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Dan O'Brien (playwright)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American playwright, poet, essayist, librettist
For other people named Dan O'Brien, seeDan O'Brien (disambiguation).
Dan O'Brien
Born1974 (age 50–51)
Occupation(s)Playwright, poet, memoirist, essayist, librettist
Spouse
Children1

Dan O’Brien (born 1974) is an Americanplaywright,poet,memoirist,essayist, andlibrettist. His most prominent works have been the playThe Body of an American and the poetry collectionWar Reporter. He was awarded aGuggenheim Fellowship for 2015–16. His playThe House in Scarsdale: A Memoir for the Stage was the winner of the 2018PEN America Award for Drama.[1]

Career

[edit]

In 2024 O’Brien premiered his playNewtown atGeva Theatre Center, directed by Elizabeth Williamson.Newtown is the recipient of the 2024 Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation Theatre Visions Fund Award.[2]

In 2023 O’Brien published three books:Survivor’s Notebook (Acre Books), described by theNew England Review as "a visceral collection of prose poems . . . [that] illuminates the traumas and triumphs of two cancer survivors to profound effect";[3]From Scarsdale: A Childhood (Dalkey Archive Press), praised by James Cook in theTimes Literary Supplement as "sad and bleakly comic . . . a fine, evocative memoir of a suburban 1980s childhood";[4] andTrue Story: A Trilogy of plays (Dalkey Archive Press) that David Dewitt inThe Arts Fuse describes as "a distinctive achievement in theater history."[5]

O'Brien's fourth poetry collection,Our Cancers, was published by Acre Books in 2021.[6] Stephen Wilson in theTimes Literary Supplement writes: "[O’Brien] has produced an exquisite and terrible beauty in these pages."[7] J. D. Schraffenberger in theNorth American Review writes: "Our Cancers tells [O’Brien’s] truth not only skillfully but masterfully, making from pain a lasting chronicle of art that traces fragmentary moments of healing over time."[8] In 2021 O'Brien also published a collection of essays entitledA Story That Happens: On Playwriting, Childhood, & Other Traumas (Dalkey Archive Press in the United States, and CB Editions in the United Kingdom). The book was praised by Margaret Gray in theLos Angeles Times as a "masterclass in survival through art."[9]Caridad Svich inContemporary Theatre Review describes the book as "[a] quiet revelation."[10]Alice Jolly in theTimes Literary Supplement writes: "This is a book for our times. It reminds us that theatre is 'fractured and failing yet struggling towards the mouth’s translation of the heart’s tongue.' Like [O’Brien], we buzz with the desire for the 'chance for more life, and for that most valued of theatrical currencies―change'."[11]

O'Brien's playThe Body of an American was awarded the Edward M. Kennedy Prize for Drama, shared withRobert Schenkkan'sAll the Way.[12] It premiered atPortland Center Stage in 2012 directed byBill Rauch, and received its European premiere in an extended run at theGate Theatre in London andRoyal & Derngate in Northampton in 2014, directed byJames Dacre.[13] The play was produced off-Broadway byPrimary Stages andHartford Stage at theCherry Lane Theatre in New York City in 2016, directed byJo Bonney and distinguished by a "Critic's Pick" from the New York Times.[14]The Body of an American is also winner of the Horton Foote Prize for Outstanding New American Play,[15] L. Arnold Weissberger Award, administered byWilliamstown Theatre Festival,[16] and thePEN Center USA Award for Drama.[17]The Body of an American was shortlisted for a 2014Evening Standard Award for Most Promising Playwright.[18]

