Miami New Drama

[5][6] It produces work that is diverse, multicultural, and multilingual with theater artists such as Moisés Kaufman, Gregory Mosher, Christopher Renshaw, and Aurin Squire.

[2] The company's debut production, The Golem of Havana, directed and with a book written by Hausmann, and music and lyrics by Salomon Lerner and Len Schiff, opened at the Colony Theatre in Miami Beach in January 2016.

[11] Hausmann, Lerner, and Shiff, along with their friends and families and the group's board, produced the play with their own money, at a substantial risk.

The play ran at the Colony Theatre from January 14, 2016 to February 14, 2016[21] after productions at La MaMa in 2013[22] and Barrington Stage Company in 2014.

The play puts a military pilot on trial for shooting down a hijacked plane headed towards a large group of people, and asks the audience to act as the jurors on the case.

[27] It is a feminist and bi-lingual re-imagining of August Strindberg's Miss Julie set during Miami's Art Basel in a luxurious South Beach hotel.

The play focuses on an album that was delivered to the Holocaust Museum in 2008, with pictures of different Nazi officers, secretaries, and their families on vacation during World War II.

[30] Puras cosas maravillosas, a Spanish adaptation of Duncan Macmillan's Every Brilliant Thing, was directed by Hausmann and starred Erika de la Vega.

This play is a documentary theater piece co-written by Billy Corben and Aurin Squire, using text from depositions, newspaper articles, and other documents from the time.

[33] Based on Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name, The Bridge of San Luis Rey was adapted for the stage and directed for Miami New Drama by David Greenspan, who also appeared in the play.

The story follows Armstrong through his life, from his beginnings in New Orleans to his rise to international stardom and eventual role during the Civil Rights era.