Tuesday, February 21, 2012

We've Moved And It's More Exciting Than Ever!


From now on, all future blog articles can be found at our fantastic new website.

While you're there, why not check out some other great features, such as:
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These new features have been designed to enhance your theatrical licensing experience.

So...what are you waiting for?!

Find us at:


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licensing.halleonard.com.au/plays/overview - to find all you need to know about our vast catalogue of plays for licensing and hire...

Monday, September 19, 2011

GRADS presents Arthur Miller’s "All My Sons"


Directed by Barry Park, a compelling family drama about betrayal, guilt and greed - and a terrible secret revealed at the Dolphin Theatre, UWA beginning the 4th of November 2011.

Starting at 7.30pm (Sunday 6th November -2pm matinee)

Tickets on sale at BOCS at only $25 or $20 concession.
Ph: 9484 1133

Monday, August 15, 2011

Plays from Hal Leonard Australia – Stars & Stripes!

 America is known as a great many things: the land of the free and home of
the brave.  Along with being the birthplace of presidential democracy,
this vast nation is home to such famous icons as the bald eagle,
the Statue of Liberty, Uncle Sam & Coca Cola. America can also boast
some of the most prolific, important and world-renowned playwrights
of our time.
Hal Leonard Australia is proud to represent and celebrate many of these
great writers, both classic and contemporary.   Below you will find a selection
of our writers and their most popular titles available for licensing.
 
From the Libraries of
Dramatists Play Service & Josef Weinberger



Photo: Applause Books
Arthur Miller
“He said he...didn’t like sticking to the facts. He much preferred making things up. The rest, you know, is history.”
 - Enoch Brater,  Theater and English professor who interviewed Miller numerous times and is working on an upcoming book on the famous playwright.
“Everybody who has acted in the arts... is aware of the legacies of Arthur Miller and wonders who will be the next Arthur Miller. It reflects well on our tradition of being both socially conscious and artistically active.”
 - RC junior Ryan Bates, who has participated in activist theater groups on campus, such as Acting Out and is currently working on The Laramie Project which explores the motivations and ramifications of the Matthew Shepard murder.

WORKS include:
  • After the Fall
  • All My Sons
  • The American Clock  
  • Broken Glass
  • Clara
  • The Crucible
  • Danger: Memory!
  • Death of a Salesman
  • Elegy for a Lady
  • An Enemy of the People
  • The Golden Years
  • I Can't Remember Anything
  • Incident at Vichy
  • The Last Yankee
  • The Man Who Had All the Luck
  • A Memory of Two Mondays
  • The Price
  • The Ride Down Mount Morgan
  • Some Kind of Love Story
  • A View from the Bridge

Arthur Miller (1915-2005) was born in New York City and studied at the University of Michigan.   He wrote a great number of plays (see left) and also a novel, various screenplays, texts.  He collaborated on books with his wife, photographer Inge Morath.  Memoirs include “Salesman in Beijing” and “Timebends,” an autobiography.  Short fiction includes the collection “I Don’t Need You Anymore”, the novella “Homely Girl, a Life” and “Presence: Stories”. 
He was awarded the Avery Hopwood Award for Playwriting at University of Michigan in 1936. He twice won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award, received two Emmy awards and three Tony Awards for his plays, as well as a Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement. He also won an Obie award, a BBC Best Play Award, the George Foster Peabody Award, a Gold Medal for Drama from the National Institute of Arts and Letters, the Literary Lion Award from the New York Public Library, the John F. Kennedy Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Algur Meadows Award. He was named Jefferson Lecturer for the National Endowment for the Humanities in 2001. He was awarded the 2002 Prince of Asturias Award for Letters and the 2003 Jerusalem Prize. He received honorary degrees from Oxford University and Harvard University and was awarded the Prix Moliere of the French theatre, the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Pulitzer Prize.



Photo: Applause Books
Edward Albee
"It is three and a half hours long, four characters wide and a cesspool deep"
 - John Chapman on Albee's 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' in The New York Daily News (1962)
WORKS include:
  • The American Dream
  • At Home at the Zoo
  • The Ballad of Sad Cafe
  • Counting the Ways
  • Everything in the Garden
  • Fam and Yam
  • Finding the Sun
  • Fragments
  • The Goat or, Who is Sylvia?
  • The Lady from Dubuque
  • Lolita
  • Me, Myself & I
  • The Play About the Baby  
  • The Sandbox
  • Seascape
  • Three Tall Women
  • Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
  • The Zoo Story
Edward Albee was born on March 12, 1928, and began writing plays thirty years later.  His plays have won many awards, including Tony Awards ("Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?",  "A Delicate Balance" & "The Goat, Or Who Is Sylvia?") and Pulitzer Prizes ("A Delicate Balance", 'Seascape", "Three Tall Women").
He is a member of the Dramatists Guild Council, and president of The Edward F. Albee Foundation. Mr. Albee was awarded the Gold Medal in Drama from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters in 1980, and in 1996 received the Kennedy Center Honors and the National Medal of Arts.



Photo by Ethan Hill
Donald Margulies
"…Margulies writes about relationships with such intelligence and spiky humor that his comedy-drama…becomes something quite wonderful."
 - Time Magazine.
"A breezy comedy of modern manners that turns poignant and deeply affecting by its end. Margulies touches chords that resonate with a deep affecting humanity."
 - San Francisco Examiner.

