John Buffalo Mailer

John Buffalo Mailer
Born April 16, 1978 (1978-04-16) (age 33)
Brooklyn, New York, New York, U.S.
Occupation author, playwright, actor, journalist

John Buffalo Mailer (born April 16, 1978) is an American author, playwright, actor, producer, and journalist.

Contents

Life and career

Mailer was born in Brooklyn, the youngest child of novelist Norman Mailer and author Norris Church Mailer.[1] Mailer is a graduate of Wesleyan University. He has written several screenplays and is a freelance journalist. In 2006 he co-wrote The Big Empty (Nation Books, February ‘06) with his father.[2]

Mailer founded Back House Productions in New York City with three other Wesleyan grads in October of 2000.[3] The following year, Back House became the resident theater company of The Drama Bookshop’s Arthur Seelan Theater, and developed, among many plays, the 2008 Tony winner for Best Musical, In The Heights. On being involved in theatre, John says: "I think theater will always be a powerful force because we need that human touch, particularly as we spend more and more time with machines, cell phones, computers we start to lose our humanity."[4] In 2001, John’s first play, Hello Herman, had its New York Premiere at the Grove Street Playhouse and nine years later, its West Coast Premiere at the Edgemar Center for the Arts in Los Angeles with John in the lead role. The result was Dramatists Play Services publishing the play in the Spring of 2010. John’s second play, Crazy Eyes, premiered in Athens, Greece in 2005.

John portrays the character Robby Mancins, an Options trader and the best friend of Shia Labeouf’s character Jake Moore, in Oliver Stone’s Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps. He is a member of The Dramatists’ Guild, Actor’s Equity Association, SAG and The Actors Studio, has lectured at the University of Notre Dame, Wesleyan, the University of Athens, Syracuse University, The New York Society for Ethical Culture, The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, Long Island University, and has appeared on Hannity and Combs, Air America, Democracy Now, WNYC, CSPAN’s Book TV, and thebigthink.com. He has freelanced for Playboy, New York Magazine, Provincetown Arts, Lid, Stop Smiling, Corriera De La Sera, The Norman Mailer Review, ESPN Books and The American Conservative.

Mailer was selected as one of People Magazine's sexiest men alive in 2002.[5] He lives in Brooklyn.

Plays

As Actor

As Producer

As Writer

References

External links