Willy Holtzman | |
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Born | June 1952 St. Louis, MO |
Occupation | Playwright |
Nationality | United States |
Willy Holtzman (born 1952) is an American playwright and screenwriter, often focusing on theatrical representations of actual historical events. Holtzman has received, two Pulitzer Prize nominations, a Humanitas Prize, a Writers Guild Award, a Peabody Award, as well as an HBO Award at the National Playwrights Conference.
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Willy Holtzman was born and raised as the 2nd of 3 children in St. Louis, Missouri. Holtzman moved to Middletown, CT in 1969 to attend Wesleyan University, where he majored in American Studies. After graduation, he moved to Wilton, CT, where he lives with his wife, Sylvia Shepard. Correct birth date is June 29, 1951
Holtzman's plays have been produced in New York at Primary Stages Theater, Theatre for a New Audience, and the Working Theater. He has been produced regionally at the Long Wharf Theatre, People's Light and Theatre Company, Baltimore Center Stage, the Alliance Theatre, Geva Theatre, the Cleveland Play House, Berkshire Theatre Festival, and Northlight Theatre. In 2007 he helped Bonnie Dickinson and her Wilton High School Theatre Arts students create Voices in Conflict, a play about returning Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans which ran at the Public Theatre, the Vineyard Theatre and the Culture Project. In his 2011 work Morini Strada, a play inspired by a true story that rocked the classical music world, Holtzman dramatizes the concert violinist Erica Morini's hiring of an unassuming violin maker to restore her legendary Stradivarius.[1][2]
He taught as a visiting artist at Bronx Regional High School in the South Bronx, 1987–89, and was Resident Playwright at Juilliard School, 1990-92. He has worked with the 52d Street Project in New York's Hell's Kitchen and on the Navajo Reservation. Holtzman is a former member of New Dramatists and now serves on its Board of Directors. He is also on the board of Harlem Stage Company.
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Film:
TV: