a
-
George Abbott
Director, Producer, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1887 - 1995
Director, producer and playwright George Abbott lived to be 107 and participated in such Broadway productions as Boy Meets Girl, The Fall Guy and Our Town.
See full bio
(1887-1995)
Director, Producer, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Edward Albee
Playwright / 1928 -
Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright Edward Albee is best known for penning Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and The Zoo Story.
See full bio
(1928-)
Playwright
-
Sholem Aleichem
Religious Leader, Author, Playwright / 1859 - 1916
Sholem Aleichem was a leading Yiddish author and playwright. The musical Fiddler on the Roof is baed on his stories about Tevye the Milkman.
See full bio
(1859-1916)
Religious Leader, Author, Playwright
-
Rudolfo A. Anaya
Educator, Author, Playwright, Poet / 1937 -
Rodolfo Anaya is a Mexican-American writer best known for his Chicano-themed books such as Bless Me, Ultima, Heart of Aztlán and Tortuga.
See full bio
(1937-)
Educator, Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Fernando Arrabal
Director, Journalist, Playwright, Poet / 1932 -
Fernando Arrabal is a Spanish French Absurdist playwright, novelist, and filmmaker whose early plays brought him to the attention of the French avant-garde.
See full bio
(1932-)
Director, Journalist, Playwright, Poet
-
Antonin Artaud
Theater Actor, Playwright, Poet / 1896 - 1948
Antonin Artaud was a French actor, costume designer and writer who revolutionized drama with his idea of a Theater of Cruelty.
See full bio
(1896-1948)
Theater Actor, Playwright, Poet
-
W.H. Auden
Author, Playwright, Poet / 1907 - 1973
W.H. Auden was a literary chameleon known for his poetry but who also wrote librettos, essays and verse dramas.
See full bio
(1907-1973)
Author, Playwright, Poet
b
-
Isaak Babel
Journalist, Playwright / 1894 - 1940
Isaak Babel was a Russian writer of Jewish descent known for his masterful short stories. He was imprisoned and executed in the Stalin era.
See full bio
(1894-1940)
Journalist, Playwright
-
Imamu Amiri Baraka
Scholar, Critic, Academic Author, Author, Playwright, Poet / 1934 -
Imamu Amiri Baraka is an African-American poet and scholar. He has served as professor emeritus of Africana Studies at the State Unversity of New York at Stony Brook.
See full bio
(1934-)
Scholar, Critic, Academic Author, Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Peter Barnes
Film Critic, Playwright / 1931 - 2004
British playwright and screenplay writer Peter Barnes was well known for his unique, anti-naturalistic approach to theater and film.
See full bio
(1931-2004)
Film Critic, Playwright
-
J.M. Barrie
Author, Playwright / 1860 - 1937
Sir James Matthew Barrie was a Scottish dramatist, best known for writing the play Peter Pan.
See full bio
(1860-1937)
Author, Playwright
-
Philip Barry
Theater Actor, Playwright / 1896 - 1949
Philip Barry is an American playwright best known for writing comedies of life. His most famous play is The Philadelphia Story.
See full bio
(1896-1949)
Theater Actor, Playwright
-
Brendan Behan
Journalist, Author, Playwright / 1923 - 1964
Bredan Behan was a rebellious Irish author of plays and short stories noted for his earthy satire and powerful political commentary.
See full bio
(1923-1964)
Journalist, Author, Playwright
-
Aphra Behn
Author, Playwright, Poet / 1640 - 1689
English Restoration author, playwright and poet Aphra Behn wrote the short work of fiction Oroonoko, a love story about an African slave in Surinam.
See full bio
(1640-1689)
Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Alan Bennett
Theater Actor, Journalist, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1934 -
Alan Bennett is a British playwright who is best known for The Madness of George III (1991) and The History Boys (2004), both of which were made into films.
See full bio
(1934-)
Theater Actor, Journalist, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Clare Boothe Luce
Diplomat, Journalist, Playwright / 1903 - 1987
Clare Boothe Luce was a socialite who satirized New York society, wrote plays, worked as a war correspondent for Life, and served as an ambassador to Italy.
See full bio
(1903-1987)
Diplomat, Journalist, Playwright
-
Bertolt Brecht
Playwright, Poet / 1898 - 1956
Bertolt Brecht is best known for his plays and poems, in which he embraced anti-bourgeois themes and being forced from his native Germany.
See full bio
(1898-1956)
Playwright, Poet
-
William Wells Brown
Journalist, Author, Playwright / 1814 - 1884
William Wells Brown was a writer who was the first African-American to publish a novel.
See full bio
(1814-1884)
Journalist, Author, Playwright
-
John Burgoyne
General, Playwright / 1722 - 1792
British general John Burgoyne is best remembered for his defeat by superior American forces in the Saratoga campaign of 1777, during the American Revolution.
