Philip C. Hall, 59, a Brooklyn transplant and playwright, is a resident of Harlem, New York. In 2019, his dramatic writings were utilized in theatrical workshops and performances to support the positive development of incarcerated youth in New York State Office of Children and Family Services facilities, as well as adults in New York State prisons. Since 2019, his dramatic work Dutch Crown (an inner-city take on Edgar Lee Masters’ Spoon River Anthology) has been performed in several New York State correctional facilities, where it continues to be used as a teaching tool.
In 1996, Philip was a founding member of Rehabilitation Through the Arts (RTA), a nonprofit organization that utilizes the transformative power of the arts to help incarcerated women and men in New York State develop critical life skills. In 2020, RTA commissioned him to write three screenplays for its Reimagining Myself program, which is currently offered to incarcerated adults in New York and California.
In March 2023, Philip’s play The N Trial (a critical exploration of one of the most offensive words in the English language) was performed at TADA! Theatre’s Emerging Artists Festival in New York City. In October 2023, he was a panelist at Brooklyn Borough Hall for the Osborne Association’s event “See Us, Support Us: Reentry Through a Child’s Eyes.” Since 2022, Philip has performed in David Rothenberg’s play The Castle. He is employed as a case manager and is currently working on two plays. He enjoys writing, attending plays, and cycling.