Nilaja sun biography books
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Adam Driver
Read BioAdam Driver
Theater credits include:
Angels In America (Signature Theater)
Mrs. Warren’s Profession(Broadway)
The Retributionists (Playwrights Horizons)Adepero Oduye
Read BioAdepero Oduye
Broadway: The Trip To Bountiful. Off-Broadway: Her Portmanteau (NYTW). Regional: Eclipsed (Yale Rep), The Bluest Eye (Hartford Stage). Film & TV: The Dinner, The Big Short, My Name Is David, 12 Years a Slave, Pariah, Steel Magnolias, "Law & Order," "Louie," "The Unusuals."
Adrian Brown
Aidan Kelly
Read BioAidan Kelly
Credits include:
Eden
National Theatre Live: Treasure Island
Superstar
Alex Averbuch
Read BioAlex Averbuch
Oleksandr (Alex) Averbuch, a native of Novoaidar, Luhans’k region, Ukraine (b. 1985), is a literary historian, poet, and translator. He is the author of three books of poetry and an array of literary translations between Hebrew, Ukrainian, English, and Russian. His poetry deals with the issues of ethnic fragmentation and in-betweenness, multiple identities, queerness, cross- and multilingualism, documentalist writing, and memory. He has organized numerous poetic performances and festivals, such as the International Festival of Contemporary Ukrainian Poetry (summer 2020),
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Front Lines is a pathbreaking collection of the most important, critically acclaimed plays written by the country’s leading contemporary female playwrights. Including seven full scripts and accompanying materials, Front Lines provides both major examples of the playwright’s craft and an essential introduction to the politically inspired work of female dramatists of the twenty-first century.
Here is Jessica Blank’s widely heralded The Exonerated (written with Erik Jensen), based on interviews with American prisoners incarcerated for crimes they did not commit. Also included is Nilaja Sun’s outstanding No Child . . . , winner of the Outer Critics Circle’s 2007 John Gassner Award for Best New Play—a funny, stirring one-woman show centering on an inner-city teacher’s success at involving her rebellious students in their own education by putting on a play. Rounding out the collection are Emily Mann’s Mrs. Packard; Paula Vogel’s Hot ’n’ Throbbing; Shirley Lauro’s Clarence Darrow’s Last Trial; Quiara Alegría Hudes’s Eliot: A Soldier’s Fugue; and Cindy Cooper’s Words of Choice, co-adapted with Suzanne Bennett.
With a preface by distinguished playwright Shirley Lauro and an introduction by theater critic Alexis Greene, Front Lines also includes short biographie