WORKS include:
  • Brooklyn Boy
  • Death in the Family
  • Dinner with Friends
  • Father and Son
  • First Love
  • Found a Peanut
  • God of Vengeance
  • Joey
  • July 7, 1994
  • Kibbutz
  • L.A
  • Lola
  • The Loman Family Picnic
  • Louie
  • Luna Park
  • Misadventure
  • The Model Apartment
  • New Year's Eve
  • Nocturne
  • Pitching to the Star 
  • Sight Unseen
  • Somnambulist
  • Space
  • Time Stands Still
  • Two Days
  • Women in Motion
  • Zimmer
Donald Margulies received the 2000 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for DINNER WITH FRIENDS along with Dramatists Guild/Hull-Warriner Award, Lucille Lortel Award, Outer Critics Circle Award, Drama Desk nominee; a Burns Mantle Best Play).
His plays have been performed at major theatres across the United States and around the world. Theatre Communications Group has published seven volumes of his work. DINNER WITH FRIENDS was made into an Emmy Award-nominated film for HBO, and COLLECTED STORIES was presented on PBS. Currently, he is adapting the novel "Middlesex" by Jeffrey Eugenides into an HBO miniseries. Mr. Margulies has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, The New York Foundation for the Arts, and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. He was the recipient of the 2000 Sidney Kingsley Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Theatre by a playwright. In 2005 he was honored by the American Academy of Arts and Letters with an Award in Literature and by the National Foundation for Jewish Culture with its Award in Literary Arts. Mr. Margulies is an alumnus of New Dramatists and serves on the council of The Dramatists Guild of America. Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1954, Mr. Margulies now lives with his wife, Lynn Street, a physician, and their son, Miles, in New Haven, Connecticut, where he is an adjunct professor of English and Theatre Studies at Yale University.



 
Stephen Adly Guirgis
"…one of the most passionate and powerful young playwrights to have come down the theatrical runway…a must for anyone interested in the work of thoughtful and original playwrights."
 - CurtainUp.
WORKS include:
  • Den of Thieves
  • In Arabia We'd All be Kings
  • Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train
  • The Last Days of Judas Iscariot
  • Our Lady of 121st Street
Stephen Adly Guirgis is a longtime member of NYC's LAByrinth Theater Company. His plays have been produced on five continents and throughout the United States. A selection of four plays were originally produced by LAByrinth, directed by Philip Seymour Hoffman, and are published through Dramatists Play Service and by Faber & Faber. Stephen was awarded a 2004 TCG fellowship, attended the 2004 Sundance Screenwriter's Lab, was named one of the 25 New Faces of Independent Film by "Filmaker Magazine," and appeared in "Entertainment Weekly’s" 2005 Summer Must List. He has received new play commissions from Manhattan Theater Club and South Coast Rep, is a member of New Dramatists and the MCC Playwright’s Coalition, and has contributed to "ESOPUS" magazine.
Television writing credits include “NYPD Blue,” “The Sopranos,” David Milch’s CBS drama “Big Apple,” and Shane Salerno's NBC drama “UC: Undercover.”
As an actor, he has appeared in Brett C. Leonard’s GUINEA PIG SOLO, produced at the Public Theatre in New York, and played leading roles inTodd Solondz's "Palindromes," and Brett C. Leonard's award-winning "Jailbait," opposite Michael Pitt.
Currently, he is developing a project with Mos Def and HBO, and is writing his first feature film for Scott Rudin Productions, to be directed by George C. Wolfe. He lives in New York City.



Julia Cho
"Well-written…triumphs in dramatizing the unknown."
 - The New Yorker.
"Cho is fast establishing herself as a chronicler of small tragedies…she is not a sleight-of-hand artist but a craftsman."
 - BackStage.
 WORKS include:
  • 99 Histories
  • The Architecture of Loss
  • BFE
  • Durango
  • The Language Archive
  • The Piano Teacher
Julia Cho’s work has been produced at The Vineyard Theatre, The Public Theater, Long Wharf Theatre, Playwrights Horizons, South Coast Repertory, New York Theatre Workshop, East West Players, The Theatre@Boston Court, Theater Mu, and Silk Road Theatre Project, among others. Honors include the 2005 Barrie Stavis Award, the 2005 Claire Tow Award for Emerging Artists, and the 2004 L. Arnold Weissberger Award. She was also a two-time finalist for the Susan Smith Blackburn Award. An alumna of the Juilliard School and NYU’s Graduate Dramatic Writing Program, Julia also served as a resident playwright at New Dramatists.



The Sisters Rosensweig
Wendy Wasserstein
"[we] can rejoice…in watching [Wasserstein] become her own bright, eloquent and great-hearted version of George Bernard Shaw...and is also electrifyingly reconnected to the bizarre, infuriating and defining contemporary forces beyond personal psychology. "
 - NY Newsday.

