Nationality American Role Author Name Ronald Ribman | Genre plays Citizenship United States Spouse Alice Rosen (m. 1967) | |
Born May 28, 1932 (age 91)
New York City ( 1932-05-28 ) Occupation poet, playwright, author Period 20th and 21st centuries Notable works The Poison Tree, Cold Storage, The Journey of the Fifth Horse Books The Ceremony of Innocence, Cold storage, Journey of the Fifth Horse, The, Five Plays Plays The Journey of the Fifth Horse, The Poison Tree, Passing Through From Exotic Places Movies The Angel Levine, Seize the Day Children Elana Ribman, James Ribman Similar People Bill Gunn, Jan Kadar, Fielder Cook, Bernard Malamud, Saul Bellow |
Ronald Burt Ribman (born May 28, 1932) is an American author, poet and playwright.
Contents
- Biography
- Literature
- Plays
- Screenplays and television
- Publications
- Awards and fellowships
- Critical commentary and analysis
- References
Biography
Ribman was born in Sydenham Hospital in New York City to Samuel M. Ribman, a lawyer, and Rosa (Lerner) Ribman. He attended public school in Brooklyn, and graduated P.S. 188 in 1944. Ribman attended Mark Twain Jr. High School, graduating in 1947, and Abraham Lincoln H.S., graduating in 1950. Ribman is a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, receiving his bachelor's degree in 1954, his master's degree in 1958, and his Ph.D. in 1962. In August 1967, he married Alice Rosen, a registered nurse. The Ribmans have two children, James and Elana.
Ribman served in the United States Army from 1954 to 1956. Following his military service, Ribman worked as a coal broker for the J.E. Ribman Coal Co of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, from 1956 to 1957. Ribman was an assistant professor of English Literature at Otterbein College from 1962 to 1963, and left academia to focus on his plays in 1964 to the present.
Literature
Ribman's poetry first appeared in literary magazines as The Beloit Poetry Journal and The Colorado Quarterly. Ribman's first commercial publication was an article, co-authored with his father, in the April 1964 issue of Harper's Magazine, titled "The Poor Man in the Scales," a study of the problems faced by indigent defendants in the federal courts. Ribman's most famous early play, "The Journey of the Fifth Horse" based on Ivan Turgenev's short story "The Diary of a Superfluous Man," won an Obie Award and starred a young Dustin Hoffman in the role of Zoditch.
NOVEL
• Infinite Absence, April 2016Plays
Screenplays and television
Publications
Awards and fellowships
In 1975, Ribman was honored by the Rockefeller Foundation with a Playwright-In-Residence fellowship for sustained contribution to American Theater.
Critical commentary and analysis
After the American Repertory Theater's world premier of Ribman's "Sweet Table at the Richelieu," Jonathan Marks identified a central theme in Ribman's work as having "a preoccupation with the persistence of the past in the present—a recognition that we all carry with us a heavy baggage of seeds, each of which began sprouting at a different time in the past, and never stopped shooting out tendrils: a bag of memories which can never be simply dumped."