See full bio
(1722-1792)
General, Playwright
-
Frances Hodgson Burnett
Author, Playwright / 1849 - 1924
British-U.S. playwright and author Frances Hodgson Burnett wrote children’s novels including the classics Little Lord Fauntleroy and The Secret Garden.
See full bio
(1849-1924)
Author, Playwright
-
Lord Byron
Playwright, Poet / 1788 - 1824
Lord Byron is regarded as one of the greatest British poets and is best known for his amorous lifestyle and his brilliant use of the English language.
See full bio
(1788-1824)
Playwright, Poet
c
-
Alejo Carpentier
Musician, Journalist, Author, Playwright / 1904 - 1980
Writer Alejo Carpentier was a leading Latin American literary figure, who used magic realism and was considered one of the best novelists of the 20th century.
See full bio
(1904-1980)
Musician, Journalist, Author, Playwright
-
Paddy Chayefsky
Playwright, Screenwriter / 1923 - 1981
Broadway playwright Pddy Chayefsky picked up two Academy Awards for his films The Hospital and Network.
See full bio
(1923-1981)
Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Anton Chekhov
Author, Playwright / 1860 - 1904
Anton Chekhov is best known for his short stories and plays, including The Proposal, The Wedding and The Anniversary.
See full bio
(1860-1904)
Author, Playwright
-
Alice Childress
Author, Playwright / 1916 - 1994
Alice Childress is an African-American playwright associated with the Harlem Renaissance. She is also the author of several young adult novels.
See full bio
(1916-1994)
Author, Playwright
-
Agatha Christie
Author, Playwright / 1890 - 1976
Agatha Christie was a mystery writer who was one of the world's top-selling authors with works like Murder on the Orient Express and The Mystery of the Blue Train.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1890-1976)
Author, Playwright
-
Caryl Lesley Churchill
Women's Rights Activist, Playwright / 1938 -
After writing radio and television plays for the BBC, British playwright Caryl Lesley Churchill penned the controversial theatrical play Seven Jewish Children.
See full bio
(1938-)
Women's Rights Activist, Playwright
-
Jean Cocteau
Artist, Author, Playwright, Poet / 1889 - 1963
Jean Cocteau was a French poet, playwright, artist and film director. He was associated with the group Les Six.
See full bio
(1889-1963)
Artist, Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Noel Coward
Playwright / 1899 - 1973
British actor, songwriter and playwright Noël
Coward was one of the top figures of 20th century theater, using wit to deal with major social issues.
See full bio
(1899-1973)
Playwright
-
Cyril Cusack
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Playwright / 1910 - 1993
Cyril Cusack was an Irish actor with the Abbey Theatre in Dublin, Ireland and he appeared in over 90 films.
See full bio
(1910-1993)
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Playwright
-
Savinien Cyrano de Bergerac
Author, Playwright / 1619 - 1655
Savinien Cyrano de Bergerac was a French author and playwright best known for his political satire and science fantasy, including the play The Pedant Imitated (1654).
See full bio
(1619-1655)
Author, Playwright
-
Aimé Césaire
Mayor, Playwright, Poet / 1913 - 2008
Aimé Césaire was a cofounder (with Léopold Sédar Senghor) of Negritude, an influential movement to restore the cultural identity of black Africans.
See full bio
(1913-2008)
Mayor, Playwright, Poet
d
-
Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda
Author, Playwright, Poet / 1814 - 1873
Cuban poet and playwright Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda was one of the foremost Romantic
writers of the 19th century.
See full bio
(1814-1873)
Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Pedro Calderón de la Barca
Playwright, Poet / 1600 - 1681
Pedro Calderón de la Barca was a poet and playwright of the Spanish Golden Age who is generally regarded as one of Spain's finest dramatists.
See full bio
(1600-1681)
Playwright, Poet
-
Ruby Dee
Civil Rights Activist, Actress, Playwright, Poet, Screenwriter / 1924 -
Ruby Dee is an American actress, playwright, screenwriter, activist, poet and journalist, perhaps best known for starring in the 1961 film A Raisin in the Sun. She's also known for her civic work with husband Ossie Davis.
See full bio
(1924-)
Civil Rights Activist, Actress, Playwright, Poet, Screenwriter
-
Joan Didion
Journalist, Author, Playwright / 1934 -
U.S. novelist and essayist Joan Didion's writing explores disorder and personal and social unrest. She has also written a number of screenplays.
See full bio
(1934-)
Journalist, Author, Playwright
-
Ruth Draper
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Playwright / 1884 - 1956
Ruth Draper was an American monologist whose best known pieces include The Italian Lesson and Doctors and Diets.