 WORKS include:
  • An American Daughter
  • Bette and Me
  • Boy Meets Girl
  • The Heidi Chronicles
  • Isn't It Romantic
  • The Man in a Case
  • Seven One-Act Plays
  • The Sisters Rosensweig
  • Tender Offer
  • Third
  • Uncommon Women and Others
  • Waiting for Philip Glass
  • Workout
Wendy Wasserstein’s play THE HEIDI CHRONICLES won the 1989 Pulitzer Prize, Tony Award, and Susan Smith Blackburn Prize; the New York Drama Critics Circle, Drama Desk, and Outer Critics Circle Awards; and earned her a grant from the Kennedy Center Fund for New American Plays. For THE SISTERS ROSENSWEIG she received the 1993 Outer Critics Circle Award, a Tony Award nomination, and the William Inge Award for Distinguished Achievement in American Theatre.
Wasserstein’s screenplays include “The Object of My Affection,” produced as a major motion picture starring Jennifer Aniston and Paul Rudd. For PBS Great Performances she wrote “Kiss, Kiss Darling”; “Drive, She Said”; and adaptations of John Cheever’s “The Sorrows of Gin” and her own “Uncommon Women and Others.” She adapted THE HEIDI CHRONICLES for TNT (1996 Emmy Award nomination for Best Television Movie) and AN AMERICAN DAUGHTER for Lifetime Television. Her adaptation of “The Nutcracker” was performed at The American Ballet Theatre at The Met, and her adaptation of “The Merry Widow” premiered at San Francisco Opera. She was the librettist for the original opera “Festival of Regrets: Central Park,” which had runs at Glimmerglass Opera and New York City Opera. She wrote “Pamela’s First Musical,” a children’s book, which adapted with Cy Coleman into a musical which premiered in Spring 2006.
Her other books include the essay collections “Shiksa Goddess” and “Bachelor Girls.” She contributed to "The New Yorker," "The New York Times," "New York Woman," and "Harper’s Bazaar," among many other publications. She was the recipient of an NEA Grant, Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Fellowship at the American Academy in Rome. She served on the Council of the Dramatists Guild, on the Board of the British American Arts Association, School of American Ballet, WNET/Thirteen, and The Educational Foundation of America. She taught at Columbia University, New York University, Juilliard School, and Princeton University, and held an Honorary Doctorate from Mount Holyoke College.
Wasserstein was born in Brooklyn and raised in Manhattan. She was a graduate of Mount Holyoke College and the Yale School of Drama.



Photo: Applause Books
A.R. Gurney
"I can only call it one of the most involving, beautiful, funny, touching and profound plays I have ever seen…" 
 - NY Daily News (about 'Sylvia')
"Gurney's '[Sylvia'] is the most endearing good time to trot down the pike in many a moon. Howlingly funny…"
 - BackStage.
 WORKS include:
  • Another Antigone
  • Black Tie
  • A Cheever Evening
  • Children
  • The Cocktail Hour
  • The Comeback
  • The Dining Room
  • The Fourth Wall
  • The Golden Age
  • The Grand Manner
  • Labor Day
  • Later Life
  • Love Letters
  • The Middle Ages
  • Office Hours
  • The Old Boy
  • Overtime
  • The Perfect Party
  • Richard Cory
  • The Snow Ball
  • Sweet Sue
  • Sylvia
  • The Wayside Motor Inn
  • What I Did Last Summer
A.R. (“Pete”) Gurney was born in 1930 in Buffalo, New York. He graduated from Williams College in 1952, served as an officer in the Navy, and afterwards attended the Yale School of Drama. For many years, he taught literature at M.I.T., but moved to New York in 1982 to devote more time to writing for the theatre.
He has won a fair amount of awards during his career, and is now a member of the Theatre Hall of Fame and of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
Gurney has been married to his wife Molly for over fifty years. They have four children, and eight grandchildren, and now live in Roxbury, Connecticut and New YorkCity.
Other than plays, he also wrote the libretto for STRAWBERRY FIELDS, with music by Michael Torke, part of the Central Park Opera trilogy presented by the New York City Opera in the Fall of 1999.  He penned the novels: "The Gospel According to Joe," "Entertaining Strangers," and "The Snow Ball." Awards: Drama Desk, N.E.A., Rockefeller Foundation, New England Theatre Conference, Lucille Lortel, American Association of Community Theatres, American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. Honorary degrees: Williams College and Buffalo State University. Gurney was on the faculty of M.I.T. until 1996.



 
Sam Shepard
"Sam Shepard is surely the only dramatist alive who could tell a story as sad and frightening as this one and make such a funny play of it without ever skimping on its emotional depth."
 - The New Yorker (about 'A Lie of the Mind')

