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Louis S Peterson

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Nationality
  
United States

Role
  
Playwright

Period
  
1953–1961

Books
  
Take a giant step

Debut works
  
Take a Giant Step

Movies
  
Tempest

Name
  
Louis Peterson


Louis S. Peterson httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
Louis Stamford Peterson 17 June 1922 Hartford, Connecticut, USA (
1922-06-17
)

Occupation
  
Playwright, screenwriter

Died
  
April 27, 1998, New York City, New York, United States

Shows
  
Goodyear Television Playhouse

Nominations
  
Primetime Emmy Award for Best Teleplay Writing - One Hour or More

Similar People
  
Alberto Lattuada, Michael Wilson, Dino De Laurentiis, Alexander Pushkin

Louis S. Peterson (June 17, 1922 – April 27, 1998) was a playwright, actor, screenwriter, and professor. He was an American playwright and the first African-American playwright to have a dramatic play produced on Broadway. He was also one of the first African-American writers to be nominated for an Emmy Award.

Contents

Biography

Louis Stamford Peterson was born in Hartford, Connecticut on June 17, 1922. His father was Louis Peterson, Sr., and his mother was Ruth Conover Peterson, who both worked in the banking business. Peterson first planned to get a degree in music. In 1944 he graduated from Morehouse College earning a B.A. in English. In college he became involved in the Little Theatre and performed onstage. He attended Yale University (1944 to 1945), and then earned an M.A. in drama from New York University in 1947. In New York Peterson performed in Off-Broadway plays, and studied acting with noted teacher, Sanford Meisner, at the Neighborhood Playhouse, and he also studied at the Actors Studio. He studied playwriting, and worked closely with Clifford Odets. His first play, Take a Giant Step, was written while he was touring as an actor and stage manager in Carson McCullers’ play, The Member of the Wedding. On July 21, 1952 he married Peggy Feury. The marriage ended after nine years in 1961.

Take a Giant Step

It was a significant step in Peterson's career when his first full-length play, Take a Giant Step, opened on Broadway in 1953. The play was welcomed with critical acclaim. The story focuses on the challenges of a black youth growing up in a white neighborhood. It starred Louis Gossett, Jr., who was a high school student at the time. It ran for eight weeks at the Lyceum Theater. In 1954, it was revived off-Broadway for 246 performances.

An article in the May 1991 issue of the magazine, Jump Cut, considers in detail Peterson’s play and screenplay, Take a Giant Step. The journal describes what Peterson’s work means culturally, how it broke down barriers, and surmounted obstacles. The article also describes those who were involved in making it a success and a pioneering work.

In the film of Take a Giant Step, the part of Spencer Scott was played by Johnny Nash, a popular rock-and-roll performer. Spencer Scott’s father was played by Frederick O’Neal, who co-founded the American Negro Theatre. O’Neal also played the part on Broadway.

The story is about a black teen, Spencer, living in white community. His white teacher claims that black slaves were “too lazy” to fight for their freedom. Spencer refutes this, and he is then expelled from school. When hIs father upholds the teacher’s right, the teenage is thus thrust into a painful and difficult position.

Plays, screenplays, and teaching

Peterson went on to write scripts for TV and film. He wrote an episode of the TV series Danger, entitled ”Padlocks” that starred James Dean; it aired on November 2, 1954. In 1956, he wrote Joey, which starred Anthony Perkins and Kim Stanley. He received an Emmy Award nomination for the "Joey" episode of the Goodyear Playhouse in 1957.

In addition, Peterson wrote film screenplays, and was the first African-American screenwriter in Hollywood. In the 1960s, Peterson left Hollywood. In 1962, Peterson’s play Entertain a Ghost opened off-Broadway at the Actors Playhouse. This was a semi-autobiographical play that dealt with issues of interracial relationships, focussing on a character who is a playwright and his wife, an actress. In 1972, he began teaching in the theatre arts department at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. While teaching, he wrote a screenplay The Confessions of Nat Turner, and a play Crazy Horse, which was produced at the Henry Street Settlement's New Federal Theatre (1979).

Peterson received the Benjamin Brawley Award for Excellence in English at Morehouse College (1944). Take a Giant Step was named one of the best plays of 1953–54 by the Burns Mantle Yearbook. He was nominated for an Emmy for his script, Joey (1956). He was inducted into the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame in 1975. Peterson retired from teaching at Stony Brook in 1993, but continued writing. He died due to lung cancer in New York City on April 27, 1998.

References

Louis S. Peterson Wikipedia