Robert Schenkkan

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Robert Schenkkan
Born Robert Frederic Schenkkan, Jr.
(1953-03-19) March 19, 1953 (age 71)
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, US
Occupation Playwright, screenwriter, actor
Alma mater University of Texas
Cornell University
Related to Benjamin McKenzie (nephew)
Information
Debut works G. R. Point (1979)
Heaven on Earth (1989)
Magnum opus The Kentucky Cycle
Awards Pulitzer Prize for Drama (1992)

Robert Frederic Schenkkan, Jr. (born March 19, 1953) is an American playwright, screenwriter, and actor. He received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1992 for his play The Kentucky Cycle and his play All the Way earned the 2014 Tony Award, Best Play. He has two Emmy Nominations and one WGA Award.

Early years

Schenkkan was born in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, to Jean Gregory (née McKenzie) and Robert Frederic Schenkkan, a professor in the Department of Radio-Television-Film at The University of Texas at Austin.[1] and public television executive.[2] He grew up in Austin, Texas. As a Plan II Honors student he received a B.A. in Drama, magna cum laude, from the University of Texas, Austin in 1975 (Phi Beta Kappa, Friars' Society, UT Texas Exes Distinguished Young Alumnus Award and E. William Doty College of Fine Arts Distinguished Alumnus Award), and an M.F.A. in Theatre Arts from Cornell University in 1977.[3] For many years, he lived in New York City and then Los Angeles, California, working both as a writer and an actor in film, television, and theatre. Since 1990 he has focused exclusively on his writing and divides his time between New York City and Seattle.

Career

Schenkkan is the author of ten full-length plays. By the Waters of Babylon premiered at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in February, 2005.[4][5] The play is unrelated to the Stephen Vincent Benét short story By the Waters of Babylon or its subsequent adaptation. In his review of the Seattle premiere, critic Thomas May writes that "Soaring lyrical fantasias provide [Schenkkan's] characters with an escape from their plights of bitter alienation." [6] Lewis and Clark Reach the Euphrates premiered at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles in December 2005. The Marriage of Miss Hollywood and King Neptune premiered at the University of Texas at Austin in November 2005. The Devil and Daniel Webster premiered at the Seattle Children’s Theatre in February 2006.

Handler, a play dealing with a snake handling church, premiered at the Actors Express Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia. Heaven On Earth won the Julie Harris/Beverly Hills Theatre Guild Award, participated in the Eugene O'Neill Playwright's Conference, and premiered Off-Broadway at the WPA Theatre. Final Passages premiered at the Studio Arena theatre. Tachinoki premiered at the Ensemble Studio Theatre in Los Angeles and was designated a Critic's Choice by the LA Weekly. His other play for young audiences, The Dream Thief, had its premier at Milwaukee's First Stage.

Schenkkan has written numerous one-act plays which are collected together and published by Dramatists Play Service as Conversations With the Spanish Lady. Among them is The Survivalist which premiered at Actors Theatre of Louisville's Humana festival, went on to the EST Marathon in NYC, Canada's DuMaurier Festival, and the Edinburgh Festival where it won the "Best of the Fringe" award.

The Kentucky Cycle underwent several years of development, starting in New York City at New Dramatists and the Ensemble Studio Theatre. The two part epic was later workshopped at the Mark Taper Forum, EST-LA, the Long Wharf Theatre, and the Sundance Institute. The complete "cycle" was awarded the largest grant ever given by the Fund for New American Plays and had its world premiere in 1991 at the Intiman Theatre in Seattle (Liz Huddle, producer) where it set box office records. In 1992, it was the centerpiece of the Mark Taper forum's 25th Anniversary Season. It was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, the first time in the history of the award that a play was so honored which had not first been presented in New York City. It also won both the PEN Centre West and the LA Drama Critics Circle Awards for Best Play. In 1993 it appeared at the John F. Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. and opened on Broadway in November of that year where it was nominated for a Tony, Drama Desk, and Outer Critics Circle awards.

His play All the Way, about the behind-the-scenes political maneuvering of President Lyndon Baines Johnson to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964, premiered at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival on July 28, 2012. Schenkkan describes this work as a play about "the morality of politics and power." All the Way won the 2012 ATCA/Steinberg Award for Best Play and the inaugural Edward M. Kennedy Prize for Drama Inspired by History. It opened in Boston at the American Repertory Theater on September 19, 2013 starring Bryan Cranston and sold out its entire run.[7] The play had its Broadway premiere on March 6, 2014 at the Neil Simon Theatre, and was awarded the 2014 Tony Award for Best Play, with Cranston also winning a Tony Award for his performance as Lyndon Baines Johnson. A sequel, titled The Great Society, premiered at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in July 2014 and is scheduled for Broadway in the 2016/2017 season.[8]

Schenkkan's film work includes: The Quiet American, directed by Phillip Noyce and starring Michael Caine (who received an Oscar nomination). For television he wrote four episodes of The Pacific (HBO, 2010) for which he was nominated for two Emmy Awards and won a WGA Award for Best Miniseries writing. Other television work includes The Andromeda Strain (A&E, 2009), Spartacus (USA Network, 2006), and Crazy Horse (TNT). In 2005, he was hired by Sony Pictures to develop a script based on Marvel Comics' Killraven.[9][10] Schenkkan was also named as the writer for the adaptation of the comic book Incognito published by the Marvel imprint Icon Comics.[11] Most recently his feature film Hacksaw Ridge is being shot in the fall of 2015, directed by Mel Gibson. His adaptation of his own play All the Way is currently being shot in LA for HBO starring Bryan Cranston and will air in March/April 2016.

Schenkkan is the recipient of grants from New York State, the California Arts Council, and the Vogelstein and the Arthur foundations. He is a New Dramatists alumnus and a member of the Ensemble Studio Theatre and the National Theatre Conference. He was the 2012 Thornton Wilder Fellow at the MacDowell Colony and a member of the College of Fellows of the American Theater.

As an actor, Schenkkan has appeared in numerous roles, including the 1989 film Out Cold; he also starred in the 1990 cult drama teen film Pump Up the Volume, in which he played David Deaver, the high school guidance counselor. He appeared as Lieutenant Commander Dexter Remmick in the episodes "Coming of Age" and "Conspiracy" of Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Personal life

Schenkkan married Mary Anne Dorward in 1987 and they divorced in 1998. They have two children, Sarah Schenkkan and Joshua Schenkkan. Schenkkan married the writer, Maria Dahvana Headley, in 2004 and they were divorced in 2012. Schenkkan is an uncle of actor Benjamin McKenzie.[12][13]

Filmography

References

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  8. Purcell, Carey. "Robert Schenkkan's The Great Society, Reuniting Original OSF Cast of All The Way, Opens" playbill.com, July 27, 2014
  9. Sci Fi Magazine (Aug. 2005): "Brave New Worlds" (p. 33; side story, "We Are the Worlds")
  10. Rotten Tomatoes: News: "Sony to Bring Old-School Comic 'Killraven' to the Big Screen"
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External links