  WORKS include:
  • Action
  • Ages Of The Moon
  • Angel City
  • Buried Child
    Chicago
  • Cowboy Mouth
  • Curse of the Starving Class
  • Eyes for Consuela
  • Fool for Love
  • The God of Hell
  • Holy Ghostly
  • Icarus' Mother
  • Kicking a Dead Horse
  • The Late Henry Moss
  • A Lie of the Mind
  • Savage/Love
  • Seduced
  • States of Shock
  • Tongues
  • Tooth Of Crime, The
  • True West
  • War In Heaven, The
Sam Shepard was born Samuel Shepard Rogers VII on November 5, 1943, in Fort Sheridan, Illinois. The son of a career Army father, Shepard spent his childhood on military bases in the United States and Guam before his family settled on a farm in Duarte, California. Shepard worked as a stable hand on a ranch in Chino from 1958 to 1960 and studied agriculture for a year at Mount Antonio Junior College. After leaving college, he joined the Bishop’s Company Repertory Players, a touring theater group. In 1963, Shepard moved to New York City, where he worked as a busboy at the Village Gate in Greenwich Village and began to write plays for the emerging experimental underground theater scene. He made his debut at Theatre Genesis on October 10, 1964, with the double-billed COWBOY and ROCK GARDEN. In 1965 he presented UP TO THURSDAY and 4-H CLUB at Theatre 65, DOG AND ROCKING CHAIR at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club, CHICAGO at Genesis, and ICARUS’S MOTHER at Caffe Cino. Although many mainstream critics were baffled by his raw, chaotic, almost Beckettian pieces, he was soon hailed by the "New York Times" as “the generally acknowledged ‘genius’ of the [Off Off-Broadway] circuit.”
In 1966, RED CROSS, CHICAGO, and ICARUS’S MOTHER earned Shepard a trio of "Village Voice" Obie Awards. In 1967 and 1968, Shepard wrote LA TURISTA, his first full-length play, MELODRAMA PLAY, and FORENSIC AND THE NAVIGATORS, all of which also won Obie awards, and COWBOYS #2, which premiered in Los Angeles. In 1969, Shepard began a stint playing drums and guitar with the cult “amphetamine rock band” the Holy Modal Rounders, later telling an interviewer that he would rather be a rock star than a playwright. He nevertheless continued to write plays, completing HOLY GHOSTLY and THE UNSEEN HAND in 1969, OPERATION SIDEWINDER and SHAVED SPLITS in 1970, MAD DOG BLUES, BACK BOG BEAST BAIT, and COWBOY MOUTH (written with poet/musician Patti Smith) in 1971. He left the Rounders in 1971 and moved to England, where he lived for the next three years. Two notable plays of this period—THE TOOTH OF CRIME (1972, Obie Award) and GEOGRAPHY OF A HORSE DREAMER (1974)—premiered in London. In 1973 he published his first book of essays and poems, “Hawk Moon.” Two similar collections followed in 1977 and 1982. In 1974 Shepard returned to the United States and became the playwright-in-residence at the Magic Theatre in San Francisco, a position he held until1984. Plays from this period include ACTION (Obie Award, 1974), KILLER’S HEAD (1975), ANGEL CITY (1976), and SUICIDE IN B-FLAT (1976). Beginning in the late 1970s, Shepard applied his unconventional dramatic vision to a more conventional dramatic form, the family tragedy, producing CURSE OF THE STARVING CLASS and BURIED CHILD in 1978 (both of which won Obie Awards) and TRUE WEST in 1980. The three plays are linked thematically in their examination of troubled and tempestuous blood relationships in a fragmented society. Shepard achieved his warmest critical reception with BURIED CHILD, which also won the Pulitzer Prize for drama. "Washington Post" theater critic David Richards wrote, “Shepard delivers a requiem for America, land of the surreal and home of the crazed…The amber waves of grain mask a dark secret. The fruited plain is rotting and the purple mountain’s majesty is like a bad bruise on the landscape.” Shepard began a new career as a film actor in 1978, appearing in “Renaldo and Clara” and Terrence Malick’s “Days of Heaven.” He also began collaborating with Joseph Chaikin on TONGUES, a stage work with music that was heavily dependent on the theories of Antonin Artaud. Shepard and Chaikin would also collaborate on SAVAGE/LOVE (1979), WAR IN HEAVEN (1985), and WHEN THE WORLD WAS GREEN (A CHEF’S FABLE) (1996). Throughout the 1980s and into the ’90s, Shepard continued to write plays—FOOL FOR LOVE (1983) won Obie awards for best play as well as direction, and A LIE OF THE MIND (1985) garnered the New York Drama Critics Circle Award and Outer Critics Circle Award for outstanding new play—and expand his work in film. He appeared as an actor in the films “Resurrection” (1980), “Raggedy Man” (1981), “Frances” (1982), “The Right Stuff” (Academy Award nomination, 1983), “Country” (1984), his own “Fool for Love” (director, Robert Altman, 1985), “Crimes of the Heart” (1986), “Baby Boom” (1987), “Steel Magnolias” (1989), “Voyager” (1991), “Thunderheart” (1992), and “The Pelican Brief” (1993). He also worked on several screenplays, including “Paris, Texas,” with Wim Wenders (Palme d’Or, Cannes Film Festival, 1984). As writer/director, he filmed “Far North” and “Silent Tongue,” in 1988 and 1992, respectively. Shepard’s play STAGES OF SHOCK premiered at the American Place Theatre in 1991, and SIMPATICO transferred to the Royal Court Theatre after its premiere in 1994 at the New York Shakespeare Festival. A revised BURIED CHILD, under the direction of Gary Sinise, opened on Broadway in April 1996 and earned a Tony Award nomination. EYES FOR CONSUELA, based on a short story by Octavio Paz, premiered at Manhattan Theatre Club in 1998. The Magic Theatre premiered THE LATE HENRY MOSS, starring Sean Penn and Nick Nolte, before it was moved to the Signature Theatre in New York in 2001. Shepard’s projects also include the short story collection “Great Dream of Heaven” (2002); the plays THE GOD OF HELL (2005) and KICKING A DEAD HORSE, which premiered in Dublin, Ireland, in March 2007 and had its New York premiere in July 2008 at The Public Theater; the films “Black Hawk Down” (actor, 2001), “Don’t Come Knocking” (his second collaboration with Wenders,




Lucy Thurber
"Thurber is an unflinching observer of the lifestyle of an all-too-large underclass in a society that has always defined itself as classless."
 - CurtainUp (about 'Scarcity')
WORKS include:
  • Killers and Other Family
  • Scarcity
  • Stay
  • Where We're Born
Lucy Thurber is the author of a number of plays. Rattlestick Playwrights Theater has produced three of her plays: WHERE WE’RE BORN, KILLERS AND OTHER FAMILY, and STAY. The Atlantic Theater Company opened their ’07 season with her play SCARCITY. Her play BOTTOM OF THE WORLD was workshopped by WET at The Eugene O’Neill Playwrights’ Center, was part of the first Tribeca Theater Festival and received a workshop at The Public Theater. MONSTROSITY was workshopped at Encore Theatre. She was the recipient of the 2000/2001 Manhattan Theatre Club playwriting fellowship. She was a guest artist at The Perseverance Theater twice, where she helped to adapt both "Moby Dick" and DESIRE UNDER THE ELMS. She has had readings and workshops at Manhattan Theatre Club, The New Group, Primary Stages, MCC, Encore Theatre in San Francisco, PlayPenn, Williamstown, New River Dramatists, and SOHO Rep. Her ten-minute play DINNER is published in a collection called "Not So Sweet, 16 plays from SOHO Rep’s 10-Minute Play Festival." Her produced plays are published by Dramatists Play Service. Lucy is a member of MCC Playwrights’ Coalition, Primary Stages writing group, 13P, and New Dramatists. She is currently writing a new play under commission from Playwrights Horizons.




