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Marsha Norman

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Nationality
  
United States

Name
  
Marsha Norman

Role
  

Marsha Norman Marsha Norman Biography Marsha Norman39s Famous Quotes

Born
  
September 21, 1947 (age 77) Louisville, Kentucky, USA (
1947-09-21
)

Notable work(s)
  
Magnum opus
  
'night, MotherThe Secret Garden

Awards
  
Books
  
Trudy Blue, Traveler in the dark

Spouse
  
Tim Dykman (m. 1987–1996), Dann C. Byck, Jr. (m. 1978–1986), Michael Norman (m. 1969–1974)

Movies
  
'night, Mother, The Audrey Hepburn Story

Children
  
Angus Dykman, Katherine Dykman

Plays
  
'Night - Mother, The Secret Garden, Getting Out, The Color Purple, The Bridges of Madison

Similar People
  

Marsha norman message


Marsha Norman (born September 21, 1947) is an American playwright, screenwriter, and novelist. She received the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for her play 'night, Mother. She wrote the book and lyrics for such Broadway musicals as The Secret Garden, for which she won a Tony Award and the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Book of a Musical, and The Red Shoes, as well as the libretto for the musical The Color Purple and the book for the musical The Bridges of Madison County. She is co-chair of the playwriting department at The Juilliard School.

Contents

Marsha Norman The Bridges of Madison County39 Heads to Broadway with a

Spotlight marsha norman part 2


Early years

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Norman was born in Louisville, Kentucky, the oldest of four children of Billie and Bertha Williams. As a child, she read and played the piano. She later began attending productions by the newly founded Actor's Theatre of Louisville. She received a bachelor's degree from Agnes Scott College and a master's degree from the University of Louisville. She worked as a journalist for The Louisville Times newspaper, and also wrote for Kentucky Educational Television. She taught young children and adolescents in mental institutions and hospitals. These were perhaps her biggest influence on her writing, especially a 13-year-old girl who influenced her play Getting Out. She also taught English at the J. Graham Brown School and Prestonia Elementary School in Louisville.

Career

Marsha Norman Playwright Spotlight Marsha Norman dramachicks

Norman's first play Getting Out was produced at the Actors Theatre of Louisville and then Off-Broadway in 1979. The play concerns a young woman just paroled after an eight-year prison sentence for robbery, kidnapping and manslaughter. It reflects Norman's experience working with disturbed adolescents at Kentucky's Central State Hospital.

Marsha Norman Marsha Norman photo 5 QuotationOf COM

Norman's success with Getting Out led her to move to New York City where she continued to write for the Actor's Theatre of Louisville. Her full-length play, Circus Valentine was produced at the Humana Festival in 1978. The play concerns a travelling circus and its star attraction, Siamese twins. Her next play, 'night, Mother, would turn out to be her best-known work, given its Broadway success and its star-powered film version. 'night, Mother brought Norman a great deal of recognition. The play, dealing frankly with the subject of suicide, won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Drama as well as the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, the Hull-Warriner, and the Drama Desk Award. However, her follow-up play, Traveller in the Dark received scathing reviews from the New York critics, some of whom were as blunt to say she could not have written it. According to an interview in The New York Times, "Ms. Norman stayed away from the theater and turned to screenplays, including a 1986 movie adaptation of " 'Night, Mother" that starred Sissy Spacek and Anne Bancroft and failed to impress critics. She was in high demand in Hollywood, though not always for films that she liked, or that studios would approve."

Norman wrote the book and lyrics for the musical The Secret Garden, an adaptation of the Frances Hodgson Burnett novel The Secret Garden, and won the Tony Award for Best Book in 1991. Her work in musical theatre continued with the book and lyrics for the musical The Red Shoes, which failed on Broadway in 1993. Her one-act play, Trudy Blue, was produced off-Broadway in 1999. That play revolved around a woman who is mistakenly told that she has two months to live. She also wrote the libretto for the musical version of The Color Purple which opened on Broadway in 2005, receiving a Tony Award nomination for Best Book of a Musical.

Norman and composer Jason Robert Brown made a symphonic adaptation of the children's novel The Trumpet of the Swan, which premiered at the Kennedy Center in 2008. Norman has since written the libretto for the musical adaptation of the film The Bridges of Madison County, with a score by Brown. The musical premiered at the Williamstown Theatre Festival on August 1, 2013 and ran briefly on Broadway from February 20, 2014.

Television and Film

Norman's works for television and film include the film version of night Mother. She has written the television films Face of a Stranger (1991),A Cooler Climate (1999),Custody of the Heart (2000), and The Audrey Hepburn Story (2000). She has written screenplays for episodes of the HBO series In Treatment.

Other

Norman currently serves on the faculty of the Juilliard School in New York City, and is Vice-President of the Dramatists Guild of America. She was honored at the 2011 William Inge Festival for Distinguished Achievement in the American Theatre.

References

Marsha Norman Wikipedia


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