John Guare has written some wild plays. His most famous, including "House of Blue Leaves" and "Six Degrees of Separation," are hilariously funny and disturbingly tragic. "The challenges of writing a ...
The title of John Guare’s 1971 farce, The House of Blue Leaves, now playing at the Mark Taper Forum, refers to a nut house, and a tree outside that contains “blue leaves,” which are really gentle ...
At 75, many a man might reasonably think of retirement. Instead, John Guare has embarked on a fresh career. In 3 Kinds of Exile, the portmanteau play at Atlantic Theater, directed by Neil Pepe, Guare ...
Every year, the YoungArts program of the National YoungArts Foundation offers 15- to 18-year-old emerging artists from around the country the chance to be mentored by some of the world's greatest ...
Inspired by a true story, the play follows the trail of a young black con man, Paul, who insinuates himself into the lives of a wealthy New York couple, Ouisa and Flan Kittredge, saying he knows their ...
Gaure is joined in the cast by Peter Maloney (Arcadia, Carousel), David Pittu (LoveMusik, Is He Dead?), Alison Cimmet (The Mystery of Edwin Drood), Jeffrey Kuhn (The 39 Steps, Spamalot), Jacquelyn ...
(AP) John Guare isn’t merely ready to unveil his new play he’ll also be onstage in it. The Tony Award-winning playwright said he will make his first foray into professional acting when he appears in ...
John Guare, in his playwriting, loves making things difficult. Verbally elaborate, dramatically digressive and freewheeling, his works often seem hell-bent on challenging their own structures. The ...
“A Free Man of Color,” the first new play by John Guare in seven years, will anchor the 2008-09 season of the Public Theater, the organization announced Thursday. Directed by George C. Wolfe, the play ...