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・ David Erler
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・ David Erskine (dramatist)
・ David Erskine (rugby player)
・ David Erskine Baker
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・ David Erskine, 2nd Baron Erskine
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David Esbjornson
・ David Escalante
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・ David Essig
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・ David Estrada (soccer)


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David Esbjornson : ウィキペディア英語版
David Esbjornson

David Esbjornson is a director and producer who has worked throughout the United States in regional theatres and on Broadway, and has established strong and productive relationships with some of the profession’s top playwrights, actors, and companies. Esbjornson was the artistic director of Seattle Repertory Theatre in Seattle, Washington,〔
〕 but left that position in summer 2008.〔Misha Berson, (Repertory Theatre finishes season with balanced budget ), ''Seattle Times'', July 23, 2009. Accessed online 2009-11-06.〕
For seven years (1992–1999) he was artistic director of New York’s Classic Stage Company, and since leaving that post he has become one of country’s most sought after freelance directors. With a list of production credits steeped in the classics from those years at CSC and as a guest director in such leading regional theatres as the Guthrie Theater, Esbjornson has also established himself as an interpreter of choice for playwrights such as Tony Kushner, Edward Albee, and Arthur Miller.
He holds an MFA from New York University, and a BA in Theatre and English from Gustavus Adolphus College in Minnesota.
==Credits==
Esbjornson has staged Shakespeare’s ''Much Ado About Nothing'' (starring Jimmy Smits, Kirsten Johnson, and Sam Waterston) in Central Park and Larry Kramer’s ''The Normal Heart'', both at New York’s Joseph Papp Public Theater. Other recent credits include the world premieres of Edward Albee’s Tony Award-winning play ''The Goat, or Who is Sylvia?'' on Broadway, Neil Simon’s ''Rose and Walsh'' at the Geffen Theatre in Los Angeles, Arthur Miller’s ''Resurrection Blues'' at the Guthrie, and Mitch Albom and Jeffrey Hatcher’s ''Tuesdays With Morrie'' at the Minetta Lane in New York. Among his New York premieres are Edward Albee’s ''The Play About the Baby'', Israel Horovitz's ''My Old Lady'', and the Tony-nominated ''The Ride Down Mt. Morgan'', by Arthur Miller at the Public Theater and on Broadway (FANY Award for outstanding direction).
Among the world premieres to Esbjornson’s credit are the first production of Tony Kushner’s ''Angels in America: Millennium Approaches'', and the first staged presentation of ''Perestroika'', both at the Eureka Theatre in San Francisco, which received seven Bay Area Theatre Critics’ Awards, including best direction and best production.
Other world premieres include Suzan-Lori Parks’ ''In the Blood'' for the Public Theater, and Part 1 of Tony Kushner’s ''Homebody/Kabul'' for the Chelsea Center in London. Recent productions directed by Esbjornson include the Maria Irene Fornes plays ''Mud'' and ''Drowning'' for the Signature Theatre; ''Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'', ''Hedda Gabler'', ''Summer and Smoke'' and ''The Great Gatsby'' for the Guthrie Theater; and the musical ''Eliot Ness'' in Cleveland for the Cleveland Play House. Additional credits include the American premiere of Patrick Marber’s ''Dealer’s Choice'' at the Long Wharf Theatre (five Connecticut Critics Circle Awards, including best direction and best production); Jose Rivera’s ''The Street of the Sun'' for the Mark Taper Forum; ''Farmyard'' at New York Theatre Workshop (New Directors Award); Kevin Kling’s ''Home and Away'' at Second Stage (Outer Critics Circle nomination); and the world premieres of Larry Kramer’s ''Just Say No'' at the WPA Theatre and Reynolds Price’s trilogy ''New Music'' for the Cleveland Play House.
Esbjornson has served as a resident director at the O’Neill Playwrights Conference, New Harmony Project, and the Iowa Playwrights Festival. He received a 1989 NEA-TCG Directing Fellowship, and is on the Board of ART/NY.
Esbjornson is the chair of the (Mason Gross School of the Arts ) Theater Department. He succeeds Israel Hicks, who died in 2010.

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