Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Byrne Piven

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
Bernard Piven

Role
  
Stage Director

Name
  
Byrne Piven



Born
  
September 24, 1929 (
1929-09-24
)
Scranton, Pennsylvania

Occupation
  
Stage, film, television actor, director

Died
  
February 18, 2002, Evanston, Illinois, United States

Spouse
  
Joyce Piven (m. 1954–2002)

Movies
  
Being John Malkovich, Very Bad Things, Creator, Temporary Girl, E=mc2

Similar People
  
Jeremy Piven, Shira Piven, Adam McKay, Pearl McKay, Peter Berg

Parents
  
Samuel Piven, Katie Piven

Children
  
Jeremy Piven, Shira Piven

Byrne piven teaching


Byrne Piven (September 24, 1929 – February 18, 2002) was an American stage actor, director, and co-founder of the Playwrights Theatre Club, a forerunner of The Second City.

Contents

Life and career

Piven was born Bernard Piven in Scranton, Pennsylvania, the son of Katie (née Balaban) and Samuel Piven, who were Ukrainian Jewish immigrants. He came to Chicago in 1954 and met Joyce Hiller at the University of Chicago. They were married a short time later. In the 1950s, the Pivens were two of the founding members of the Playwrights Theatre Club, along with Paul Sills and David Shepard. Playwrights featured such budding stars as Mike Nichols, Elaine May, Ed Asner and Barbara Harris.

In the mid-1950s, the Pivens moved to New York, where they studied with Uta Hagen. Piven played the leads in several New York Shakespeare Festival productions. He was also part of the Obie Award-winning cast of A House Remembered.

They returned to Chicago in 1967 to rejoin Sills, Sheldon Patinkin, Bernie Sahlins and Joyce Sloane in forming Second City Repertory and then Story Theatre. Piven, charismatic, balding and bearded, with a beautifully resonant voice, spent some time as an acting teacher at Northwestern University, offering his expertise in improvisation as well as his peculiarly sage view of life, combining a respect for zen and the torah. In 1972, he and his wife started the Piven Theatre Workshop, partly to supplement their incomes, and partly to have something for their children to do after school. As Piven liked to point out, many of those children went on to fame and fortune.

Piven was standby for both Louis Hayward (King Arthur) and Christopher Carey (Mordred) in the national tour of "Camelot." The production also featured Arthur Treacher (Pellinore) and Kathryn Grayson (Guenevere) prior to her replacement by Jan Moody.

Some of Piven's favorite roles include: The Man in 605, for which he received the Joseph Jefferson Award for best actor, the Piven Theatre Workshop/Famous Door production of The Shoemakers, directed by Shira, Victory Garden's production of The Value of Names with Shelley Berman, This Old Man Came Rolling Home and The Sunshine Boys at the National Jewish Theatre, Bob Falls’ Hamlet (starring Byrne's then-student Aidan Quinn) and the Workshop's futuristic production of Macbeth.

Piven also starred as the river boat captain in the Uncle Ben's rice commercials in the 1970s, and many television appearances, including Magnum PI, 1987 episode 'On the Fly'. He died of lung cancer in Evanston, Illinois.

His son is actor Jeremy Piven. His brother is criminology professor Herman Piven, who was for a time married to Frances Fox Piven.

References

Byrne Piven Wikipedia