Waiting for Ella Poster

Waiting for Ella

Waiting for Ella Poster

Waiting for Ella


Contemporary | Drama
By Michael London

4F | Ages 33, 43, 45 & 69
2M | Ages 33, & 9

Act 1 | 45 mins
Intermission
Act 2 | 45 mins

Set in an isolated waiting room at Kettering Hospital in Dayton, Ohio, Waiting for Ella is the story of these four Native American friends that find a way to come together after the leader of their new acapella singing group, Tohtónha, has a health crisis and may no longer be the visionary that keeps them together. Their crisis and fear mirrors some of the same questions facing many people as they ask what it means to be a part of a community, what it means to be seen, what does it take to survive with an identity intact?

We hear the joy and humor of their souls in their singing both native and non-native songs. They turn the world upside down and a little sideways, singing standards like Amazing Grace, Sweet Georgia Brown and Puttin’ on the Ritz in native languages.


Cast List

MAIN:

ETTAJANE | Female, age 43

A Choctaw/African American woman in her 40’s is not afraid to say what’s on her mind.

AUNTIE MILLIE | Female, age 96

A Mohawk elder, shares her knowledge with humor and ease.

LEDA | Female 33

A member of the Chippewa nation, looks to the future and will take her friends with her.

ANNA MAE | Female 45

A Shawnee descendant who hails from Kentucky, wears her heart on her sleeve, and is an ally looking to help.

SUPPORTING:

KAI | Male 33
A male Cheyenne-Arapaho Nurse

WOLF | Male 9
The Bi-racial son of Ettajane.

Waiting for Ella photos

Setting


DAYTON, OH | Contemporary

The setting for the action is a private waiting room at Kettering Hospital.

Behind the Story

ARTISTIC COMMISSION
This play is the result of an Individual Artist Award for the Playwright from the National Endowment for the Arts. It is the outcome of a project called Native Voices. Mike’s desire was to create a play that gives voice to Urban Natives in today’s world. It was created with the support and assistance of the Human Race Theatre Company.

Media

Poster of a teenager walking down a rural road


Actor Name | Jewish Community Center | Oct 2025
Photo credit: Photographer Name


Show preview | Jewish Community Center | Oct. 2025
Video credit: Videographer name

Testimonials

Anschel is an incredibly powerful play that provides accessible and engaging Holocaust education for audiences as young as 6th grade. At the JCC of Greater Columbus we welcomed over 230 attendees, of which 60 were students. There are very few Holocaust education programs that have such broad appeal to audiences of different ages. The story itself is inspiring and the performance captivated everyone in our theater for the entire time. I would highly recommend bringing Anschel to your community.

Ronnie Conn (Jewish Community Center, Columbus, OH)

What an amazing and rewarding experience to participate in Anschel, last night in Springfield.  90 minutes of attention, concentration and emotion.  It was very personal and the setting felt very right.  The young actor was electrifying – and this must be hard duty as the story is as hard to watch as it is compelling.  No looking away.

Audience Member (Springfield, OH)

“Touching, moving, and beautifully told story.”

Audience Member (Columbus, OH)



“It was a very moving and spiritual experience!”

Audience Member (Dayton, OH)

Performance History

DATESTYPEVENUELOCATION
Nov 6, 2023Staged ReadingThe Loft Theare
The Human Race Theatre Company
Dayton, OH


ABOUT THE PLAYWRIGHT


Michael M London

Playwright | Educator | Speaker

  • His plays have been produced in the USA, UK and Canada
  • Artist-in-Residence with many Ohio arts and educational organizations
  • Playwright-in-Residence with the Benjamin Franklin House (London, UK)
  • Master’s Degree from Royal Holloway, University of London (UK)

Other Scripts

Treason Banner



Historical | Drama

4 M (ages 13, 43, 45 & 69)

A father and son, each who cared deeply for the other, became two sides of the political drama of their time….. Both convinced of their cause, both set to lose.

Smile banner



Solo | Historical | Bio-Drama

1 M (age 65)

SMILE is a window into the private thoughts and private world of the very public Charlie Chaplin.

Connect

I also maintain the Ohio Playwright’s Circle program, a resource that focuses on service and education to Ohio playwrights.

To contact me about the Ohio Playwright’s Circle, email me at ohioplaywrightscircle@gmail.com

Or visit the blog site at ohioplaywrightscircle.wordpress.com

Treason Poster

Treason

Treason Poster

Treason


Historical | Drama
By Michael London

4M | Ages 13, 43, 45 & 69

Act 1 | 50 minutes
Act 2 | 40 minutes

A father and son, each who cared deeply for the other, became two sides of the political drama of their time….. Both convinced of their cause, both set to lose.

