For more information on John Guare, visit Britannica.com.
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: John Guare |
For more information on John Guare, visit Britannica.com.
| American Theater Guide: John Guare |
Guare, John (b. 1938), playwright. Nephew of a Hollywood casting director, he was born in New York and studied at the Yale School of Drama. He won an Obie Award for his one‐act play, Muzeeka (1968), but his first major success was The House of Blue Leaves (1971). Subsequent full‐length plays have included Rich and Famous (1976), Marco Polo Sings a Solo (1977), Landscape of the Body (1977), Bosoms and Neglect (1979), and Lydie Breeze (1982). Not until Six Degrees of Separation (1990) did he enjoy another major hit. Guare's later works include Four Baboons Adoring the Sun (1992), Lake Hollywood (1999), and Chaucer in Rome (2001); he also scripted the librettos for Two Gentlemen of Verona (1971) and Sweet Smell of Success (2002). Guare's work is difficult to categorize, mixing absurdist touches with a quirky kind of satire that relies on inflated language.
Dictionary:
Guare (gwâr) , John
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| Works: Works by John Guare |
| 1971 | The House of Blue Leaves. Guare's initial major success comes with his first full-length play, about an eccentric collection of characters: a middle-aged zookeeper who aspires to be a Hollywood songwriter; his wife, Bananas, who aspires to be a dog; and a woman who agrees to pre- and extramarital sex but will not cook for a man before marriage. The play is set in Queens, New York, in 1965, during Pope Paul VI's visit. Born in New York City, Guare attended Georgetown University and the Yale Drama School. His first play, Muzeeka, was produced in 1967 and won an Obie Award. |
| 1976 | Rich and Famous. Guare's black comedy chronicles the experiences of Bing Ringling, a young playwright in a desperate pursuit of fame and fortune. |
| 1977 | Landscape of the Body. Guare's absurdist drama concerns a Maine woman's experiences in New York City. "The play is about a decapitation," Guare explains, "about people living without any reflective powers, without their reason, without their imagination." |
| 1979 | Bosoms and Neglect. Guare explores the relationship between a mother and her son in this witty, darkly comic psychoanalytic satire. It is the sparest and most naturalistic of Guare's full-length plays and manages only four performances on Broadway. However, when restaged in Boston, it is hailed as "brilliant" and too "fiercely uncompromising" for Broadway. |
| 1990 | Six Degrees of Separation. Based on an actual incident in which a young African American claimed to be actor Sidney Poitier's son, the play explores the American cult of celebrity. A well-off Manhattan couple invite the young man into their home and are taken in by his compelling stories. They want to believe him as much as he wants to fool them. In the play Guare satirizes liberal guilt and the isolation and dullness of modern urban life. |
| 1992 | Four Baboons Adoring the Sun. Guare's play concerns a married couple--academics who are working in Sicily and hosting their children from their previous marriages. The couple is happy; the children are disconcerted by having stepparents. Critics find that this tension between generations is explored with considerable sensitivity. |
| Quotes By: John Guare |
Quotes:
"We live in a world where amnesia is the most wished-for state. When did history become a bad word?"
| Wikipedia: John Guare |
| John Guare | |
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Guare at the 2009 premiere of PoliWood |
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| Born | John Guare February 5, 1938 |
| Occupation | Playwright |
| Nationality | American |
| Writing period | 1964–present |
| Notable work(s) | The House of Blue Leaves; Six Degrees of Separation |
John Guare (pronounced gwâr, born 5 February 1938) is an American playwright. He is best known as the author of The House of Blue Leaves, Six Degrees of Separation, and Landscape of the Body. His style, which mixes comic invention with an acute sense of the failure of human relations and aspirations, is at once cruel and deeply compassionate.
