Michael Kahn (theatre director)

This article is about Michael Kahn the theatre director. For Michael Kahn the film editor, see Michael Kahn (film editor).
Michael Kahn
Born 1937
Brooklyn, New York, United States
Occupation Director, Artistic Director, Teacher
Years active ~1950 – present

Michael Kahn is an American theatre director and drama educator. He has, since 1986, been the Artistic Director of the Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington, D.C.. He held the position of Richard Rodgers Director of the Drama Division of the Juilliard School from 1992 to 2006.[1][2]

After beginning his career Off-Off-Broadway in 1964, directing experimental theatre and other works, including Shakespeare, Kahn had both notable failures and successes with Broadway projects, winning acclaim especially for productions of The Royal Family (1975–76) and Show Boat (1983). He joined the Juilliard School's faculty in 1968, becoming the head of its drama school. During his long tenure as artistic director of the Shakespeare Theatre Company, Kahn has overseen its growth, including initiating its Free For All productions. He has also acted as artistic director for several other companies, continued to direct regional theatre and opera, and received various awards and honors.

Early life and career

Kahn was born in Brooklyn, New York. He attended the High School for the Performing Arts[3] and received a Bachelor of Arts from the Columbia College of Columbia University.[4]

Kahn's career began Off-Off-Broadway by directing Jean-Claude van Itallie's War Sex and Dreams and America Hurrah at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in 1964–65.[5] He directed the Wallace Grey play Helen which ran Off-Broadway at the Bouwerie Lane Theatre in December 1964[6] and the Thornton Wilder one-act plays The Long Christmas Dinner/Queens of France/The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden in September to November 1966 at the Off-Broadway Cherry Lane Theatre.[7] He won critical praise for his direction of the New York Shakespeare Festival production of Measure for Measure in 1966 at the Delacorte Theatre.[8] He next directed The Rimers of Eldritch at the Off-Broadway Cherry Lane Theatre in February and March 1967.[9] After this, he directed his first project for Broadway, The Freaking Out of Stephanie Blake (1967), a troubled production that never opened.[10] His second Broadway play, Here's Where I Belong, closed after one performance, in March 1968.[11] Additional Broadway credits include several Shakespeare plays and revivals of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1974–75), The Royal Family (1975–76), Whodunnit (1982–83), and Show Boat (1983), among others. He was nominated for the Tony Award, Best Direction of a Musical, for Show Boat and won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival as producing director of The Royal Family.[12]

Kahn has also directed opera and regional theatre.[13] He was the Artistic Director for both the American Shakespeare Theatre (in 1969) and The Acting Company (1978–1988),[14] Producing Director for the McCarter Theatre (1974),[1] and founder and head of The Chautauqua Theater Company in 1983.[15] He twice won Tony Awards for regional theatre, in 1986 as artistic director of American Shakespeare Festival and in 2012 as artistic director of the Shakespeare Theatre Company.[12]

Juilliard School

Kahn joined the Juilliard School faculty in 1968 and became the Richard Rodgers Director of Juilliard Drama, head of the school, in 1992. He resigned as the head of the school in 2005 and continued as Teacher of Acting.[16]

Shakespeare Theatre Company

In 1986, Kahn became Artistic Director of what was then known as The Folger Theatre Group or The Folger Theatre,[17][18] now the Shakespeare Theatre Company.[1] During his time with the company, Kahn has supervised its move from the Folger Shakespeare Library to the Lansburgh Theatre, and the creation of the Shakespeare Theatre Company Free For All at Rock Creek Park's Carter Barron Amphitheatre. Kahn joined forces with George Washington University in 2000 to create the Academy of Classical Acting. This Masters of Fine Arts degree is a comprehensive one year program that trains actors for the classical theatre, with an emphasis on Shakespeare.[19] Kahn oversaw the Company’s name change and construction of Sidney Harman Hall, part of the new Harman Center for the Arts, which expands artistic opportunities for the Shakespeare Theatre Company and other arts groups.[20]

Shakespeare Theatre Company Directing Credits:

