peoplepill id: naomi-wallace
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United States of America
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The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American playwright
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Prospect, Kentucky, USA
Age
63 years
Residence
Yorkshire Dales, North Yorkshire, North East England, United Kingdom; Kentucky, USA
Education
University of Iowa,
Hampshire College,
Bachelor of Arts
Awards
MacArthur Fellows Program
 
Susan Smith Blackburn Prize
 
Obie Award
 
Windham–Campbell Literature Prizes
(2013)
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Naomi Wallace (born 1960) is an American playwright, screenwriter and poet from Kentucky. She is widely known for her plays, and has received several distinguished awards for her work.

Biography

Naomi Wallace was born in Prospect, Kentucky, to Henry F. Wallace, a photo journalist and correspondent for Time and Life magazines, and Sonja de Vries, a Dutch justice and human rights worker.

Wallace obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree from Hampshire College. She then received two master's degrees from the University of Iowa. Currently, she divides her time between Kentucky and the Yorkshire Dales in Northern England (UK), where she lives with her partner, Bruce McLeod, with whom she has three children.

Naomi Wallace
Jeremy Scahill and Naomi Wallace giving a writing workshop in New Haven

Wallace has taught English literature, poetry and playwrighting at Yale University, UCLA, University of Iowa,Illinois State University, Merrimack College, Hampshire College, American University of Cairo, Vrije University of Amsterdam and other institutions.She has also worked with women in the criminal justice system, and is a member of SURJ, Showing up for Racial Justice. She has been called "a dedicated advocate for justice and human rights in the U.S. and abroad, and Palestinian rights in the Middle East," and her writing described as "muscular, devastating, and unwavering."

In the mid-2000s, Wallace was briefly detained by Homeland Security after defying the ban on travel to Cuba.

In August 2016, Wallace was one of the Freedom Riders with the Women's Boat to Gaza.

Wallace is a supporter of the B.D.S. movement and Jewish Voices for Peace.

Publications

Wallace's plays are published in the U.S. by Broadway Play Publishing Inc., Theatre Communications Group, Faber and Faber in the UK, and éditions Théâtrales in France. Wallace's work has been produced in the United States, United Kingdom, Europe, and the Middle East.

Awards

Wallace's work has received the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize (twice), the Joseph Kesselring Prize, the Fellowship of Southern Writers Drama Award, and an Obie Award.She is also a recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship, and a National Endowment for the Arts development grant.

In 2009, One Flea Spare was incorporated into the permanent répertoire of the French National Theatre, the Comédie-Française, and produced there in 2012. Wallace is the only living American playwright to enter the répertoire. Only two American playwrights have ever been added to La Comédie's repertoire in 300 years: the other being Tennessee Williams. The play was translated into French by Dominique Hollier.

In 2012, Wallace was a recipient of the Horton Foote Prize for most promising new American play.

In 2013, she was awarded the inaugural Windham–Campbell Literature Prize established at Yale University.

In 2015, Wallace received an Arts and Letters Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.The award citation reads:"Naomi Wallace is a powerful and essential voice who brings to the theater great lyricism and moral courage.Her characters, so cruelly treated and often destroyed, speak with a direct and devastating poetry.Never does this dramatist mollify or fail to engage us on the deepest level, and her three "Visions" of the Middle East that compriseThe Fever Chart are short, stark masterworks."

Work

Signature Theater, the Off Broadway company that has historically mounted a season of plays, produced three of Wallace's plays in 2014–2015, including the world premiere of Night is a Room.

Plays

  • In The Heart of America
  • One Flea Spare
  • The Inland Sea
  • Slaughter City
  • The Trestle at Pope Lick Creek
  • The Girl Who Fell Through a Hole in Her Jumper (with Bruce E. J. McLeod; licensed under the title The Girl Who Fell Through a Hole in Her Sweater in the United States)
  • The War Boys
  • Things of Dry Hours
  • Birdy (an adaptation of William Wharton's novel)
  • The Fever Chart: Three Visions of the Middle East
  • Twenty One Positions: A Cartographic Dream of the Middle East (co-written with Lisa Schlesinger and AbdelFattah Abu Srour)
  • The Hard Weather Boating Party
  • One Short Sleepe
  • And I and Silence
  • The Liquid Plain
  • Night is a Room
  • Barrel Wave
  • Returning to Haifa (co-adapted with Ismail Khalid)


Anthologies


Essays

Poetry

  • To Dance A Stony Field (Peterloo Poets Press).

Films

  • Lawn Dogs
  • The War Boys, co-written with Bruce E. J. McLeod
  • Flying Blind, co-written with Bruce E. J. McLeod
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 01 Oct 2023. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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