Media contact: Bruce
Peterson (800) 842-6063 ext. 5492
Christopher Durang, one
of the most influential playwrights of contemporary
American theater, will be the Honoree of the 27th
William Inge Theatre Festival, April 23-26, 2008, in
Independence, Kansas.
Durang will receive the
William Inge
Theatre Festival Distinguished Achievement in the
American Theatre Award on Sat. April 26,
2008 during the Tribute festival finale, at the
William Inge Theatre on the campus of Independence
Community College. Previous Honorees at the Inge
Festival include such great playwrights as Arthur
Miller, August Wilson, Neil Simon, Edward Albee, and
Stephen Sondheim, among others.The festival is named
for the late Pulitzer Prize and Oscar-winning writer
William Inge, who was a native of Independence.
“We are excited to honor
one of modern theater’s funniest and most topical
playwrights, whose noteworthy achievements include
inspiring a new generation of young playwrights,”
said Peter Ellenstein, Inge Center Artistic
Director.
Christopher Durang, an
actor as well as a playwright, has seen his plays
produced on and off-Broadway, around the country and
abroad. From the start, his hilarious
no-holds-barred work has attracted serious actors.
His first professional production was of “The Idiots
Karamozov,” co-authored with Albert Innaurato, at
the Yale Repertory, starring then student Meryl
Streep. As a student, Durang also collaborated with
fellow student and previous Inge Festival Honoree
Wendy Wasserstein.
Durang’s work “Titanic”
starred his Yale classmate Sigourney Weaver and he
co-authored with her a satiric cabaret, “Das
Lusitania Songpsiel” Later, both Durang and Weaver
were nominated for Drama Desk Awards for Best
Performer in a Musical. Also in 1976, his play “A
History of the American Film” received an unusual
“triple premiere” with back-to-back productions at
professional resident theaters across the nation.
The following year, it hit Broadway, earning Durang
a Tony nomination for Best Book of a Musical.
In the early 1980s,
Durang penned some of his most famous work. “Sister
Mary Ignatius Explains it All for You” received rave
reviews. Elizabeth Franz originated the lead role,
with actresses Nancy Marchand, Kathleen Chalfont,
Lynn Redgrave, Cloris Leachman, and Valerie Curtin
among those headlining subsequent productions.
“Sister” was paired with his popular curtain raiser
“The Actor’s Nightmare.”
“Beyond Therapy” likewise
attracted the attention of many noted actors.
Initially Off-Broadway starring Sigourney Weaver and
Stephen Collins, it later transferred to Broadway
starring Dianne Wiest and John Lithgow. David Hyde
Pierce, getting his Equity card in his first
professional production, played a small but funny
role of the waiter.
The subsequent play “Baby
with the Bathwater” was directed by Mark Linn-Baker
and featured Cherry Jones and Tony Shalhoub. In
1985 New York’s Public Theatre presented Durang’s
“The Marriage of Bette and Boo.” It featured a
remarkable cast including Joan Allen and Graham
Beckle, along with Olympia Dukakis and Mercedes
Ruehl.
His newer stage work
includes books and lyrics for “Adrift in Macao” with
music by Peter Melnick. His crackpot Christmas play
“Mrs. Bob Cratchit’s Wild Christmas Binge” was a big
success, about an out-of-control Mrs. Cratchit. In
2004, he wrote a commission for the McCarter Theatre
in Princeton, N.J., which became “Miss
Witherspoon.” It was named on the Ten Best Plays of
the year by Time
magazine and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
Durang has also received
acclaim for his writing in non-stage venues as
well. He wrote a teleplay for the PBS series
“Trying Times,” co-authored with Wendy Wasserstein
“House of Husbands” and became a staff writer for
the ABC special “Carol and Robin and Whoopi and
Carl.” In 2001 he appeared in six episodes of the
NBC sitcom “Kristin,” starring Kristin Chenoweth.