Lanford Wilson
"He is one of the very most talented writers in all the American theatre…" 
 - Women's Wear Daily.
"His language is rich and forceful, yet conveys a sense of graceful ease and breezy humor."
 - Cue Magazine.

WORKS include:
  • Balm In Gilead
  • Betrothal, A
  • Burn This
  • By the Sea By the Sea By the Beautiful Sea
  • Day
  • Fifth Of July
  • Ghosts
  • Gingham Dog, The
  • Great Nebula In Orion, The
  • Home Free
  • Hot L Baltimore, The
  • Ikke Ikke Nye Nye Nye
  • Ludlow Fair
  • Redwood Curtain
  • Rimers Of Eldritch, The
  • Talley's Folly
  • Three Sisters
  • Wandering
Lanford Wilson received the 1980 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for TALLEY’S FOLLY. He was a founding member of Circle Repertory Company and one of twenty-one resident playwrights for the company. Some of his work at Circle Rep includes: THE FAMILY CONTINUES; THE HOT L BALTIMORE; SERENADING LOUIE; 5TH OF JULY and ANGELS FALL, all directed by Marshall Mason; and the one-act play BRONTOSAURUS. His other plays include: BALM IN GILEAD and some twenty produced one-acts.
He also wrote the libretto for Lee Hoiby’s opera of Tennessee Williams’ SUMMER AND SMOKE and two television plays, "Taxi!" and "The Migrants" (based on a short story by Tennessee Williams). Other awards include the New York Drama Critics Circle Award, the Outer Critics Circle Award, and an Obie for THE HOT L BALTIMORE, an Obie for THE MOUND BUILDERS, a Drama-Logue Award for THE FIFTH OF JULY and TALLEY’S FOLLY, the Vernon Rice Award for THE RIMERS OF ELDRITCH, and Tony Award nominations for TALLEY’S FOLLY, 5TH OF JULY, and ANGELS FALL. He was the recipient of the Brandeis University Creative Arts Award in Theatre Arts and the Institute of Arts and Letter Award. Mr. Wilson completed an entirely new translation of Chekhov’s THE THREE SISTERS, which was commissioned and produced by the Hartford Stage Company. His play TALLEY AND SON (the third play in the Talley Trilogy) opened in New York City in September 1985. His play BURN THIS opened at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles in January 1987 starring John Malkovich and Joan Allen and opened on Broadway in October 1987 with the same cast. BURN THIS was also done in London in 1990, again starring Mr. Malkovich. His play REDWOOD CURTAIN opened in Seattle in January 1992 and in Philadelphia in March, and at the Old Globe in San Diego, California, in January 1993. It opened at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre on Broadway on March 30, 1993





Steven Dietz
"Dietz owns all the tools of a crackerjack writer."
 - NY Newsday.
 
WORKS include:
  • Becky's New Car
  • Dracula (Dietz)
  • Force of Nature
  • Halcyon Days
  • Inventing Van Gogh
  • Last of the Boys
  • Lonely Planet
  • The Nina Variations
  • Paragon Springs
  • Private Eyes
  • Rocket Man
  • Sherlock Holmes: The Final Adventure
  • Shooting Star  
  • Trust
  • Yankee Tavern
Steven Dietz’s plays and adaptations—which include LONELY PLANET, PRIVATE EYES, INVENTING VAN GOGH, DRACULA, FORCE OF NATURE, HALCYON DAYS, and THE NINA VARIATIONS (all published by Dramatists Play Service)—have been seen at over one hundred regional theatres in the United States, as well as Off-Broadway. International productions of his work have been seen in England, Japan, Germany, France, Australia, Sweden, Russia, Slovenia, Argentina, Peru, Singapore, and South Africa. Additional work includes FICTION (produced Off-Broadway by the Roundabout Theatre Company); LAST OF THE BOYS (produced by Steppenwolf Theatre, Chicago); and several widely produced adaptations: HONUS AND ME (from Dan Gutman), and SHERLOCK HOLMES: THE FINAL ADVENTURE (from William Gillette and Arthur Conan Doyle).




Doug Wright
"Engaging and intellectually satisfying…Mr. Wright has a wry and probing interest in the macabre!"
 - NY Times.
"Doug Wright teases, freezes and zaps us."
 - Village Voice.
 
