Permanent linkThursday, October 18, 2012 at 7:30 p.m. in Mathers Theatre
The Insubstantial Pageant: Writing for Performance
Margaret
Edson will discuss her perspective that we are born ready to talk and
listen, but it takes years to learn to read and write. What is gained
and lost when the redolent swirl of human experience is consigned to the
abstract, linear, preterite alphabetic code? And what ironies await
when the freeze-dried code is reconstituted as live performance?
Margaret
Edson was born in Washington, DC in 1961. Between earning degrees in
history and literature, she worked on the cancer and AIDS inpatient unit
of a major research hospital. Wit was written in 1991, widely
rejected, first produced in 1995, and awarded the Pulitzer Prize for
Drama in 1999. The HBO production won the Emmy Award for Best Film in
2001. Wit has received hundreds of productions in dozens of languages
and was presented on Broadway in 2012. The script is used in classes
ranging from AP English to medical ethics. Ms. Edson has been a
classroom teacher for twenty years. She currently teaches sixth-grade
social studies. She lives in Atlanta with her partner, art historian
Linda Merrill, and their two sons.
This event is sponsored by the Clarke Forum for Contemporary Issues and
co-sponsored by the Norman M. Eberly Writing Center and the Departments
of English, American Studies and Theatre & Dance.
Permanent linkTony Award-winning playwright David Henry Hwang will visit Dickinson September 12 as the recipient of The Harold and Ethel L. Stellfox Visiting Scholars and Writers Program award. Hwang will present a lecture, followed by a book signing, on Wednesday, Sept. 12 at 7:30 p.m. in the Anita Tuvin Schlecter (ATS) Auditorium, West Louther Street between College and Cherry streets. He will receive the award that evening. For further information, check out the news release on
David Henry Hwang.