Inspired by the true events, TREASON is a dramatic two-man play revealing Benjamin Franklin’s clandestine meeting with his illegitimate son William, Britain’s faithful Royal Governor of New Jersey, as this devoted father and loving son find themselves enemies in the American Revolution.

Their opposing loyalties come head to head in May 1775 when William steals away to meet secretly with his father, begging him to stop his dangerous push for war.

Even William’s shocking first meeting with his own illegitimate son cannot change the course of the coming battle.

This is the story of that night.


Request a Sample Inquire About a Production

Cast List

Joseph Galloway | Male, Mid 40’s

Middle-aged merchant & politician, owner of the Trevose Estate, and a man full of tension and fear over the coming conflict.

William Franklin | Male, Mid 40’s

Royal Governor of the colony of New Jersey; son of Benjamin Franklin.

Benjamin Franklin | Male Late 60’s

American Politician, Printer & Inventor and father of William Franklin.

William “Temple” Franklin | Male 14

Grandson of Benjamin Franklin, son of William Franklin, and a bright but naïve boy from a sheltered existence.

Treson Location

Setting


The action takes place inside a parlor room at the Pennsylvania country estate of Trevose on the night of May 24, 1775.

Behind the Story

Today we have families that are torn apart with political division.

This is not new. It is at the very core of who we are as a country and how we started. It is only when we can actually hear each other and listen that we may hope to heal the divide. This is the true story of a family that did not, and it may be a caution to us all.

I know this history well, and sharing this story and others of this family on stage is a key reason that I remain committed as the Playwright-in-Residence for the Benjamin Franklin House in London, UK.

ARTISTIC COMMISSION
The creation of this work was supported by:

  • The American ArtWorks Foundation
  • The Benjamin Franklin House in London, UK

Media

Treason
Treason

Testimonials

Anschel is an incredibly powerful play that provides accessible and engaging Holocaust education for audiences as young as 6th grade. At the JCC of Greater Columbus we welcomed over 230 attendees, of which 60 were students. There are very few Holocaust education programs that have such broad appeal to audiences of different ages. The story itself is inspiring and the performance captivated everyone in our theater for the entire time. I would highly recommend bringing Anschel to your community.

Ronnie Conn (Jewish Community Center, Columbus, OH)

What an amazing and rewarding experience to participate in Anschel, last night in Springfield.  90 minutes of attention, concentration and emotion.  It was very personal and the setting felt very right.  The young actor was electrifying – and this must be hard duty as the story is as hard to watch as it is compelling.  No looking away.

Audience Member (Springfield, OH)

“Touching, moving, and beautifully told story.”

Audience Member (Columbus, OH)



“It was a very moving and spiritual experience!”

Audience Member (Dayton, OH)

Performance History

DATESTYPEVENUELOCATION
2016Staged ReadingLoft Theatre
Human Race Theatre Company
Dayton, OH
2016Staged ReadingThe Benjamin Franklin HouseLondon, UK


ABOUT THE PLAYWRIGHT


Michael M London

Playwright | Educator | Speaker

  • His plays have been produced in the USA, UK and Canada
  • Artist-in-Residence with many Ohio arts and educational organizations
  • Playwright-in-Residence with the Benjamin Franklin House (London, UK)
  • Master’s Degree from Royal Holloway, University of London (UK)

Other Scripts

Smile photo



Solo | Historical | Bio-Drama

1 M (age 65)

SMILE is a window into the private thoughts and private world of the very public Charlie Chaplin.

Waiting for Ella photos



Contemporary | Drama

4F (ages 33, 43, 45 & 69) | 2M (ages 33, 9)

4 Native American women explore their deeper connections while in a crisis.

Connect

I also maintain the Ohio Playwright’s Circle program, a resource that focuses on service and education to Ohio playwrights.

To contact me about the Ohio Playwright’s Circle, email me at ohioplaywrightscircle@gmail.com

Or visit the blog site at ohioplaywrightscircle.wordpress.com

Smile Poster

Smile

Smile

Chaplin, The One Man Band


Solo | Bio-drama
By Michael London

1 M | Age 65

105 mins with an intermission

SMILE captures a moment in time when Sir Charles Spencer Chaplin was at the end of his movie making career.  We meet him in his office as he reminisces of his origins as the Little Tramp.  He then finds himself, in 1952, caught up in a McCarthy era interrogation by the FBI, as he is a suspected anti-American communist.

Cast List

CHARLIE CHAPLIN | Male, age 63

Chaplin

Setting


LOS ANGELES | 1952

The setting for the play is the office and dressing room for Charles Chaplin at the Chaplin Studios In Los Angeles in 1952.

Behind the Story

I first came to write about Sir Charles Chaplin through the side door. That is to say, I didn’t start out to write a play about Chaplin. In fact, at the beginning of this project, I knew very little about him.

