Bryan has been a Playwright-in-Residence at Spokane Civic Theatre in Spokane, Washington,
since 1982. Thirteen of his plays have been published, and his short play The Lemonade Stand is
also anthologized in More One Act Plays for Acting Students (Meriwether Publishing Ltd.,
2003). These works include commissioned stage adaptations of Ernest Hemingway’s The Snows
of Kilimanjaro and The Killers, and Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.’s Long Walk to Forever, all published by
The Dramatic Publishing Company. Bryan’s work has been performed throughout the United
States, and other countries. His play National Pastime, about the breaking of the color line in
major league baseball in 1947, has received many productions, including an Equity waiver
production at Fremont Centre Theatre in South Pasadena, California...
Bryan has been a Playwright-in-Residence at Spokane Civic Theatre in Spokane, Washington,
since 1982. Thirteen of his plays have been published, and his short play The Lemonade Stand is
also anthologized in More One Act Plays for Acting Students (Meriwether Publishing Ltd.,
2003). These works include commissioned stage adaptations of Ernest Hemingway’s The Snows
of Kilimanjaro and The Killers, and Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.’s Long Walk to Forever, all published by
The Dramatic Publishing Company. Bryan’s work has been performed throughout the United
States, and other countries. His play National Pastime, about the breaking of the color line in
major league baseball in 1947, has received many productions, including an Equity waiver
production at Fremont Centre Theatre in South Pasadena, California and an Equity production at
(former) Stamford Theatre Works in Stamford, Connecticut. National Pastime is published by
Playscripts, Inc. of NYC.
Bryan collaborated with David Casteal in developing the play York, which tells the story of the
only Black man on the Lewis & Clark Expedition (1803-06), and has been performed
throughout the country. (Bryan did the book for York, and David developed the Djembe drum
rhythms used to tell the story.)
Bryan has a cycle of plays on end-of-life, Vesta, Dusk, and Holding On ~ Letting Go. Vesta was
workshopped at Lark Theatre Company in NYC, and received an equity-waiver professional
production at Seattle’s Capitol Hill Arts Center (CHAC) in February, 2008. Dusk premiered at
Spokane Civic Theatre in Spring 2007, and Holding On ~ Letting Go premiered at Fremont
Centre Theatre (FCT) in 2012. The FCT production was featured as a main stage production at
the National Black Theatre Festival in Winston Salem, North Carolina in Summer 2013, and was
also produced by Spokane Civic Theatre Studio Centre in Spring, 2017. All of these end-of-life
plays are now specially licensed in clinical and educational settings addressing end-of-life issues
through the Hospice Foundation of America (www.hospicefoundation.org).
In 1999, Bryan was a Fellow at the Hawthornden International Retreat for Writers in Lasswade,
Scotland. He has also been a guest writer at a number of venues, including the Lark Theatre in
NYC in 1999.
A number of Bryan's short plays have been in festivals throughout the country. In July 2010, his
short play Antipasto was selected for the 35th Annual Samuel French Off- Off Broadway Short
Play Festival. Other short plays featured in multiple festivals include Office Hours, Myra,
Meta..., Mea Culpa, and The System.
Bryan's most recent full-length play, Exile, was workshopped at Spokane Civic Theatre's Studio
Theatre in Fall, 2022.
Bryan is a member of the Dramatists Guild of America.