Henry IV, Part 1 and Henry IV, Part 2 in repertory,[21] Wallenstein, The Government Inspector, Strange Interlude, The Heir Apparent (world premiere), Old Times, All’s Well That Ends Well, The Liar, Richard II, The Alchemist, Design for Living, The Way of the World, Antony and Cleopatra, Tamburlaine, Hamlet, Richard III, The Beaux' Stratagem, Love's Labour's Lost, Othello, Lorenzaccio (world premiere), Macbeth, Cyrano, Five by Tenn, The Winter’s Tale, The Silent Woman, The Oedipus Plays, The Duchess of Malfi, Timon of Athens, Don Carlos, Hedda Gabler, King Lear, Coriolanus, Camino Real, A Woman of No Importance, King John, The Merchant of Venice, Peer Gynt, Sweet Bird of Youth, combined Henry VI, Parts 1, 2 & 3, Mourning Becomes Electra, Henry V, Volpone, combined Henry IV, Parts 1 & 2, Richard II, The Doctor's Dilemma, Hamlet, Mother Courage and Her Children, Much Ado About Nothing, Measure for Measure, Richard III, Twelfth Night, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Antony and Cleopatra, As You Like It, All's Well That Ends Well, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet

Other work

Regional theatre

In 1968, Michael Kahn directed the inaugural production of Camino Real by Tennessee Williams at the Robert S. Marx Theatre at Cincinnati Playhouse.[22] In 1973, Kahn directed Old Times by Harold Pinter at The Goodman Theatre.

Kahn directed Tis Pity She's A Whore at American Repertory Theater in 1988 and The Duchess of Malfi at The Guthrie Theater in 1989. In 1997 Kahn directed A Touch Of The Poet at Arena Stage, Washington, D.C.[23] Kahn directed Torch Song Trilogy at the Studio Theatre in Washington, D.C., which ran in September and October 2013.[24][25] He also directed the world premiere of Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill at the Signature Theatre in Arlington, Virginia, starring Christine Lahti, which opened in October 2013.[26]

Opera

Kahn directed Bizet's Carmen for the Washington Opera, produced at the Kennedy Center, in 1982.[27] He directed the Samuel Barber opera Vanessa in 1995, which was presented at the Kennedy Center.[28] He directed the Mark Adamo opera Lysistrata, or the Nude Goddess for the Houston Grand Opera in 2005.[29] For the Dallas Opera he directed Romeo and Juliet by Charles Gounod in 2011.[30]

Honors and awards

American Theater Hall of Fame

For his long history and influence in American Theatre, including his early work in the avant-garde theatre scene in New York, leadership of the Chataqua Theatre and McCarter Theatre, his tenure as teacher and head of the drama division at Juilliard, and 25 years directing the Shakespeare Theatre Company, Kahn was nominated to the American Theater Hall of Fame. He was inducted on January 28, 2013.[31][32][33]

Order of the British Empire

In recognition of his many successes in presenting Shakespeare in America, Michael Kahn was honored by Queen Elizabeth II as a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire. The Award was presented by British Ambassador Peter Westmacott at a ceremony at the Ambassador's Residence on April 23, 2013. (Shakespeare's birthday).[34][35]

