作者Escude (我有迷魂招不得)
看板Theatre
標題Gay playwright wins Pulitzer for drama
時間Wed Apr 7 15:17:02 2004
Gay playwright wins Pulitzer for drama
Tue Apr 6, 9:06 PM ET Add Community - Planet Out to My Yahoo!
Christopher Lisotta, Gay.com / PlanetOut.com Network
SUMMARY: Playwright Doug Wright has won the Pulitzer Prize in drama for
"I Am My Own Wife," about a real-life transgender East German who survived
the Nazi regime and the communist era.
Playwright Doug Wright has won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize in drama for his
one-person show "I Am My Own Wife," about a real-life transgender East German
who survived both the Nazi regime and the repressive Communist era.
"I'm weak with exhaustion, but it's happy exhaustion, like the feeling you
get after a nice, long hot bath," Wright told Gay.com/PlanetOut.com Network
about his reaction to Monday's Pulitzer announcement.
Wright, 41, worked on the play for more than a decade. In the early 1990s
Wright traveled to Berlin, where he was introduced to Charlotte von Mahlsdorf,
who by then was in her early sixties. Born Lothar Berfelde, von Mahlsdorf
lived as a woman, and became known for her museum-quality collection of
antique furniture. The meeting led to Wright interviewing von Mahlsdorf for
hundreds of hours over the course of several years. She died in 2002 at the
age of 74.
"I would go so far as to say that Charlotte grew up in a regime where
discrimination was enshrined in law," he explained. Wright said he thought
President Bush's stand on the Federal Marriage Amendment and the push to
change the U.S. Constitution showed that the issue of limiting rights was
still alive and well. "It makes the play particularly cautionary," he added.
The play was workshopped in San Diego in 2002, and later shown in Chicago
and New York before coming to Broadway's Lyceum Theater in December 2003.
The current production stars Jefferson Mays, who plays more than 30 characters,
and is directed by Moises Kaufman ("The Laramie Project").
"I Am My Own Wife" also explores whether von Mahlsdorf was an East German
spy, and the nature of personal narratives and lies people tell themselves
and others. The New York Times called the play "the most stirring new work
to appear on Broadway this fall" in a Dec. 4 review.
"Charlotte paid a very provocative and controversial price, but I do think
she maintained her singularity in the most repressive regime the West has
ever produced, and that's an achievement in and of itself," Wright said.
But Wright stressed that von Mahlsdorf's unique story and her sexual identity
didn't make the play an overly difficult sell. He also noted he didn't want
to make von Mahlsdorf a saint.
"I think that's what makes the piece more accessible," he explained. "I'm
neither lionizing nor demonizing Charlotte. I hope that we've moved beyond
the nature of gay theater. We are increasingly visible. Her sexuality was a
critical aspect of her nature but it was not all-defining."
In the meantime Wright is in the process of directing a staged reading while
dealing with the increased press attention of being the newest Pulitzer Prize
recipient.
"I keep calling my boyfriend every hour and saying, 'It's three o'clock and
I'm still a Pulitzer Prize winner,'" he admitted. "It's thrilling, and as a
writer it's great to be acknowledged for an unapologetically gay work. That's
really gratifying."
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/po/20040407/co_po/gayplaywrightwinspulitzerfordrama
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