I am trying to come up with a list of plays (and the playwrights who wrote them) of one-person plays which involve historical figures (politicians, poets, etc). So far, I've come up with "Give 'Em Hell, Harry," "The Belle of Amherst," "Thurgood," "Mark Twain Tonight," "Read Hot Patriot" (Molly Ivins), "Golda's Balcony," "Clarence Darrow," and Holland Taylor's "Ann." Any other suggestions?
William Luce who wrote The Belle of Amherst seems to have made a career of this kind of show. Julie Harris did one on Isak Dinesson, the title of which escapes me, and I think Mr. Luce wrote one called Lillian about Lillian Hellman.
There are two plays about Gertrude Stein and the one that starred Pat Carroll had a very satisfactory off-Broadway run. Pat Bond wrote and starred in the other which I don't think ever played NY although it was taped for PBS.
Clarence Darrow was written for Henry Fonda.
Roy Dotrice had over a decade's work as John Aubrey in the vastly entertaining Brief Lives in the 60s & 70s. He played everywhere in the English speaking world that he could get a booking.
For some reason someone thought Alec McCowan as Rudyard Kipling would sell in NYC. It didn't and died after a week. Vincent Price played Oscar Wilde and Ben Kingsley played Edmund Kean to slightly better success.
Colleen Dewhurst played Carlotta O'Neill in a show that played the Public although it went nowhere. More recently Judith Ivey played Martha Mitchell there.
I don't think you should ignore Anna Deveare Smith. It's true she plays multiple characters in her one-woman shows, but they are historical figures, famous and not. In fact, she usually crafts the monologues of the characters from actual interviews.
9 Parts of Desire by Heather Raffo, about the women in Iraq affected by the war, it's a one woman show that plays 9 roles one of which is based off of a famous artist in Iraq who was killed.
joined:12/24/12
Posted: 1/15/13 at 02:49pm