Robert Whitehead (theatre producer)

Robert Whitehead (born Montreal, Quebec 3 March 1916; died Pound Ridge, New York 15 June 2002) was a theatre producer.

His first production was Medea, starring Judith Anderson and John Gielgud, and he won the Outer Critics Circle Award five times.[1] He was nominated for 19 Tony and Drama Desk Awards, winning 4 Tony Awards and 5 Drama Desk Awards.[2][3][4]

His father owned textile mills, and his mother, Selena Mary LaBatt Whitehead, was an opera singer. (The actor Hume Cronyn was Whitehead's cousin on the LaBatt side.)

He went to Trinity College School in Montreal, then worked as a commercial photographer before studying acting at the New York School of the Theatre.

He spent the Second World War years as an ambulance driver in North Africa and Italy.

Whitehead had a long term association with fellow producer Roger L. Stevens. In 1964 the Lincoln Center Repertory Theatre opened with Robert Whitehead and Elia Kazan as its heads and Harold Clurman as literary adviser.

In 1968 Whitehead married Zoe Caldwell, who starred in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. (His first wife Virginia, an antique dealer whom he married in 1948, died in 1965.) The couple bought property in Pound Ridge, a mountain area in New York State, and built a house there. Caldwell, who won a Tony as Brodie, later appeared for Whitehead in a revival of Medea (with Judith Anderson as the nurse), Lillian, a one-woman show about Lillian Hellman, and Terrence McNally's Master Class, in which she played Maria Callas.

Honours

2002 Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement.[3] The Commercial Theater Institute gives an annual award for "Outstanding Achievement in Commercial Theater Producing" which is named for Robert Whitehead.[5]

Broadway Productions

Reference: [2]

Awards and Nominations

  • 1996 Tony Award® Best Play -Master Class - winner
  • 1996 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Play -Master Class - winner
  • 1994 Tony Award® Best Play -Broken Glass - nominee
  • 1984 Tony Award® Best Reproduction -Death of a Salesman - winner
  • 1984 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival -Death of a Salesman - winner
  • 1979 Tony Award® Best Play -Bedroom Farce - nominee
  • 1977 Drama Desk Award Outstanding New Play (American) -A Texas Trilogy: Lu Ann Hampton Laverty Oberlander - winner
  • 1977 Drama Desk Award Outstanding New Play (American) -A Texas Trilogy: The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia - winner
  • 1977 Drama Desk Award Outstanding New Play (American) -A Texas Trilogy: The Oldest Living Graduate - winner
  • 1977 Drama Desk Award Outstanding New Play (Foreign) -No Man's Land - nominee
  • 1968 Tony Award® Best Play -The Price - nominee
  • 1965 Tony Award® Best Producer of a Play -Tartuffe - nominee
  • 1962 Tony Award® Best Play -A Man for All Seasons - winner
  • 1962 Tony Award® Best Producer of a Play -A Man for All Seasons - winner
  • 1959 Tony Award® Best Play -A Touch of the Poet - nominee
  • 1959 Tony Award® Best Play -The Visit - nominee
  • 1957 Tony Award® Best Play -The Waltz of the Toreadors - nominee
  • 1957 Tony Award® Best Play -Separate Tables - nominee
  • 1956 Tony Award® Best Play -Bus Stop - nominee

Reference: [2]

Notes

External Links