Hartwell is dealing with the double load of stress by "really focusing," he says. "Just taking it a day at a time." See also: Best Actress in a Drama 2013 -- Laura Norman in Ghost Writer
Coincidentally, both plays have socio-political connotations, though they're very different and Grounded is the more immediately relevant of the two. The play is about a fighter pilot who becomes pregnant and is grounded by the military."She's a very passionate fighter pilot," Hartwell says. "She belongs in the sky, in the blue, as she says. After she has her baby, they give her a new gig as a drone pilot in Las Vegas. It's about the disconnect that she has between flying a jet and sitting in a cold trailer in the middle of the Las Vegas desert manning a drone twelve hours away from Afghanistan. There's guilt and slow breakdown as she realizes what the drones are meant to do. It's about drones and PTSD, humanity, war.
"When she's a fighter pilot in the sky she doesn't see it, doesn't have to witness it -- drops bombs, they're gone. But they have cameras on the drones and in the trailer in the desert she can see everything. It makes it all human, real. Her instinct is to treat it just like when she's a fighter pilot, but she slowly realizes that it's not the same. She can't just wipe it out of her mind and it eats at her slowly."
BETC artistic director Stephen Weitz had already picked Laura Norman for the role of the pilot when he contacted Hartwell. Hartwell had directed Norman in BETC's Ghost Writer last year -- for which she won a Best of Denver -- and he jumped at the chance: "The number one reason I decided to do the project was that she was attached to it," Hartwell says. "The reason she's perfect for this role is that she has a quiet strength. It's a completely different character from Myra in Ghost Writer, but both characters do have a hidden strength, and that's what she's able to tap into. There was a reserve Myra had to have -- and it's a different kind of reserve required for her to play an air force fighter pilot.
"It's hard," he continues. "I knew it would be difficult to direct a one-woman show. I have to keep track of her energy level and make sure she doesn't blow her voice out. She has to hold the audience's attention alone for an hour and twenty minutes.
"This is a story that's so timely and needs to be seen, a dark play and a cold play. It's hard to step back right now. Anything about drones and war is going to be difficult to shake off at the end of a rehearsal or performance. Laura's pretty wiped out by the end of rehearsal.
"Without being preachy, the play comments on the use of drones. It taught me more than I ever knew before. A lot of people in the audience will walk away with new knowledge. The character mentions fairness several times in the script -- not that war is ever fair. But that is not a fair fight when the threat of death is removed for one of the participants." Keep reading for more from Josh Hartwell.