Spouse Sam Gold (m. 2011) | ||
![]() | ||
Plays 4000 Miles, After the Revolution, The Great God Pan, Belleville Similar Sam Gold, Anne Kauffman, Gabriel Ebert, Mary Louise Wilson, Robert Kaplowitz |
Theater talk playwright amy herzog full episode
Amy Herzog is an American playwright. Her play 4000 Miles, which ran Off-Broadway in 2011, was a finalist for the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Herzog's plays have been produced Off-Broadway, and have received nominations for, among others: the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Actor and Actress (After the Revolution); the Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play (The Great God Pan); and Drama Desk Award nominations for Outstanding Play and Outstanding Actress in a Play (Belleville). She was a finalist for the 2013 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize.
Contents
- Theater talk playwright amy herzog full episode
- Theater talk playwright amy herzog broadway s joe allen
- Personal life
- Career
- Style and themes
- After the Revolution
- The Great God Pan
- Belleville
- Works
- Awards and honors
- References

Theater talk playwright amy herzog broadway s joe allen
Personal life

Herzog's grandfather is songwriter Arthur Herzog Jr.. She is married to stage director Sam Gold; they have two children.
Career

Herzog received a Masters in Fine Arts from the Yale School of Drama. Her teachers included Richard Nelson and John Guare. Jim Nicola, producer of Belleville at the New York Theatre Workshop, said that "the distinction of Herzog’s work is her belief 'that private, individual experience is always inseparable from public, historical processes, when she explores human lives.'"

Her new play, Mary Jane, will premiere at Yale Rep, New Haven, Connecticut, from April 28 to May 20, 2017, directed by Anne Kauffman.
Style and themes

Tim Sanford, artistic director of Playwrights Horizons noted that she is willing "to take on 'ideas and history, which not everyone believes in anymore.' He also praises the sophistication of her structures and characters. 'You can see the affinity for Richard Nelson, who was her teacher,' Sanford points out, referring to the veteran playwright and teacher at Yale School of Drama."
Richard Nelson said: “She has great, great facility for dialogue... It’s clean, it’s simple, it’s evocative, it’s witty. It’s alive and easily spoken. Very, very actable. That’s a given talent.” John Guare noted “Amy came fully formed" Guare also mentioned her “warm-hearted, cold-eyed sympathy for her characters.”
Herzog based several characters in her plays on family members. The character of "Vera Joseph" in 4000 Miles is based on Herzog's grandmother, Leepee. Vera initially appeared in her play After the Revolution. Leo in 4000 Miles is based on her cousin who lost a good friend. The "Josephs" in her plays are also partially based on her father's stepfamily.
After the Revolution
Her play After the Revolution had its world premiere at the Williamstown Theatre Festival, Massachusetts, from July 22 to August 1, 2010. The play premiered Off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons in October 2010 (in previews) and ran through December 12, 2010. The play concerns the young granddaughter continuing her "family's Marxist tradition, devoting her life to the memory of her blacklisted grandfather." The cast featured Mare Winningham, Lois Smith (as Vera), Peter Friedman and Katharine Powell.
The play received nominations for the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Actor and Actress, as well as the Outer Critics Circle Award, John Glassner award. Charles Isherwood, in his review for The New York Times called the play "smart, engrossing", and wrote: it "...strikes a fresh note in being set among a family of exotic beings..." Herzog won the "New York Times Outstanding Playwright Award" for this play; the award carries a prize of $5000.
The Great God Pan
Her play The Great God Pan opened at Playwrights Horizons in December 2012 and closed on January 13, 2013. Directed by Carolyn Cantor, the cast featured Becky Ann Baker, Peter Friedman, Jeremy Strong (Jamie), Keith Nobbs (Frank) and Joyce Van Patten.
The play concerns a journalist, Jamie, age 32. Jamie is told by his old friend Frank that he is suing his (Frank's) father for sexual abuse; Frank suspects that Jamie was also abused. Although Jamie denies this, his life and relationships are thrown into turmoil. Herzog said that the play is "not about abuse, it's about memory and self-discovery."
Charles Isherwood, reviewing in The New York Times, wrote: Herzog "...has emerged in the past few years as one of the bright theatrical lights of her generation.... She writes with a keen sensitivity to the complex weave of feelings embedded in all human relationships, with particular attention to the way we tiptoe around areas of radioactive emotion. Ms. Herzog makes quietly captivating dramas of our instinct to avoid drama, noting how momentous events in our lives can pass by almost without registering on the surface." The play received a 2013 Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play (Peter Friedman).
Belleville
Belleville had its world premiere at the Yale Repertory Theatre in October through November 2011, directed by Anne Kauffman. This play was commissioned by Yale Rep. The play then opened Off-Broadway at the New York Theatre Workshop from March 3, 2013 to April 14, 2013. Again directed by Anne Kauffman, the cast featured Maria Dizzia and Greg Keller.
The play involves two young married Americans, Zack and Abby, living in Paris in a "funky bohemian apartment in up-and-coming Belleville". Zack’s "noble mission [is] to fight pediatric AIDS."
The play received nominations for the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Director (Anne Kauffman) and Outstanding Lighting Design (Ben Stanton). The play also received 2013 Drama Desk Award nominations for Outstanding Play and Outstanding Actress in a Play (Maria Dizzia). Herzog, for Belleville, was a finalist for the 2013 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize.
Works
Awards and honors
She received the 2008 Helen Merrill Award for Aspiring Playwrights.
She won a 2011 Whiting Award, which included a $50, 000 prize. She received the Lilly Award in 2011 for playwrighting. (The Lilly Award Foundation has as its mission to "celebrate the work of women in the theater and promote gender parity at all levels of theatrical production.")
Herzog won the 2012 Obie Award in the category Best New American Play for 4000 Miles.
She was a finalist for the 2012-2013 Susan Smith Blackburn Award; each finalist receives $2,500.
She is a finalist for the 2016-2017 Susan Smith Blackburn Award for her play Mary Jane.