Awards

In addition to the Tony, Drama Desk and other awards noted above, Kahn has also received multiple Vernon Rice Award nominations, a MacArthur Award, two New Jersey Critic's Awards, the Daily News Critic's Citation, and multiple Helen Hayes Award nominations and wins.[50] He was nominated as Director, Musical, for a 1974 Joseph Jefferson Award for The Tooth of Crime.[51]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Greenya, John. Michael Kahn Builds Harman Center for the Arts, washingtonflyer.com, September/October 2007
  2. Bio, Juilliard, juilliard.edu, accessed June 4, 2009
  3. Notable Alumni" alumniandfriends.org, accessed August 22, 2013
  4. Charney, Mark (2002). "The Bard as Great Box Office: Michael Kahn and the Shakespeare Theatre". The Upstart Crow: A Shakespare Journal 22: 37–40.
  5. " 'America Hurrah'", vanitallie.com, accessed August 22, 2013
  6. " 'Helen' Listing" lortel.org, accessed November 20, 2013
  7. "Wilder Plays Listing" lortel.org, accessed November 20, 2013
  8. Kauffmann, Stanley. "The Theater: 'Measure for Measure': Shakespeare's Play Is Staged in the Park", The New York Times, July 14, 1966, p. 27
  9. " 'The Rimers of Eldritch' Listing", Internet Off-Broadway Database, accessed August 22, 2013
  10. Goldman, William. The Season, Hal Leonard Corp., 1969, ISBN 0879100230, pp. 174–182
  11. Mandelbaum, Ken. "Here's Where I Belong", Not Since Carrie: Forty Years of Broadway Musical Flops, Macmillan, 1992, ISBN 1466843276, pp. 160–161
  12. 12.0 12.1 "Michael Kahn", Internet Broadway Database, accessed November 17, 2013
  13. "Kahn Biography" filmreference.com, accessed November 18, 2013
  14. "Leadership", theactingcompany.org, accessed June 5, 2013
  15. "About Us, Chautauqua Theater Company" theater.ciweb.org, accessed June 5, 2013
  16. "Michael Kahn steps down as Head of Drama Division". http://talk.collegeconfidential.com. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  17. About Folger Theatre 1970–1991, Folger Theatre Group
  18. "Artistic Director Michael Kahn of the Shakespeare Theatre Company". guidefortheaarts.com. Retrieved 5 June 2013.
  19. MFA Program shakespearetheatre.org
  20. Graham, Trey. "MICHAEL KAHN,A Life in the Theater," passportmagazine.com, June, 2007
  21. Plays shakespearetheatre.org, accessed August 22, 2013
  22. Lefkowitz, David. "Last Chance: Travanti Brings His Touch To DC's Poet" playbill.com, November 7, 1997
  23. 2013-2014 Season studiotheatre.org, accessed August 22, 2013
  24. Graham, Trey. " 'Torch Song Trilogy", By Harvey Fierstein" washingtoncitypaper.com, September 13, 2013
  25. Gans, Andrew. "Christine Lahti Stars in 'Pride in the Falls of Autrey Mill', Beginning Oct. 15 at the Signature", playbill.com, October 15, 2013
  26. Libbey, Theodore, Jr. "Opera: 'Carmen' Opens Capital Season" The New York Times, November 2, 1982
  27. Ross, Alex. "Opera Review; Barber's 'Vanessa,' Long Neglected, Is Revived" The New York Times (webcache.googleusercontent.com), January 16, 1995
  28. Holland, Bernard. With Chastity as a Sword, Women Take Up Arms" The New York Times, March 7, 2005
  29. Sonna, Mark-Brian. "Opera Review" The Column, February 16, 2011
  30. Treanor, Tim. "You are here: Home / News / Michael Kahn named to Theater Hall of Fame Michael Kahn named to Theater Hall of Fame". DC Theatre Scene. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  31. "Events - The 2012 Gala Induction and Dinner". Theater Hall of Fame. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
  32. "2012 Inductees honored January 28, 2013 at the Gershwin Theatre". The Theater Hall of Fame. Retrieved 5 June 2013.
  33. The Reliable Source Washington Post, April 24, 2013
  34. 35.0 35.1 Michael Kahn Inducted as Honorary Commander of the British Empire, dcmetrotheaterarts.com
  35. youtube.com
  36. "Award" wapava.org
  37. "Kahn Award" mpt.org
  38. nationaltheatreconference.org
  39. "Our Programs" shakespearesociety.org
  40. "Shakespeare Award for Classical Theatre" playbill.com
  41. 42.0 42.1 press release
  42. "Featyre", metroweekly.com
  43. "News Release" newsroom.dc.gov
  44. "Awards", omti.org
  45. "Washingtonians of the Year", washingtonian.com
  46. "Washington Post Award", books.google.com
  47. "Drama Dean Earns Big Award" yaledailynews.com
  48. "Michael Kahn of the Shakespeare Theatre Company" guideforthearts.com
  49. "Hayes Awards nominations and awards", helenhayes.org, accessed June 4, 2009
  50. "Search, 1974" jeffawards.org, accessed November 20, 2013

External links