See full bio
(1884-1956)
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Playwright
-
Daphne du Maurier
Author, Playwright / 1907 - 1989
Dame Daphne du Maurier was a novelist and playwright whose famous works Rebecca and The Birds were made into films by Alfred Hitchcock.
See full bio
(1907-1989)
Author, Playwright
-
Alexandre Dumas
Journalist, Author, Playwright / 1802 - 1870
Alexandre Dumas was a 19th-century French novelist and playwright whose best known works are The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo.
See full bio
(1802-1870)
Journalist, Author, Playwright
-
Jack Dunphy
Dancer, Author, Playwright / 1914 - 1992
An accomplished playwright and author in his own right, Jack Dunphy is best known for his long-term relationship with the famed author Truman Capote.
See full bio
(1914-1992)
Dancer, Author, Playwright
e
-
Jesse Eisenberg
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Playwright / 1983 -
American actor Jesse Eisenberg is known for memorable performances in movies from indie drama The Squid and the Whale to Oscar contender The Social Network.
See full bio
(1983-)
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Playwright
-
Euripides
Playwright
Euripides was the last of classical Athens' three Ancient Greek great tragic dramatists, following Aeschylus and Sophocles.
See full bio
Playwright
f
-
Jules Feiffer
Illustrator, Journalist, Author, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1929 -
American cartoonist and writer Jules Feiffer became famous for his “Feiffer,” a satirical cartoon strip notable for its emphasis on very literate captions.
See full bio
(1929-)
Illustrator, Journalist, Author, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Henry Fielding
Author, Playwright / 1707 - 1754
Henry Fielding was an English writer and justice of the peace who crafted novels like Tom Jones and Amelia.
See full bio
(1707-1754)
Author, Playwright
-
John Fletcher
Playwright / 1579 - 1625
English Jacobean dramatist John Fletcher collaborated with Francis Beaumont and other dramatists on comedies and tragedies between about 1606 and 1625.
See full bio
(1579-1625)
Playwright
-
Brian Friel
Author, Playwright / 1929 -
Brian Friel is an Irish dramatist and short-story writer notable for such plays as Translations and Dancing at Lughnasa.
See full bio
(1929-)
Author, Playwright
-
Christopher Fry
Educator, Theater Actor, Playwright, Poet / 1907 - 2005
Playwright Christopher Fry wrote a series of major plays in free verse, with undertones of religion and mysticism, including A Phoenix Too Frequent (1946).
See full bio
(1907-2005)
Educator, Theater Actor, Playwright, Poet
g
-
John Galsworthy
Author, Playwright, Poet / 1867 - 1933
Nobel Prize winning English novelist and playwright John Galsworthy is remembered for evoking Victorian and Edwardian upper middle-class life in his work.
See full bio
(1867-1933)
Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Federico García Lorca
Playwright, Poet / 1898 - 1936
Federico García Lorca is considered one of Spain's greatest poets and dramatists. One of his most successful poetry collections was The Gypsy Ballads.
See full bio
(1898-1936)
Playwright, Poet
-
Oliver Goldsmith
Journalist, Author, Playwright, Poet / 1730 - 1774
Irish writer Oliver Goldsmith wrote essays, poems, novels and plays in the 1700s. Although considered an eccentric, readers found his characters relatable.
See full bio
(1730-1774)
Journalist, Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Spalding Gray
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Television Actor, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1941 - 2004
Actor, playwright and screenwriter Spalding Gray wrote and performed his own roles in Monster in a Box and Gray’s Anatomy; both became feature films.
See full bio
(1941-2004)
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Television Actor, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Graham Greene
Journalist, Author, Playwright / 1904 - 1991
Graham Greene, who wrote The End of the Affair in 1951, is one of the most widely read and critically acclaimed British novelists of the 20th century.
See full bio
(1904-1991)
Journalist, Author, Playwright
h
-
Lorraine Hansberry
Playwright / 1930 - 1965
Playwright and activist Lorraine Hansberry wrote A Raisin in the Sun and was the first black playwright and the youngest American to win a New York Critics’ Circle award.
See full bio
(1930-1965)
Playwright
-
Moss Hart
Playwright, Screenwriter / 1904 - 1961
Moss Hart won a Pulitzer Prize with George S. Kaufman for their play You Can't Take It With You and directed the original 1956 production of My Fair Lady.
See full bio
(1904-1961)
Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Václav Havel
World Leader, Playwright / 1936 - 2011
Václav Havel is a playwright who in 1989 became the president of Czechoslovakia, contining on after the country became the Czech Republic until 2003.
See full bio
(1936-2011)
World Leader, Playwright
-
Seamus Heaney
Educator, Academic Author, Playwright, Poet / 1939 -
Seamus Henry is a renowned Irish poet and professor who won the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature.
