, won awards from the Jonathan Larson Foundation and ASCAP, received commissions from Yale and Playwrights Horizons, and worked alongside some of the greatest theatre artists living. Sharing our work with young artists is always the most exciting, fulfilling and inspiring opportunities for us.
However, when we learned of Pepperdine’s policy of banning students from forming a Gay-Straight Alliance, we were appalled. How can a university reconcile prohibiting its gay community from organizing while simultaneously inviting a composing team to come to the school to talk about a musical with a gay protagonist who was kicked out of his church for choosing to live openly about his sexuality?
In the past year and a half we have watched countless young people tragically end their lives prematurely because they felt they had nowhere to turn. No place safe. They felt unseen. As educators and mentors, it is up to us to use our voices and our platform to recognize all people. They exist. Their stories matter. Their lives matter. Their right to organize and be supported matters.
Witness Uganda is about tolerance and exploring various points of view through a multitude of people. The show is about the complexity of trying to change the world.
The Pepperdine policy is an antiquated view and is in opposition to progress. LGBT people exist in your University and yet your policies continue to ignore them. School officials are not required to like gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender people. You are not even required to teach about them. But as an educational institution you have a responsibility to demonstrate tolerance. And as a religious institution you have been commanded to demonstrate love. “God is love.” (1 John 4:8.)
We are not willing to participate in a culture of intolerance, especially under the guise of education. Until Pepperdine learns how to demonstrate love to their LGBT and straight students, Griffin Matthews and Matt Gould will not be attending or teaching any master classes there.
Love,
Matt Gould and Griffin Matthews
Matt Gould, Griffin Matthews Win Two ASCAP Awards for Witness Uganda
Read all about Matt Gould and Griffin Matthews winning two ASCAP awards for their musical Witness Uganda.
Link to the press article here.
Download pdf of the article here.
Play-by-Play at Art’s Cutting Edge
Take a look at this great write-up on Matt Gould and Griffin Matthews, and their work on Witness Uganda.
Link to the press article here.
Download pdf of the article here.
Gould and Matthews’ WITNESS UGANDA Presented for Schwartz at Disney
Read about Matt Gould and Griffin Matthews presenting Witness Uganda for Stephen Schwartz at Disney.
Link to the press article here.
Download pdf of the article here.