I knew that I had experienced the creative process of an actor and that of a writer. But I was curious to know what happens if I combine two such processes. Would I experience a new creative process not quite like the ingredients when separated? I am still discovering the answer to this question.

I decided to write a play that I would perform and began researching the lives of many different personalities. After a few weeks, I began to study Chaplin as one of many alternatives. But once I started, I couldn’t seem to stop. Book after book after book. My sitting room became a screening room for his films.

Something magical clicked for me as I viewed films and read books on the first recognized genius of the new art form of Cinema. Gradually I acquired a new member of the household. Chaplin moved in to stay. Books, films, photographs, posters, Chaplin memorabilia of all kinds. He finally acquired his own room.

I prepared myself with extensive research with Chaplin Scholars across the United States. I studied Chaplin’s art of Mime with the Goldston Mime Foundation. I’ve seen 76 of the 86 films that he made. And I studied the structures of one-person-shows that have been written in recent years. And finally, I began to conceive the script.

My driving vision has been to create a piece that speaks of Chaplin, the man behind Charlie the Tramp. Although beloved and adored early in his career, Chaplin became known as “The man America loved to hate.” Driven away in 1952, he was begged to return to America in 1972.

His art and his life have been studied and analyzed many times over. The wealth of material on Chaplin is staggering. And throughout it all, there is a notion of Chaplin as an incredibly complex and contradictory personality. The same notion that is often applied to his Charlie the Tramp character. I believe Chaplin would have viewed these perspectives as a self-indulgent intellectual exercise, and himself as a simple man in spite of it all. A genius, yes, but a simple man.

I also found that there are no full-length one-person-shows, based on a nonfictional character, that do not use the theatrical device of eliminating the imaginary fourth wall with the audience. (i.e. Mark Twain, in “Mark Twain Tonite,” speaks directly to the audience.) I discovered that Chaplin would never have been comfortable speaking to a large audience about his personal self. And so, in SMILE, he does not, (l find myself creating a significant challenge and bucking theatrical tradition at the same time. But then what’s life without a few risks?)

With the generous cooperation and support of an incredible production staff we created SMILE — Chaplin, the One Man Band.

For me, there has been no such thing as a one-man-show.

Media

Smile photo
Chpalin

Testimonials

“Whether playing the young or old Chaplin, London succeeds in giving us glimpses of the man behind the mask, the complex and troubled soul behind the Tramp’s seductively simple exterior.”

THE SCOTSMAN  (Edinburgh, Scotland)


“London Smiles Better!”

THE LIST (Glasgow, Scotland)

“Few on the planet have gone to such painstaking detail in reviving the memory of Charlie Chaplin.”

THE GAZETTE  (Montreal, Canada)


“Unique Theatre imaginatively and creatively produced and played…. It is a production that I will remember, and think about for a long time.”

THE BOOSTER (Columbus, Ohio)

“London has crafted a sensitive and loving portrait of Charlie Chaplin. SMILE will make you smile.”

Dayton Daily News  (Dayton Ohio)


“It (London’s Performance) was like a virtuoso playing a musical instrument!”

CFQR (Montreal, Canada)

Performance History

DATESTYPEVENUELOCATION
July 1987ProductionJust for Laughs Festival – Juste Pour Rire; Centaur TheatreMontreal, Canada
Mar 1987ProductionBoll Theatre
University of Dayton
Dayton, OH
Aug 1985ProductionDayton Theatre GuildDayton, OH
Aug 1985ProductionEdinburgh International Theatre Festival; Herriot-Watt TheatreEdinburgh, Scotland


ABOUT THE PLAYWRIGHT


Michael M London

Playwright | Educator | Speaker

  • His plays have been produced in the USA, UK and Canada
  • Artist-in-Residence with many Ohio arts and educational organizations
  • Playwright-in-Residence with the Benjamin Franklin House (London, UK)
  • Master’s Degree from Royal Holloway, University of London (UK)

Other Scripts

Waiting for Ella Banner



Contemporary | Drama

4F (ages 33, 43, 45 & 69) | 2M (ages 33, 9)

4 Native American women explore their deeper connections while in a crisis.

Treason Banner



Historical | Drama

4 M (ages 13, 43, 45 & 69)

A father and son, each who cared deeply for the other, became two sides of the political drama of their time….. Both convinced of their cause, both set to lose.

Connect

I also maintain the Ohio Playwright’s Circle program, a resource that focuses on service and education to Ohio playwrights.

To contact me about the Ohio Playwright’s Circle, email me at ohioplaywrightscircle@gmail.com

Or visit the blog site at ohioplaywrightscircle.wordpress.com

Copyright © Michael M London | Website by Nufire Collective