WORKS include:
  • Baby Talk
  • Grey Gardens (book for the musical)
  • I am My Own Wife
  • Lot 13: The Bone Violin
  • Quills
  • The Stonewater Rapture
  • Unwrap Your Candy
  • Watbanaland
  • Wildwood Park
Doug Wright wrote the book for the Broadway production of THE LITTLE MERMAID. In 2006, he received Tony and Drama Desk nominations for his book for the Broadway musical GREY GARDENS. In 2004, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, a Tony Award for Best Play, the Drama Desk Award, a GLAAD Media Award, an Outer Critics Circle Award, a Drama League Award, and a Lucille Lortel Award for his play I AM MY OWN WIFE. Earlier in his career, Mr. Wright won an Obie Award for outstanding achievement in playwriting and the Kesselring Award for Best New American Play from the National Arts Club for his play QUILLS. He went on to write the screenplay adaptation, making his motion picture debut. The film was named Best Picture by the National Board of Review and nominated for three Academy Awards. His screenplay was nominated for a Golden Globe Award, and received the Paul Selvin Award from the Writers Guild of America. For director Rob Marshall, Doug penned the television special “Tony Bennett: An American Classic,” which received seven Emmy Awards. His stage work has been produced in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, London, Stockholm, Bucharest, Krakow, Dublin, Budapest, Brasov, and Viterbo, among other cities. His titles include THE STONEWATER RAPTURE, INTERROGATING THE NUDE, WATBANALAND, BUZZSAW BERKELEY, and UNWRAP YOUR CANDY. For career achievement, Mr. Wright was recently cited with an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Tolerance Prize from the KulturForum Europa. He is a member of the Dramatists Guild, the Writers Guild of America, East, the Screen Actors Guild and the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers. Directing credits include KIKI AND HERB: PARDON OUR APPEARANCE in Washington, DC, Philadelphia, and London. Acting credits include the films “Little Manhattan” and “Two Lovers.” Currently, Doug serves on the board of the New York Theater Workshop. He lives in New York with his partner, singer/songwriter David Clement.




David Henry Hwang 
"With M. BUTTERFLY David Henry Hwang joins the first string of American playwrights. This is an audaciously imaginative play, big in conception and theme, and a satisfying instance of a talented writer hitting full stride."
 - Variety.
"Of all the young dramatists at work in America today, none is more audacious, imaginative, or gifted than David Henry Hwang…"
 - The New Yorker.

WORKS include:
  • Bondage
  • The Dance and the Railroad
  • The Dance and the Railroad and Family
  • Devotions
  • F.O.B.
  • F.O.B. and The House of Sleeping Beauties
  • Family Devotions
  • Golden Child
  • The House of Sleeping Beauties
  • M. Butterfly
  • The Sound of a Voice
  • Trying to Find Chinatown
  • Trying to Find Chinatown and Bondage
  • Yellow Face
David Henry Hwang’s plays include M. BUTTERFLY (1988 Tony Award, 1989 Pulitzer Finalist), GOLDEN CHILD (1998 Tony nomination, 1997 OBIE Award), YELLOW FACE (2008 OBIE Award, 2008 Pulitzer Finalist), FOB (1981 OBIE Award), THE DANCE AND THE RAILROAD (1982 Drama Desk nomination), FAMILY DEVOTIONS (1982 Drama Desk Nomination), and BONDAGE. He wrote the books for the Broadway musicals Elton John and Tim Rice’s AIDA (coauthor), the revival of FLOWER DRUM SONG (2002 Tony nomination), and Disney’s TARZAN. In opera, his libretti include Philip Glass’ THE VOYAGE (Metropolitan Opera), Osvaldo Golijov’s AINADAMAR (two 2007 Grammy Awards), Unsuk Chin’s ALICE IN WONDERLAND (Opernwelt 2007 “World Premiere of the Year”), and Howard Shore’s THE FLY. Hwang also penned the feature films “M. Butterfly,” “Golden Gate,” and “Possession” (coauthor). He serves on the Council of the Dramatists Guild and was appointed by President Clinton to the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.