O'Brien's many other plays includeThe Three Christs of Ypsilanti,The Cherry Sisters Revisited,The Voyage of the Carcass,The Dear Boy,The House in Hydesville,Moving Picture,Key West,Am Lit,Lamarck,The Last Supper Restoration,The Angel in the Trees,"Will You Please Shut Up?", andThe Disappearance of Daniel Hand. His work has been produced bySecond Stage Theatre,Ensemble Studio Theatre, TheHumana Festival of New American Plays atActors Theatre of Louisville,Williamstown Theatre Festival,Boston Court Pasadena Theatre Company,Geva Theatre Center, Page 73 Productions, The Production Company, SoHo Playhouse, and elsewhere. He has served as a Hodder Fellow atPrinceton University, the Djerassi Fellow in Playwriting at theUniversity of Wisconsin in Madison, and as the Tennessee Williams Fellow in Playwriting atThe University of the South (Sewanee). He has frequently served on the playwriting faculty at theSewanee Writers' Conference. His work has been developed at the National Playwrights Conference at theEugene O'Neill Theatre Center, The New Harmony Project, and elsewhere. He is the recipient of aRockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center Residency. In 1996-97 O'Brien received aThomas J. Watson Fellowship for travel and independent study in Ireland and the U.K. Previous awards include the American Theatre Critics Association'sM. Elizabeth Osborn Award for Best New Play by an Emerging Playwright.

O'Brien's debut poetry collection entitledWar Reporter was published in 2013 by Hanging Loose Press in Brooklyn and CB Editions in London, edited byCharles Boyle.War Reporter received the 2013Fenton Aldeburgh First Collection Prize,[19] and was shortlisted for the 2013Forward Prize for Best First Collection.[20] O'Brien's second collection of poetry,Scarsdale, was published in 2014 by CB Editions in London and in 2015 by Measure Press in the US. O'Brien was writer-in-residence at theJames Merrill House inStonington, Connecticut.[21]New Life, O'Brien's third poetry collection, was published in 2016 by CB Editions in London and in 2017 by Hanging Loose Press in the US. Barbara Berman writes ofNew Life in The Rumpus that "an original voice speaks, on a plane with earlier masters."[22] In 2014 O'Brien was the recipient of the Troubadour International Poetry Prize.[23]

Patrick McGuiness writes inThe Guardian thatWar Reporter is "a masterpiece of truthfulness and feeling, and a completely sui generis addition not just to writing about war but to contemporary poetry."[24]War Reporter was a staff pick for best books of 2013 atSlate.com, whereWilliam J. Dobson hails it as an "incredible achievement. Anyone who cares about how we go to war—and how we return—must read it."[25]

O'Brien was a 2015-16 Guggenheim Fellow.[26]

O'Brien wrote the libretti for two one-act operas by composerJonathan Berger.Theotokia andThe War Reporter, titled jointly asVisitations, was commissioned by Stanford Live, theNational Endowment for the Arts, and theMellon Foundation, and premiered at theBing Concert Hall atStanford University in April 2013, directed by Rinde Eckert and performed byNew York Polyphony and Mellissa Hughes.[27] This production ofVisitations received a New York City premiere at the 2014Prototype Festival.[28]

O'Brien's plays and poetry and prose have appeared internationally in newspapers, magazines, and literary journals including theNew York Times,Washington Post,Esquire,Paris Review,Times Literary Supplement,The American Scholar,Los Angeles Review of Books,Literary Hub,American Theatre Magazine,The Southern Review,Sewanee Review,New England Review,Hopkins Review,Sunday Times,Yale Review,Southwest Review,Missouri Review,32 poems,Poetry Review,Poetry Ireland Review,The White Review,ZYZZYVA,Malahat Review,StoryQuarterly,Alaska Quarterly Review,Greensboro Review, and many others.

Personal life

[edit]

