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John Conklin

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Name
  
John Conklin

Role
  
Theater Designer

Education
  
Yale University


John Conklin httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu


Awards
  
Helen Hayes Awards for Outstanding Set Design, Resident Production

Nominations
  
Tony Award for Best Scenic Design, Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Set Design

Nea opera honors interview with john conklin


John Conklin (born June 22, 1937) is a theater designer and teaches in the Department of Design for Stage and Film at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.

Contents

Nea opera honors mark lemos on john conklin


Life and career

John Conklin was born in Hartford Connecticut, and educated at the Kingswood-Oxford School and Yale University.

In New York City, he has designed for the Metropolitan Opera; the New York City Opera; the New York Shakespeare Festival; Broadway and off-Broadway productions. He has designed for other U.S. opera companies, including the San Francisco Opera and the Chicago Lyric Opera; Glimmerglass Opera; Opera Theatre of St. Louis; Santa Fe Opera; Seattle Opera; and the opera companies of Houston, Dallas, San Diego, Washington, and Boston. Regional theaters where he has worked include the American Repertory Theatre, the Goodman Theatre (Chicago), the Long Wharf Theatre, Hartford Stage, Arena Stage, the Guthrie Theatre, Center Stage (Baltimore), and Actors Theatre of Louisville.

In Europe he has designed for the English National Opera; the Royal Opera, Stockholm and the opera companies of Munich, Amsterdam, and Bologna. In 1991 he designed the costumes for Robert Wilson's production of the Magic Flute at the Bastille Opera in Paris.

In 2008 he retired from his position as Associate Artistic Director for the Glimmerglass Opera, a post he had held for eighteen years. He is the artistic advisor for Boston Lyric Opera where his work has included Lucia de Lammermoor (2005) and Brittens's A Midsummer Night's Dream (2011). Reviewing the latter production, the Boston Globe described the scenery as "by turns abstract, stylized, whimsical, and deconstructed."

References

John Conklin Wikipedia