Christopher Durang"Durang's writing is short and sharp moments of wit and hilarity."
 - Variety.
"If you need a break from serious drama, the place to go is Christopher Durang's silly, funny, over-the-top sketches, DURANG/DURANG."
 - TheaterWeek.
 WORKS include:
  • 1-900-Desperate
  • The Actor's Nightmare
  • An Altar Boy Talks to God
  • Aunt Dan Meets the Madwoman of Chaillot
  • Baby with the Bathwater
  • Betty's Summer Vacation
  • Canker Sores and Other Distractions
  • Death Comes to Us All, Mary Agnes
  • 'Dentity Crisis
  • Desire, Desire, Desire
  • The Doctor Will See You Now
  • Durang/Durang
  • For Whom the Southern Belle Tolls
  • Funeral Parlor
  • The Idiots Karamazov
  • Kitty the Waitress
  • Medea
  • Miss Witherspoon
  • Mrs. Bob Cratchit's Wild Christmas Binge
  • Naomi in the Living Room
  • The Nature and Purpose of the Universe
  • Nina in the Morning
  • One Minute Play
  • Phyllis and Xenobia
  • Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You
  • Titanic
  • The Vietnamization of New Jersey
  • Wanda's Visit
  • Woman Stand Up
  • Women in a Playground
In 1996, Christopher Durang was commissioned by the Rodgers and Hammerstein Foundation to write a new book for the popular musical BABES IN ARMS. SEX AND LONGING was commissioned by Lincoln Center Theater and was presented on Broadway in fall 1996 starring Sigourney Weaver. THE IDIOTS KARAMAZOV, a full-length play with music written with Albert Innaurato, was revived at the American Repertory Theatre. His play BETTY’S SUMMER VACATION (Drama Desk Award nomination) had its world premiere at Playwrights Horizons in February 1999 to great critical acclaim and sold-out houses and was extended three times. It was the recipient of four Obie Awards, for distinguished playwriting, directing, acting, and set design. His new musical (with music by Peter Melnick), ADRIFT IN MACAO premiered at New York Stage and Film in the summer of 2002. MRS. BOB CRATCHIT’S WILD CHRISTMAS BINGE was commissioned by Pittsburgh’s City Theater and had its world premiere in November 2002. In the early '80s, he and Sigourney Weaver co-wrote and performed in their acclaimed Brecht-Weill parody DAS LUSITANIA SONGSPIEL and were both nominated for Drama Desk Awards for Best Performer in a Musical. In 1993, he sang and tried to dance in the five-person Off-Broadway Sondheim revue PUTTING IT TOGETHER, with Julie Andrews at Manhattan Theatre Club. And he played a singing Congressman in CALL ME MADAM with Tyne Daly as part of “Encores.” He can be heard on cast recordings of both productions. In movies, he has appeared in "The Secret of my Success," "Mr. North," "The Butcher's Wife," "Housesitter," "The Cowboy Way," "The Object of my Affection," "Simply Irresistible," and 'The Out of Towners," among others. For television, he wrote for a Carol Burnett special called "Carol and Robin and Whoopi and Carl;" and for PBS’ series “Trying Times,” he wrote a teleplay called "The Visit" starring Swoosie Kurtz as Wanda, the upsetting houseguest. He’s written several screenplays, including "The House of Husbands" (co-authored with Wendy Wasserstein), "The Adventures of Lola" for Tri-Star and director Herbert Ross, "The Nun who Shot Liberty Valance," and his own adaptation of SISTER MARY… which aired on Showtime with Diane Keaton in the title role; and two sitcom pilots, "Billy and Meg" (for Fox Television) and "Dysfunction! - the TV Show" for Warner Brothers. He hopes one day they will be produced, perhaps in heaven. He has an MFA from the Yale School of Drama. Early in his career, he won a Guggenheim, a Rockefeller, the CBS Playwriting Fellowship, the Lecompte du Nouy Foundation grant, and the Kenyon Festival Theatre Playwriting Prize. In 1995 he won the prestigious three-year Lila Wallace Readers Digest Award; as part of his grant, he ran a writing workshop for adult children of alcoholics. Since 1994 he has been co-chair with Marsha Norman of the Playwriting Program at the Juilliard School in Manhattan. He is a member of the Dramatists Guild Council.




David Ives
"Riveting…Ives' fictionalized account of the event is fascinating and heartbreaking." —Huffington Post (about: 'New Jerusalem...')
 WORKS include:
  • All in the Timing
  • Ancient History
  • Babel's in Arms
  • Captive Audience
  • Degas C'est Moi
  • Don Juan in Chicago
  • English Made Simple
  • Enigma Variations
  • The Liar  
  • Long Ago and Far Away
  • Mere Mortals
  • The Other Woman
  • Philip Glass Buys a Loaf of Bread
  • Sure Thing
  • Time Flies
  • The Universal Language
  • Variations on the Death of Trotsky
  • Venus in Fur
  • Words, Words, Words
David Ives is probably best known for his evenings of one-act plays called "All in the Timing" and "Time Flies." Other shows include NEW JERUSALEM: THE INTERROGATION OF BARUCH DE SPINOZA; Irving Berlin’s WHITE CHRISTMAS; IS HE DEAD? (adapted from Mark Twain); and VENUS IN FUR. He is the author of three young-adult novels, "Monsieur Eek," "Scrib," and "Voss." He is a graduate of Yale School of Drama and a former Guggenheim Fellow in playwriting.




 Craig Pospisil
"…masterful…delightful…"
 - Stage Directions Magazine.
"Craig Pospisil does something rare and difficult in his episodic comedy…The laughs come easily and frequently."
 - City News.
"It's a wonderful play. It's a quirky and romantic comedy…but it's also alive with contemporary social poignancy."
 - Dayton Daily News. (About 'Somewhere in Between')
 WORKS include:
  • The American Dream
  • Revisited
  • Choosing Sides
  • Class Conflict
  • Double Wedding
  • Free
  • Guerilla Gorilla
  • Guns Don't Kill
  • In a Word
  • Infant Morality
  • The Last December
  • Life is Short
  • Manhattan Drum-Taps
  • Months on End
  • A Mother's Love
  • No Child Left (Pospisil)
  • On the Edge (Pospisil)
  • On the Wings of a Butterfly
  • Perchance
  • Quandary in Quando
  • A Quiet, Empty Life
  • Somewhere in Between
  • Train of Thought
  • What Price?
Craig Pospisil is the author of MONTHS ON END, SOMEWHERE IN BETWEEN, and LIFE IS SHORT, all published by Dramatists Play Service. MONTHS ON END received its world premiere at the Purple Rose Theater Company (Jeff Daniels, Executive Director), and has had dozens of productions since. SOMEWHERE IN BETWEEN premiered at the Detroit Repertory Theater and has had over sixty productions, including in New York, Los Angeles, and Paris. Craig is head writer for “theAtrainplays,” an ongoing twenty-four-hour theatre project in which plays and musicals are written while riding on the New York subway’s A Train. His Atrainplays IT’S NOT YOU and TOURIST ATTRACTION are published by Playscripts Inc. Other publications include GUERILLA GORILLA in the anthology “Plays and Playwrights 2001,” A PICTURE HOOK in “Monologues for Men by Men,” ON THE EDGE in “Under Thirty, Plays for a New Generation,” and IT’S NOT YOU in “Take Ten II, New Ten-Minute Plays.” His work has also been seen at the Ensemble Studio Theatre, the Bay Street Theater, the New York Musical Festival, Williamstown Theatre Festival, and the Caldwell Theater. He is the winner of the Alan Mineri Award and the FutureFest, InterPlay, New Play Project, and Towngate Theater playwriting competitions. His work has been performed in Australia, England, Germany, France, and in Hong Kong. Other plays include THE DUNES, FREE, and the musical DRIFT. He is also the editor of “Outstanding Men’s Monologues Volume One” and “Outstanding Women’s Monologues Volume Two,” published by Dramatists Play Service. A native New Yorker, Craig received his master's degree from New York University’s Dramatic Writing Program, and he is the Director of Nonprofessional Rights for Dramatists Play Service.