Originally fromScarsdale, New York, O'Brien currently lives inLos Angeles with his wife, actress, writer, comedian, and producerJessica St. Clair. Their daughter, Isobel Kelly O'Brien, was born on October 1, 2013. He is a summa cum laude graduate ofMiddlebury College, and received a master's degree in Creative Writing fromBrown University, graduating with high honors.[29]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"PEN honors SoCal writers with 2018 literary awards".Los Angeles Times. 2018-09-27.
  2. ^"Newtown Press Release"(PDF).www.gevatheatre.org. Geva Theatre Center. Retrieved2 April 2024.
  3. ^"New Books by NER Authors".nereview.com. New England Review. 18 December 2023. Retrieved30 April 2024.
  4. ^Cook, James (1 March 2024)."Lonely in a Crowded Country: Growing up in a dysfunctional family".Times Literary Supplement. No. 6309. Retrieved1 March 2024.
  5. ^Dewitt, David."Theater Interview/Preview: Dan O'Brien — The Playwright as Documentarian".The Arts Fuse. Retrieved14 April 2024.
  6. ^"Our-Cancers | Acre Books".
  7. ^Wilson, Stephen (18 February 2022)."Secret Alchemy".Times Literary Supplement. Retrieved7 February 2023.
  8. ^Schraffenberger, J. D."A Review of Our Cancers by Dan O'Brien".North American Review. Retrieved7 February 2023.
  9. ^Gray, Margaret (5 May 2021)."Abuse, cancer, COVID-19 shutdown: One writer's master class in survival through art".Los Angeles Times. Retrieved7 February 2023.
  10. ^Svich, Caridad (25 June 2022)."A Story that Happens: On Playwriting, Childhood & Other Traumas".Contemporary Theatre Review.31 (4):513–514.doi:10.1080/10486801.2021.1968591.S2CID 246279476. Retrieved7 February 2023.
  11. ^Jolly, Alice (14 May 2021)."Lively Messes".Times Literary Supplement. Retrieved7 February 2023.
  12. ^Healy, Patrick (22 February 2013)."First Winners of Kennedy Prize Announced".The New York Times. Retrieved22 February 2013.
  13. ^Shenton, Mark."London's Gate Theatre to Present These American Lives". Playbill.com. Archived fromthe original on 2013-09-21.
  14. ^Clement, Olivia (2015-01-22)."Primary Stages Announces Off-Broadway Premieres by Acclaimed Playwrights".Playbill.com. Playbill. Retrieved22 January 2015.
  15. ^Healy, Patrick (2014-09-03)."Dan O'Brien and Suzan-Lori Parks Win Horton Foote Prize".New York Times. Retrieved3 September 2014.
  16. ^Rickwald, Bethany (12 July 2012)."Dan O'Brien, Greg Naughton, Adam Rapp Set for Williamstown Theatre Festival's Fridays @ 3 Reading Series". TheatreMania.com. Retrieved4 February 2017.
  17. ^Kellogg, Carolyn (22 August 2013)."Joan Didion to be awarded PEN Center USA prize by Harrison Ford".Los Angeles Times.
  18. ^Jury, Louise (2014-11-17)."London Evening Standard Theatre Awards 2014 shortlist announced". Evening Standard. Retrieved17 November 2014.
  19. ^"Mass Media Essay Examples | Free Book Summary".
  20. ^Bury, Liz (8 July 2013)."Forward poetry prizes highlight 'powerful year for poetry'".The Guardian. London.
  21. ^"The James Merrill House - Museum & Writer-in-Residence Program".www.jamesmerrillhouse.org. Archived fromthe original on 2009-10-06. Retrieved2013-07-06.
  22. ^"New Life by Dan O'Brien".The Rumpus.net. 2016-01-29. Retrieved2018-08-31.
  23. ^"Troubadour Poetry Prize 2014".coffeehousepoetry.org. 2014-12-01. Retrieved2018-09-13.
  24. ^McGuiness, Patrick (15 November 2013)."War Reporter by Dan O'Brien – review".Guardian. Retrieved21 November 2013.
  25. ^Slate Staff (30 November 2013)."Best Books 2013: Slate Staff Picks".Slate Magazine – via Slate.
  26. ^"Fellowship Awards In The United States And Canada, 2015".John Simon Guggenheim Foundation. Retrieved9 April 2015.
  27. ^"Jonathan Berger's 'Visitations,' at Stanford".The New York Times. 15 April 2013.
  28. ^"Prototype".prototypefestival.org. 14 January 2019.
  29. ^"Dan O'Brien - Biography".www.danobrien.org. Archived fromthe original on 24 February 2012. Retrieved22 May 2022.

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