Here is a list of playwrights we would be interested in working with. The list keeps growing. If you are a playwright that may be interested, please contact us. Liz Duffy AdamsShe is a member of New Dramatist, and graduate of the Yale School of Drama. Her work has been produced or developed by Syracuse Stage, Bay Area Playwrights Festival, Summer Play Festival, The Women's Project and Productions, and Portland Stage Company, among other places. David AuburnHe is best known for his 2000 play Proof. It won the 2001 Tony Award, as well as the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Brooke BermanShe is a member of New Dramatist, and a Juilliard graduate who began her career as a solo performer. Brooke’s plays have been produced at the Humana Festival, The Second Stage, Steppenwolf Theatre Company, The Play Company; Naked Angels and others. Sarah Bewleywww.sarahbewley.com She is a playwright currently living in Florida. Sarah was the first woman to ever win the McClaren Comedy Prize, and the first to ever win the Dayton Playhouse FutureFest aith a staged reading. Anthony ClarvoeHis plays Ambition Facing West, Ghosts, The Brothers Karamazov, The Living, Let’s Play Two, Show and Tell, and Picking Up Ax, Are preformed throughout the United States. They have received drama critics awards in Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and elsewhere. Ian CohnHe is an Artistic Associate at the Lark Play Development Center. His play Bertrand Priest won first prize in the 2006 Kaufman & Hart Award for New American Comedies. Kara Lee CorthronShe is emerging as one of theatre's most promising playwrights. Kara was recently named the winner of the Theodore Ward Prize for African-American Playwrights, for her play Like a Cow or an Elephant, recently was awarded the 2008 Princess Grace Award for Playwriting. Jorge Ignacio CortinasHe is a member of New Dramatists, and a graduate from Brown University. His many awards include the Helen Merrill Award; the Robert Chesley Award; "playwright of the year" in El Nuevo Herald’s year-end list; and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York Foundation for the Arts, and the California Arts Council, among others. Nilo CruzIn 2001, he served as the playwright-in-residence for the New Theatre in Coral Gables, Florida, where he wrote Anna in the Tropics, winner of the 2003 Pulitzer and the Steinberg Award for Best New Play. A year later it received its Broadway premiere with Jimmy Smitts in the lead role. Lisa D’AmourHer plays have been inspired by road trips (1988 Olds Delta 88), family (thick and Southern), movie stars (Marlon Brando) and architecture (bridges, skyscrapers, multi-level parking garages). Marcus GandleyHe is a poet-playwright was born and bread on the rolling hills, lively churches, and moody-blue streets of Oakland, California. He is a member of New Dramatists and a professor of Creative Writing at Columbia University. Israel HorvitzOne of America's most celebrated dramatists, he has written more than 50 produced plays, many of which have been translated and performed in more than 30 languages worldwide. Naomi IizukaShe is a member of New Dramatists and received a B.A. from Yale University and an M.F.A. from the University of California-San Diego. Her work has been produced and developed throughout the United States. Deborah Zoe LauferShe is a graduate of The Juilliard School, where she was also a Playwright-in-Residence. Her play End Days was just awarded The American Theatre Critics Association Steinberg citation in March, 2008. Craig LucasThe author of Missing Persons, Blue Window, Reckless, Prelude to a Kiss, God’s Heart, The Dying Gaul, Stranger, Small Tragedy, The Singing Forest and Prayer for My Enemy. Michael McKeeverHis work has been produced Off-Broadway, as well as throughout America, Canada and Europe. Michael’s diverse range include works about war-time morality (The Garden of Hannah List), hate crime (A Town Like Irving), and life affirmation (Running with Scissors). Chiori MiyagawaHer plays vary in style, yet they all reflect her interest in memory and identity in different ways. Memories in her plays may be real, distorted, fabricated, collective, or personally life-changing. Her plays have been seen off-Broadway, at renowned performance spaces in NYC, and regionally, and published in six different play anthologies. Allison MooreHer plays include Hazard County, Eighteen, Urgent Fury, The Strange Misadventures of Patty, CowTown, and American Klepto. She is a graduate of Southern Methodist University, and received her MFA from the Iowa Playwrights Workshop. Joe MussoJoe Musso's plays have been presented in twenty-nine states and in Canada. Paul M. RudnickAmerican playwright, novelist, and screenwriter Paul Rudnick is a humorist who writes regularly for a variety of media, often on gay subjects. His subversive wit characteristically punctures pretensions and lays bare hypocrisies, yet it is also typically forgiving and healing. John P. ShanleySuccessful playwright of such works as Savage In Limbo and Danny and the Deep Blue Sea. His play Doubt has won several awards for outstanding dramatic play including: the 2005 Pulitzer Prize, the 2004-2005 Drama Desk Award and the 2005 Tony Award. Nicky SilverHe is an American playwright that began writing after graduating from the New York University (NYU) Theatre program. His plays Pterodactyls and Raised in Captivity earned back-to-back Drama Desk Award nominations for Outstanding Play in 1994 and 1995. Octavio SolisHe is, perhaps, the most prominent Chicano playwright in the country. He is of the post-Luis Valdez generation that has gone beyond Chicano identity-seeking and is now looking at humanity, at issues revolving around love and death and why the world is such a mess. Ken Urbanwww.kenurban.org He was named one of nytheatre.com's 2007 People of the Year. His plays include I (heart)KANT, Nibbler, Halo, The Private Lives of Eskimos, The Absence of Weather (winner of the 2004 Moving Arts Premiere One Act Competition), The Female Terrorist Project, The Happy Sad, and Sense of an Ending. Paula Vogel"Vogel tends to select sensitive, difficult, fraught issues to theatricalize," theatre theorist Jill Dolan comments, "and to spin them with a dramaturgy that’s at once creative, highly imaginative, and brutally honest." Lucy WangShe is a writer whose plays include Junk Bonds, Big Red and Little Tiger; Good Mourning, America, Concerto for Organ in B-Sharp, Art of Bullfighting and Bird's Nest Soup. Her awards include a 2007 NATPE Diversity Fellowship, the 2006 New Writers Award for TV sponsored by CAPE and Fox and has sold an original pilot to Disney. Other accolades include a grant from Berrilla Kerr foundation, Kennedy Center Award for New American Play, James Thurber Fellowship, William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Honorary Fellow, James Irvine Honorary Fellow, Best New Play from Katherine and Lee Chilcote Foundation. Wang's work has been Performed all over the U.S. and abroad. Tracey Scott WilsonShe received a B.A. from Rutgers University and an M.A. from Temple University. While at Temple she wrote a satiric novel entitled I Don't Know Why That Caged Bird Won't Shut-Up. After receiving 28 rejections for that novel in one day, she developed writer's block for one year. To combat this block, Ms. Wilson took a playwriting class at the 63rd Street YMWCA in New York City. The following year she won a Van Lier Playwriting Fellowship from the New York Theatre Workshop.
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