In the foreword to a collection of Guare's plays, film director Louis Malle writes:
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Guare was born in New York City and raised in Jackson Heights, Queens. He was raised a Roman Catholic, but now seems to be lapsed [1]. He was educated at Georgetown University, (BA, 1960), where in 1958 he contributed a song to an original musical revue entitled The Natives Are Restless and presented by the Mask and Bauble Dramatic Society. The song humorously attributed the success of many famous people to the syllable “O” in their names. Under the direction of Donn B. Murphy, his play The Toadstool Boy, about a country singer's quest for fame, won first place in the District of Columbia Recreation Department's One-Act-Play competition. In 1960, the Mask and Bauble presented The Thirties Girl, a musical for which Guare did the book, much of the music and the lyrics, again under Murphy's tutelage. Set in Hollywood's turbulent 1920's, it dealt with the dethronement of a reigning diva by a fresh-faced starlet. (Management of identity and celebrity, and the quest for fame, the focus of these early efforts, are recurring themes in the body of Guare's work. He subsequently imported the Hollywod ingenue's song, I'm Here With Bells On into his first full-length Off-Broadway play, The House of Blue Leaves, which received an Obie Award and New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best American Play, and subsequently won Guare a Tony Award in its 1986 Broadway revival.)
He then went to the Yale School of Drama, (MFA, 1963). His early plays, mostly comic one-acts exhibiting a flair for the absurd, include To Wally Pantoni, We Leave a Credenza (1964), Muzeeka (1968), and Cop-Out (1968). The House of Blue Leaves (1971), a domestic drama by turns wildly comic and despairingly desperate, moved Guare into the front ranks of American dramatists. Chaucer in Rome, a sequel to The House of Blue Leaves, received its world premiere at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in July 1999 and later enjoyed a production in New York by Lincoln Center Theater.
Later plays include Marco Polo Sings a Solo, Bosoms and Neglect, Moon Over Miami, Six Degrees of Separation, and Four Baboons Adoring the Sun. Lake Hollywood and A Few Stout Individuals (2002) both received their world premieres at Signature Theatre. Six Degrees of Separation (1990), an intricately plotted comedy of manners about an African-American confidence man who poses as the son of film star Sidney Poitier, has been the most highly praised and widely produced of Guare's full-length plays. It was made into a film in 1993.
Guare’s cycle of plays on nineteenth-century America, Gardenia, Lydie Breeze and Women and Water, has been performed in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, Washington D.C., London and Australia. A Few Stout Individuals returns to nineteenth century America, with a cast that includes Ulysses S. Grant, Mark Twain, soprano Adelina Patti and the Emperor and Empress of Japan. These historic dramas investigate the violence at the root of American identity and the failure of utopian aspirations.
Guare has also been involved with musical theatre. His libretto with Mel Shapiro for the musical Two Gentlemen of Verona was a success when it premiered in 1971 and was revived in 2005 at the Public Theater's Shakespeare in the Park. It won the two men the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Book of a Musical. He wrote the songs for Landscape of the Body. Guare wrote narration for '"Psyche,"' a tone poem by César Franck, which premiered at Avery Fisher Hall in October of 1997, conducted by Kurt Masur with the New York Philharmonic. In 1999, he revised the book of the Cole Porter musical comedy, Kiss Me, Kate for its Broadway revival. He also wrote the book for the Broadway musical Sweet Smell of Success.
Guare wrote the screenplay for Louis Malle's film Atlantic City (1980), for which he was nominated for an Oscar.
He was a founding member in 1965 of the Eugene O’Neill Theatre Center in Waterford, Connecticut and Resident Playwright at the New York Shakespeare Festival in 1976. He is a council member of the Dramatists Guild, co-editor of the Lincoln Center Theater Review, co-produces the New Plays Reading Room Series at the Lincoln Center Library for the Performing Arts and teaches in the Playwriting department at the Yale School of Drama.
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| Six Degrees of Separation (Sources) (play) | |
| National Playwrights Conference (American Theater) | |
| Signature Theatre (American Theater) |
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