Aaron Posner

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Aaron Posner is an

Outer Critics Circle Award
, the John Gassner Prize, a Joseph Jefferson Award, a Bay Area Theatre Award, and an Eliot Norton Award.

Biography

Born in Madison, Wisconsin, and raised in Eugene, Oregon,[1] Posner is married to actress Erin Weaver, whom he met while she was a student of his at the University of the Arts. They have one daughter.

Posner has adapted novels as plays, and later created new variations of classic plays, including some by William Shakespeare and Anton Chekhov. Among Posner's best-known adaptions are The Chosen (1999), based on Chaim Potok's 1967 novel of the same name, and My Name Is Asher Lev (2009), based on Potok's 1972 novel of the same name.

With composer James Sugg, Posner created A Murder, A Mystery & A Marriage: A Mark Twain Musical (2006), adapted from a short story of the same name by Mark Twain that was published in 2001. Posner wrote the book and lyrics. The work premiered in Wilmington, Delaware, in a co-production of the Round House Theatre and the Delaware Theatre Company.[2][3]

Posner's variation of Chekhov's 1896 play The Seagull, under the title of Stupid Fucking Bird, premiered in 2013 by the Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company in Washington, D.C. It was a very different type of work, his own answer to Chekhov, rather than a classical adaptation. The play has since been produced more than 200 times by theatre companies and universities in the United States, Australia, Canada, Estonia, and Sweden.

Posner has adapted Chekhov's Uncle Vanya and Three Sisters as well. His Life Sucks: Or the Present Ridiculous (2015) was premiered by Theater J in Washington, D.C.[4] No Sisters (2017), which premiered by the Studio Theatre in Washington, D.C., ran as a companion play to their production of Three Sisters.[5]

For the

freedmen, it premiered at the Folger Shakespeare Library on May 31, 2016.[8]

Posner is an associate professor of acting and directing at American University in Washington, D.C.[9]

References

  1. ^ Aaron Posner, American Players Theatre
  2. ^ Harris, Paul (June 11, 2006). "'A Murder, A Mystery & A Marriage: A Mark Twain Musical Melodrama'". Variety. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
  3. ^ Sydney-Chanele Dawkins, "The Playwright's Playground: Playwright Aaron Posner Talks About Inspiration, Adaptations and That 'Stupid Fucking Bird'", DC Metro Theater Arts, 31 July 2014; accessed 8 February 2019
  4. ^ John Stoltenberg, "Review: Life Sucks at Theater J", DC Metro Theater Arts, 20 January 2015
  5. ^ Barbara McKay, "Review": No Sisters, TheaterMania, 27 March 2017
  6. ^ "Chicago Shakespeare Theater: The Tempest".
  7. ^ Fraley, Jason (November 29, 2022). "'Tempest' mixes Shakespeare with Tom Waits and magic".
  8. ^ District Merchants, Folger Shakespeare Library, n.d., 2016
  9. ^ "Faculty Profile: Aaron Posner | American University, Washington, D.C." American University. Archived from the original on 2018-02-06. Retrieved 2019-11-30.

External links