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Holly Twyford

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Nationality
  
American

Movies
  
Out of Season

Education
  
Boston University

Role
  
Stage Director

Name
  
Holly Twyford


Holly Twyford soundingbeckettcomdatauploadsHollytwyford400jpg

Occupation
  
Stage actress / director

Awards
  
Helen Hayes Awards for Outstanding Lead Actress, Resident Play

Nominations
  
Helen Hayes Awards for Outstanding Lead Actress, Resident Musical

People also search for
  
Aaron Posner, Jeanette L. Buck, Christopher Lane, Will Pomerantz, Joe Banno, Michael Baron

Inside OR, with Actress Holly Twyford


Holly Twyford is a Washington, D.C.-based American stage actress and director. She is a ten-time nominee and a four-time winner of the Helen Hayes Award.

Contents

Early life and career

Twyford grew up in Great Falls, Virginia. She attended the School of Theatre Arts at Boston University's School of Theatre Arts before returning to the D.C. area to pursue acting. Before her theatre career was established, she worked as a bartender and in the costume department of the renowned Arena Stage, where she would later star.

Twyford has appeared in over thirty productions for organizations including Arena Stage, the Folger Shakespeare Library, Studio Theatre, Source Theatre, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, Theatre J, Olney Theatre, Round House Theatre and the now-defunct Consenting Adults Theater Company, where she earned her first Helen Hayes Award nomination in 1993. She commonly collaborates with director Joe Banno on offbeat productions of Shakespeare plays, including a 1999 version of Hamlet at the Folger in which Twyford, along with three others, portrayed the protagonist as a fractured personality.

Twyford's film and television appearances include Out of Season, Pecker, Falling to Peaces and a 1997 episode of Homicide: Life on the Street.

Twyford is a lesbian and has been out for her entire career. She had been with her partner, an environmentalist, since 1992.

In a 2005 group interview with director Delia Taylor and playwright Jeanette Buck for Metro Weekly, she said that she didn't feel her homosexuality had hindered her career, but that the necessity of coming out to coworkers when starting a new job "gets to be real tiring". In the same interview, she and her colleagues also discussed the paucity of female roles and the need for more female directors, playwrights and producers in both the theatre industry and Hollywood.

References

Holly Twyford Wikipedia