Girish Mahajan (Editor)

The Destiny of Me

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Written by
  
Larry Kramer

Original language
  
English

Playwright
  
Larry Kramer

Composer
  
Peter Kater

4.2/5
Goodreads

Date premiered
  
October 11, 1992

First performance
  
11 October 1992

Genre
  
Drama

The Destiny of Me t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQfHCCKtWWkQypMs

Place premiered
  
Lucille Lortel Theatre New York City

Subject
  
A young man undergoing an experimental treatment for AIDS looks back at his past

Setting
  
National Institutes of Health

Nominations
  
Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Lambda Literary Award for Drama

Similar
  
The Normal Heart, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Hello Again, A Perfect Ganesh, As Is

The destiny of me


The Destiny of Me is a play by Larry Kramer. The play follows Ned Weeks, a character from Kramer's play The Normal Heart. The play premiered Off-Broadway in 1992, and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.

Contents

The destiny of me scene


Overview

It focuses on Ned Weeks, a character introduced in The Normal Heart, as he checks into the National Institutes of Health to undergo an experimental treatment for AIDS. Much of his story is told in flashback, as Ned recalls growing up as Alexander in a Jewish household where, as a hardcore theatre aficionado, he imitates Cornelia Otis Skinner and Mary Martin and adorns his bedroom with Broadway posters. He constantly is beaten by his father Richard, a government employee who never fulfilled the promise of his Yale education, for being "different" and a "sissy," while his sympathetic but complacent mother Rena fails to intervene. Meanwhile, both parents dote on his brother Benjamin, who grows up to become a successful attorney with a dazzling career.

Productions

The play premiered Off-Broadway, produced by the Circle Repertory Company, at the Lucille Lortel Theatre on October 11, 1992 and closed on March 21, 1993 after 198 performances. Directed by Marshall W. Mason, the cast included John Cameron Mitchell as Alexander, Jonathan Hadary as Ned, David Spielberg as Richard, Piper Laurie as Rena, and Peter Frechette as Benjamin.

Larry Kramer was nominated for the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Kramer won the Obie Award and the 1993 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Play, and John Cameron Mitchell won the Obie Award, Performance.

Critical response

Frank Rich of the New York Times observed, "No one can accuse Mr. Kramer of being a boy who cried wolf. History may judge this impossible, reflexively contentious man a patriot. But what makes The Destiny of Me so fascinating, and at times overwhelmingly powerful, is not so much its expected single-mindedness about AIDS as its unexpectedly relentless pursuit of the crusader at center stage. Mr. Kramer cannot solve the medical mystery of the virus or the psychological mystery of the world's tardy response to the peril. What he can try to crack is his own mystery: Why was he of all people destined to scream bloody murder with the aim of altering the destiny of the human race? The writing in The Destiny of Me can fall short of Mr. Kramer's ambitions, but it is never less than scaldingly honest." He continued, "Not by happenstance is The Destiny of Me a juicy, three-act memory play in the mode of that Arthur Miller-Tennessee Williams era, with occasional flashes of humor reminiscent of latter-day variations on the form by Neil Simon and Herb Gardner . . . Given the conventionality of Mr. Kramer's dramatic format, one sometimes wishes the dialogue fleshing it out were finer. He has a good ear, but it is the ear of a journalist, not a poet."

Film

Because of the success of The Normal Heart film in 2014, Larry Kramer has begun writing the film adaptation of The Destiny of Me for HBO, which will portray Ned Weeks from the time of The Normal Heart to present day. Ryan Murphy who also directed The Normal Heart is set to direct the sequel while Mark Ruffalo, Julia Roberts and Jim Parsons may reprise their roles from The Normal Heart.

References

The Destiny of Me Wikipedia