Additional acting
credits include in "Laughing Wild" (which he wrote),
which premiered at Playwrights Horizons in 1987 and
starred E. Katherine Kerr and Durang, and later
opposite Jean Smart, and the films “Housesitter,” “The
Secret of My Success” and “Mr. North,” among
others. In 1993 Durang was thrilled to be cast in
“Putting it Together,” a compilation of Stephen
Sondheim songs. The cast included Julie Andrews,
Rachel York and Michael Rupert.
Durang is currently
co-director, with Marcia Norman, of the playwriting
program at the Juilliard School, Division of Drama. His awards include the
Harvard Arts Medal and the prestigious three-year
Lila Wallace Readers Digest Writers Award; and the
Sidney Kingsley Playwriting Award. Early in his
career, he won a Guggenheim, a Rockefeller, the CBS
Playwriting Fellowship, and many other grants and
fellowships.
During the Inge Festival,
each evening will feature numerous special guest
artists in the fields of performance, playwriting,
and directing. Many will be on stage to help salute
Durang at the Tribute festival finale.
During the daytime of
the festival April 24-26, festival patrons can meet
the guests during workshops and panels about the
performing arts.
Also part of the
Festival is “Scenes at the Inge House.” The Inge
Center will select winning scenes by college actors
from competitions held at regional Kennedy Center
American College Theatre Festival conferences. The
scenes are then performed in the living room of the
William Inge Boyhood home in Independence, which is
now used as residency for professional guest
playwrights-in-residence.
A further presentation
during the Festival is the
Otis Guernsey New
Voices in the American theater Award, to
be bestowed to an outstanding emerging playwright.
For more information on
the Inge Festival and year-round events at the
William Inge Theatre Festival, visit
www.ingefestival.org.
Major supporters of
the William Inge Center for the Arts include the
Kansas Arts Commission, the National Endowment for
the Arts, Hallmark Corporation, the William T.
Kemper Foundation/Commerce Bancshares, the
Dramatists Guild, the Dana Foundation, and many
corporate and private foundations and hundreds of
individuals across the country.
For more information
on the Inge Festival and other Inge Center
activities, contact (800) 842-6063 ext. 5835 or
visit
www.ingecenter.org.
Media Advisory:
Below are:
--Complete list of previous William Inge Theatre
Festival “Distinguished Achievement in the American
Theatre” Honorees.
--Complete list of previous “Otis Guernsey New
Voices in the American Theatre Award” winners.
William Inge Theatre
Festival
Distinguished Achievement
in the American Theatre Award
Honorees--
presented in person
in Independence, Kansas
1982: William Inge Celebration
1983: Jerome Lawrence
1984: William Gibson
1985: Robert Anderson
1986: John Patrick
1987: Garson Kanin
1988: Sidney Kingsley (in Independence)
Robert E. Lee (on the road)
1989: Horton Foote
1990: Betty Comden & Adolph Green
1991: Edward Albee
1992: Peter Shaffer
1993: Wendy Wasserstein
1994: Terrence McNally
1995: Arthur Miller
1996: August Wilson
1997: Neil Simon
1998: Stephen Sondheim
1999: John Guare
2000: A.R. Gurney
2001: Lanford Wilson
2002: John Kander & Fred Ebb
2003: Romulus Linney
2004: Arthur Laurents
2005: Tina Howe
2006: 25th Anniversary retrospective
2007: Jerry Bock & Sheldon Harnick
Otis Guernsey New Voices in Playwriting Award
Winners
1993: Jason Milligan
1994: Catherine Butterfield
1995: Mary Hanes
1996: Brian Burgess Cross
1997: Joe DiPietro
1998: David Ives
1999: David Hirson
2000: James Still
2001: Mark St. Germain
2002: Dana Yeaton
2003: Theresa Rebeck
2004: Mary Portser
2005: Lynne Kaufman
2006: Melanie Marnich
2007: JT Rogers