|
William Mastrosimone (born August 19, 1947) is an American playwright and screenwriter from Trenton, New Jersey. He attended high school at The Pennington School and received a graduate degree in playwrighting from Mason Gross School of the Arts, a part of Rutgers University. His plays include ''The Woolgatherer'', ''Extremities'', ''Shivaree'', and ''Cat's Paw''. He also wrote ''Bang Bang You're Dead,'' which was once able to be downloaded from the Internet and performed by students for free. Other plays include ''The Afghan Women'' and ''Nanawatai'', upon which the film ''The Beast'' is based. Two recent plays are ''Sleepwalk'', a story again focusing on the traumas of modern teenage life, and "Dirty Business", a play about a party girl caught between the mafia and the newly elected President of the United States. Mastrosimone's first play was ''The Woolgatherer'' which premiered at Rutgers Theatre Company in New Jersey of 1979.〔http://www.theatrealliance.org/news/2008/0508a.html 〕 His screenwriting credits include, ''With Honors'', ''Into the West'' and the adaptation of his play ''Extremities''. He won 2 Daytime Emmy Awards for ''Bang, Bang You're Dead'' and was nominated for a Prime Time Emmy for ''Into the West'' and ''The Burning Season''. His play "Bang Bang You're Dead" is being toured by 'The Premiere American Touring Company' with students from Actor's Playground School of Theatre (in NJ), directed by Ralph Colombino, based in the Tri-State Area. This company goes to middle schools, high schools, and universities to prevent violence. ==References== 〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「William Mastrosimone」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|