The Mission

New Paradise Laboratories is a not-for-profit creative studio that thinks outside of every box it inhabits. Part theatre company, part imaginarium, NPL invents fresh and unexpected experiences for audiences, spectators, and participants, onstage and in the world. NPL acknowledges its responsibility to undertake art-making as a progressive force for social justice and environmental stewardship, both in its creative processes and in the content of its work.  Therefore, NPL collaborates with a range of curious researchers – visual artists, actors, scientists, theatre designers, composers, philosophers, economists, architects, and the public at large – to imagine the widest possible vista for every project. 

NPL began in 1996 as an ensemble theatre company and established a proven track record of original theatre works, invented interactive games, internet performance, and experience design. The future of NPL will extend from this base to museum exhibitions, books, computer code, film and video, and ambulatory experiences, to provoke compelling ideas, sudden inspiration, and a sense of awe. 

The Team

Whit Maclaughlin – Artistic Director

Whit MacLaughlin is the OBIE and Barrymore Award-winning Artistic Director of New Paradise Laboratories. He has conceived, written, and produced 25 original works with the company since 1996, nationally and internationally. His work is known for its strong visual sensibility, visceral muscularity, and pop treatment of philosophical discourse.

His recent work includes large-scaled outdoor and indoor experience design: How To Get To The River (2022), an ecological art adventure for the Academy of Natural Science in Philadelphia, Gumshoe (2017) for the Central Branch of the Free Library of Philadelphia, and Spectre Vivant (2017) for Opera Philadelphia.

His work for the stage and other media include: 707 Hazardous Moves (2021), Hello Blackout (2017), O Monsters (2016), The Adults (2014), and the web-based immersion pieces Extremely Public Displays of Privacy (2011) and Fatebook (2009). He has created work in New York, Seattle, Minneapolis, Louisville KY, Princeton NJ, at CalArts, Ankara, Turkey, and Kansas City, MO. He has received Fellowships from the Pew Charitable Trust, the NEA, and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts; grants from The Pew Center for Arts and Heritage, Mapfund, NEA, TCG, and the William Penn Foundation.

His publications include Batch, An American Bachelor/ette Party Spectacle by Alice Tuan and Whit MacLaughlin, Humana Festival 2007; Prom, U of Minnesota Press, 2010; Live Movies, a Field Guide to New Media for the Performing Arts, ed. Kirby Malone and Gail Scott White, George Mason University, 2006. His work has been presented in NYC at the Ontological Theatre, the Connelly Theatre, and PS 122; at the Walker Art Center, Warhol Museum, Humana Festival of New American Plays, Fusebox Festival, Philadelphia FringeArts Festival, and Prague Quadrennial.

Email: whit.maclaughlin@newparadiselaboratories.com

Pete Angevine – Creative Producer

Pete led Little Baby’s Ice Cream, an experimental, nationally distributed natural foods brand which he founded with no prior experience in business or food, and grew to an industry-innovating, million-dollar enterprise with 60+ employees. Prior to that, he performed and recorded various pop and avant-garde music internationally. Along the way he earned degrees in geography and arts & culture strategy; produced the prototype of an artist-designed historically-interpretive miniature golf course at a botanical garden; began designing clothes; built a comically small art gallery in his house and a couch made of dirt and grass in his backyard; and so on. Recently, he has worked independently with a range of not-for-profit enterprises in fields including life science, public art, cooperative farming, and experimental music, and is the newly minted Creative Producer of New Paradise Laboratories.

Email: pete.angevine@newparadiselaboratories.com

Collaborators

Janani Balasubramanian – Co-Creator, DEEP DIVE

Janani Balasubramanian is an artist and researcher working at the intersections of contemporary art and science. Janani’s work is rooted in years-long collaborations with scientists, through which they discover how artistic inquiry can meet, expand, and provoke new thought in relation to a given scientific discipline. They are committed to accessibility, adaptive design, and play as generative principles of their multimedia practice. 


Janani’s work has been presented and/or commissioned by over 160 venues across North America and Europe, including The Public Theater, MoMA, Andy Warhol Museum, Red Bull Arts, Ace Hotel, Brooklyn Museum, High Line, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. They have been an innovator-in-residence at Colorado College; artist-in-residence at Brooklyn College; artist-in-residence at the University of Colorado; Hemispheric Institute Fellow at NYU; Sundance Institute Fellow; Pioneer Works Narrative Arts Fellow; Jerome Hill Artist Fellow; and Van Lier Fellow at the Public Theater. Janani has received additional development support from MAP Fund; Stanford University Ethics, Society, and Technology Hub; Harvard University Critical Media Practice fund; Tow Foundation; and National Endowment for the Arts. 


Janani is currently artist-in-residence in the brown dwarf astrophysics group at the American Museum of Natural History; visiting artist at Stanford University’s Institute for Diversity in the Arts; resident artist with the Stanford Compression Forum; Pew Foundation grantee through the Academy of Natural Sciences; inaugural Collider fellow at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts; and member of the Guild of Future Architects. They are a 2021 NYFA Fellow in Fiction.

Producing Fellows

Rohan Hejmadi

Alongside being a Producing Fellow with NPL, Rohan is a student at Swarthmore College where he is majoring in Computer Science and Theater. His previous experience includes chairing the Swarthmore Drama Board; producing and directing An Exquisite Corpse –  an experimental theater piece performed at the Lang Performing Arts Center; and organizing multiple festivals in his hometown of Bangalore, India. In addition to improving his understanding of the art of producing, Rohan hopes to use this experience to explore the intersection of coding and theater to see outside the normal boundaries of each field and create unique projects at their intersection. 

Outside of the theater, Rohan can be found laughing at dad jokes, holding his head in despair when Arsenal (his favorite soccer team) is losing a game, shouting angrily at his computer when his code doesn’t work correctly, or revelling in the fact that his name is also a kingdom in The Lord of The Rings. It really never gets old.

Salvador “Cinco” Placensia

Cinco is an avid home cook and comic book connoisseur, who has recently moved to Philadelphia from Colorado to work with New Paradise Laboratories as a Producing Fellow. He earned a BA in Visual and Performing Arts from the University of Colorado Colorado Springs, and is beyond excited to become more involved in the Philadelphia arts community. Cinco imagines art as an immersive experience built through deep collaborations. He finds that it’s imperative to make meaningful connections with artists, lend insight that is both logistical and creative, and create space and time for the project to develop. He has had many formative experiences throughout his artistic journey, namely an internship at The Public Theater for Under the Radar 2019, a research assistant position at Brooklyn College with lead artist Janani Balasubramanian on a project titled The Gift, and technical assistant for the UCCS Theater Company. There are very few experiences that teach individuals how to be producers, so opportunities such as NPL’s producing fellowship seriously contribute to the development of his own practice.