Fotografía de autor
25+ Obras 1,150 Miembros 39 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Ken Ludwig is an internationally acclaimed playwright who has had numerous hits on Broadway, in London, and throughout the world. His plays and musicals include Lend Me a 'Tenor, which won two Tony Awards, and Crazy for You. which won the Tom Award for Best Musical. He has also won two Laurence mostrar más Olivier Awards and the Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America. His work has been commissioned by the Royal Shakespeare Company, and his plays have been performed in over thirty countries in more than twenty languages. mostrar menos

Obras de Ken Ludwig

Obras relacionadas

Twentieth Century (2004) — Adaptor — 12 copias
Moon Over Broadway [1997 film] (2000) — Actor — 2 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1950-03-15
Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
York, Pennsylvania, USA
Educación
Haverford College
Harvard Law School
Biografía breve
KEN LUDWIG is an internationally acclaimed playwright whose many hits on Broadway, in London's West End and throughout the world have made his name synonymous with modern comedy. He has had six shows on Broadway and six in the West End, and he has won the Laurence Olivier Award, England’s highest theatre honor, as well as three Tony Award nominations and two Helen Hayes Awards. His work has been commissioned by the Royal Shakespeare Company and has been performed in thirty countries in over twenty languages. His musical Crazy For You ran for over four years on Broadway and in London. After a hit revival production at The Open Air Theatre in Regent’s Park this summer, it will open on the West End in October. Lend Me A Tenor, originally produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber and recently revived on Broadway with an all-star cast, was called “one of the two great farces by a living writer” by The New York Times. Other plays and musicals include Moon Over Buffalo (Broadway & London’s Old Vic, starring Carol Burnett, Lynn Redgrave, Joan Collins & Frank Langella); Twentieth Century (Broadway, starring Alec Baldwin & Anne Heche); The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (Broadway); Treasure Island (London, Theatre Royal, Haymarket; 2009 AATE Distinguished Play Award for Best Adaptation); Shakespeare in Hollywood (commissioned by The Royal Shakespeare Company, Helen Hayes Award as Best Play); Leading Ladies; Be My Baby (starring Hal Holbrook and Dixie Carter); The Beaux' Stratagem (adaptation with Thornton Wilder at the request of the Wilder Estate); The Three Musketeers (Bristol Old Vic); An American in Paris; Sullivan & Gilbert; The Fox on the Fairway; The Game’s Afoot, Midsummer/Jersey, and The Hound of the Baskervilles. His children’s play ’Twas the Night Before Christmas will premiere this November at The Adventure Theatre. His work has appeared in The Yale Review, and he is writing a book for Crown Publishing entitled How To Teach Your Children Shakespeare. He studied music at Harvard with Leonard Bernstein and theatre history at Cambridge University in England. For more information, please visit www.kenludwig.com.

Miembros

Reseñas

For years I’ve been shaking my head over why my sister and Jim staged their wedding in a post office. She liked the setting, the logic of which seemed inadequate as they were both raised Catholic.

Jack and Louise married in a Federal Post Office in Brooklyn for much sounder reasons: they had a wartime romance via snail mail, implicating the Post Office as Cupid with a mail pouch. I know this was the setting for their union because Arena Stage in DC put on this tribute play of Jack Ludwig’s to his parents a few years back. As part of a promotional effort and, I think, fundraiser I received a series of replica correspondence and telegrams between them over a couple months, ending with their wedding invitation, citing the post office in Brooklyn for their nuptials.

I don’t know half as much about my parent’s courtship as I now know of Jack and Lou’s, sadly. My folks were in high school during the war, met in college, married after graduating. All their courtship was with groups of happy coeds relieved of the uncertainty and scarcity of wartime. So I’m grateful for Ludwig’s piece that provides some insight into the mood of the times, veiled affection and intimacy in loving letters between his parents as their romance blossomed from afar, with a sweetness and seriousness only possible before the bald familiar social tyranny and transparency of email and sexting and the internet. Blech.

The playbook that came with the letters via Arena Stage is, delightfully, signed by the playwright. How lucky for me. Just discovered this as it has taken me this long to get around to reading the letters and all and noticing the Ludwig inscription. Three years into the COVID era and two months into the flatness of winter seemed just the perfect time. The play begins in the cheeriest of manners, expresses the impatience of a budding long distance romance between equals, the seriousness of world events all too capable of crushing dreams of happiness and longevity, and stages the ultimate union in the best of all places—an exhilarating, massive Times Square celebration. Then it ends with a happy union in the sacred space of a federal institution that persists to this day in uniting people across great distances, the Brooklyn Post Office.

We should all be as reverent and devoted as Ludwig in honoring the union of our own parents as to write a play or book or psalm about them, if for no other reason as to acknowledge that the improbability of our existence rests on the sustained intentionality of love with a purpose: happiness ever after with a kindred soul who brings out the best in you. Lovely charming play and couple, Jack and Lou.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
NeelieOB | Jan 20, 2024 |
Its a funny show.
 
Denunciada
TUscript | Jan 26, 2023 |
“If we can’t all be Shakespeares, it doesn’t make us less in the world; the understanding makes us more.”

“I want your children to be inspired by Shakespeare for the many years to come when they believe that they can do anything as long as they work hard enough at it”.

The above quotes are both from the epilogue, and they both fitting conclusions to an extraordinary book. Ludwig’s love of Shakespeare is evident and he makes us want to learn more and to develop a deeper understanding of Shakespeare’s works. I feel myself more knowledgeable in terms of Shakespeareana after having read it.

Personally, I adore Shakespeare.

You can read the rest of this review on my blog.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
antao | 29 reseñas más. | Dec 10, 2016 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
25
También por
2
Miembros
1,150
Popularidad
#22,332
Valoración
4.1
Reseñas
39
ISBNs
25
Favorito
1

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