Aubrey Clyburn

Aubrey Clyburn is an autistic writer, actor, and amateur mathematician. Originally from North Carolina, she earned her BFA in Acting from Texas State University and is a recent transplant from NYC to LA. Her first full-length play, Axioms, has been chosen for staged readings at Matthew Corozine Studio, Arizona Actors Academy, Caltech’s MACH 33 Festival, and the Neurodivergent New Play Series in NYC.

Aubrey Clyburn is an autistic writer, actor, and amateur mathematician. Originally from North Carolina, she earned her BFA in Acting from Texas State University and is a recent transplant from NYC to LA. Her first full-length play, Axioms, has been chosen for staged readings at Matthew Corozine Studio, Arizona Actors Academy, Caltech’s MACH 33 Festival, and the Neurodivergent New Play Series in NYC.

Scripts

Worldly Attachments

by Aubrey Clyburn

Synopsis

An insecure witch confronts her conjuring buddy, Darren the unicorn, about the parameters of their relationship.

An insecure witch confronts her conjuring buddy, Darren the unicorn, about the parameters of their relationship.

beat

by Aubrey Clyburn

Synopsis

Two middle-aged brothers try to fight their way through a pile of secrets before their fragile mother comes in to see why they haven't returned to family Christmas dinner.

Two middle-aged brothers try to fight their way through a pile of secrets before their fragile mother comes in to see why they haven't returned to family Christmas dinner.

Axioms

by Aubrey Clyburn

Synopsis

Eliza, a lonely, hyper-logical mathematician, has had a fight with her best (and only) friend. So she retreats to her mind palace to find a solution using the only tools she has: memory, axiomatic set theory, and stuffed animals. She keeps trying to apply mathematical principles to situations from her life, but the math keeps getting more complex until she finally has to ask whether there’s a solution to be...

Eliza, a lonely, hyper-logical mathematician, has had a fight with her best (and only) friend. So she retreats to her mind palace to find a solution using the only tools she has: memory, axiomatic set theory, and stuffed animals. She keeps trying to apply mathematical principles to situations from her life, but the math keeps getting more complex until she finally has to ask whether there’s a solution to be found there at all.