 
Jeffrey Hatcher
"If I were a betting man (and who isn't in the the theater), I'd wager that we'll be seeing a lot of Jeffrey Hatcher's [work] over the next few years…"
 - NY Sun.

WORKS include:
  • Compleat Female Stage Beauty
  • Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
  • The Government Inspector
  • Mrs. Mannerly
  • Murder by Poe
  • Murderers
  • A Picasso
  • Scotland Road  
  • Smash
  • Tell-Tale
  • The Thief of Tears
  • Three Viewings
  • To Fool the Eye Jean Anouilh
  • Tuesdays with Morrie
  • The Turn of the Screw
Jeffrey Hatcher’s plays have been produced on Broadway, off-Broadway, throughout the United States, and abroad. They include THREE VIEWINGS, A PICASSO, SCOTLAND ROAD, and COMPLEAT FEMALE STAGE BEAUTY, as well as adaptations of THE TURN OF THE SCREW, THE GOVERNMENT INSPECTOR, DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE, and TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE (with Mitch Albom). Film/ TV: "Stage Beauty," "Casanova," "The Duchess," and episodes of "Columbo." He is a member of The Playwrights Center, Dramatists Guild, Writers Guild, and New Dramatists.

Photo courtesy of: The Ensemble Theatre production,
Australia 2010 - 2011



 
David Lindsay-Abaire
"Mr. Lindsay-Abaire blends clichéd ingredients into something savory and distinctive…[a] dark, sweet and thoroughly engaging comedy."
 - NY Times. (about:  Fuddy Meers)

WORKS include:
  • Baby Food
  • Crazy Eights
  • A Devil Inside
  • Fuddy Meers
  • Kimberly Akimbo
  • Rabbit Hole
  • That Other Person
  • Three One-Acts by
  • Wonder of the World
David Lindsay-Abaire is a playwright, screenwriter, lyricist, and librettist whose play RABBIT HOLE premiered on Broadway and went on to receive the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, the Spirit of America Award, and five Tony nominations. He was also nominated for a Grammy Award (Best Musical Show Album) and two Tony Awards (Best Book of a Musical and Best Score) for his work on SHREK THE MUSICAL. Prior to that, David was awarded the 2008 Ed Kleban Award as America’s most promising musical theater lyricist. David’s other plays include FUDDY MEERS, KIMBERLY AKIMBO, WONDER OF THE WORLD, and A DEVIL INSIDE, among others. Another play, GOOD PEOPLE, premieres on Broadway this winter, starring Frances McDormand. In addition to his work in theatre, David's screen credits include his screen adaptation of "Rabbit Hole" (starring Nicole Kidman, Aaron Eckart, and Dianne Wiest, and directed by John Cameron Mitchell), as well as the upcoming features “Guardians of Childhood” (Dreamworks), and “Oz: The Great and Powerful” (Disney, directed by Sam Raimi). David is a proud New Dramatists alum, a graduate of Sarah Lawrence College and the Juilliard School, as well as a member of the WGA and the Dramatists Guild Council.




 Jones, Hope & Wooten
"Phenomenally successful playwrights."
 - Daily Breeze, Torrance, CA
"Judging by their success, Jones Hope Wooten have
the knack for writing shows people want to see." 
 - Indiana Auditions Theatre Blog
"Comic genius!"
 - The News-Dispatch, Michigan City, IN

WORKS include:
  • Christmas Belles
  • Dashing Through the
  • Snow
  • Dearly Beloved
  • The Dixie Swim Club
  • The Hallelujah Girls
  • The Red Velvet Cake War
  • Southern Hospitality
  • 'Til Beth Do Us Part
Jessie Jones is the co-author of many plays (listed left).  Jessie's first play, DEARLY DEPARTED, which she also co-authored, had its premiere at The Long Wharf Theatre in New Haven, Connecticut, followed by an Off-Broadway production at Second Stage in New York City. She also co-authored the feature film “Kingdom Come,” the screen adaptation of DEARLY DEPARTED which was released by Fox Searchlight Films. Her short stories have been published in literary journals and she has written for television sitcoms and an animated series for Walt Disney Productions. As an actor, Jessie has appeared onstage in New York and in regional theatres as well as in television and film.  
Nicholas Hope is the co-author of many plays (listed left). He won the Southwest Regional Playwrights Competition for his first play, A FRIEND OF THE FAMILY. He has written episodic television for Warner Bros. and Walt Disney Studios. As a casting director, Nick was Director of Casting for Theatre Communications Group in New York, The Goodman Theatre in Chicago, and ABC Television in New York and Los Angeles.  
Jamie Wooten is the co-author of many plays (listed left).  In television, Jamie won the Writers Guild of America award and spent many seasons with Dorothy, Blanche, Rose and Sophia as a writer/producer on the classic television series "The Golden Girls." He is also an award-winning BMI songwriter.
For more information, please go to www.joneshopewooten.com

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