See full bio
(1939-)
Educator, Academic Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Lillian Hellman
Editor, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1905 - 1984
Lillian Hellman was a playwright and screenwriter whose dramas attacked injustice, exploitation and selfishness.
See full bio
(1905-1984)
Editor, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Theodor Herzl
Activist, Journalist, Playwright / 1860 - 1904
Journalist Theodor Herzl responded to the anti-Semitism he witnessed while covering the Dreyfus Affair by starting the World Zionist Organization.
See full bio
(1860-1904)
Activist, Journalist, Playwright
-
Saint Hildegard
Nun, Journalist, Playwright, Poet / 1098 - 1179
Saint Hildegard was a Christian mystic, abbess, visionary, and composer.
See full bio
(1098-1179)
Nun, Journalist, Playwright, Poet
-
Honoré de Balzac
Author, Playwright / 1799 - 1850
Honore de Balzac was a French writer who aimed to write about all spheres of life. His best-known stories are found in Droll Stories, 3 vol.
See full bio
(1799-1850)
Author, Playwright
-
Langston Hughes
Playwright, Poet / 1902 - 1967
Langston Hughes was an American poet, novelist, and playwright whose African-American themes made him a primary contributor to the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1902-1967)
Playwright, Poet
-
Victor Hugo
Author, Playwright, Poet / 1802 - 1885
Poet, playwright and novelist Victor Hugo was the heart of French Romanticism, with works such as The Hunchback of Notre-Dame and Les Misérables.
See full bio
(1802-1885)
Author, Playwright, Poet
i
-
Henrik Ibsen
Playwright / 1828 - 1906
Exiled Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen wrote A Doll's House and Hedda Gabler, the latter of which featured one of theater's most notorious characters.
See full bio
(1828-1906)
Playwright
-
William Ralph Inge
Playwright, Screenwriter / 1913 - 1973
William Inge was a playwright best known for his plays Come Back, Little Sheba; Picnic, for which he won a Pulitzer Prize; and Bus Stop.
See full bio
(1913-1973)
Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Eugène Ionesco
Playwright / 1909 - 1994
Playwright Eugène Ionesco's first “antiplay,” The Bald Soprano, inspired a revolution in dramatic techniques and helped inaugurate the Theatre of the Absurd.
See full bio
(1909-1994)
Playwright
j
-
Jerome K. Jerome
Editor, Journalist, Author, Playwright / 1859 - 1927
Jerome K. Jerome was an English humorist writer of the late 1800s, early 1900s, best known for his travelogue Three Men in a Boat.
See full bio
(1859-1927)
Editor, Journalist, Author, Playwright
-
Ben Jonson
Playwright / 1572 - 1637
Playwright Ben Jonson (1572–1637) was a major force in Elizabethan and Jacobean theater, second only to William Shakespeare himself.
See full bio
(1572-1637)
Playwright
-
June Jordan
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Journalist, Playwright, Poet / 1936 - 2002
June Jordan was an African American author who investigated both social and personal concerns through poetry, essays, and drama.
See full bio
(1936-2002)
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Journalist, Playwright, Poet
k
-
George S. Kaufman
Playwright / 1889 - 1961
American playwright George S. Kaufman co-wrote a number of Broadway hits, two of which received Pulitzer Prizes.
See full bio
(1889-1961)
Playwright
-
Kwame Kwei-Armah
Television Actor, Playwright / 1967 -
Actor and playwright Kwame Kwei-Armah was introduced to U.K. households in 1999 as paramedic Finlay Newton on the BBC hospital drama Casualty.
See full bio
(1967-)
Television Actor, Playwright
l
-
Lady Gregory
Playwright, Poet / 1852 - 1932
Irish dramatist Lady Gregory, also known as Isabella Augusta, collaborated with William Butler Yeats and J.M. Synge to found the Irish National Theater and the Abbey Theater company.
See full bio
(1852-1932)
Playwright, Poet
-
D.H. Lawrence
Journalist, Author, Playwright, Poet / 1885 - 1930
D.H. Lawrence is best known for his infamous novel Lady Chatterley's Lover, which was banned in the United States until 1959, and is widely regarded as one of the most influential writers of the 20th century.
See full bio
(1885-1930)
Journalist, Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Jerome Lawrence
Playwright / 1915 - 2004
Jerome Lawrence was an American playwright. He collaborated with Robert Edwin Lee for over 50 years. Inherit The Wind is their most well known play.
See full bio
(1915-2004)
Playwright
-
Mike Leigh
Director, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1943 -
Mike Leigh is a British film director and playwright who's known for his use of improvisation. He won best director at Cannes for his film Naked.
See full bio
(1943-)
Director, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Ira Levin
Author, Playwright / 1929 - 2007
Author Ira Levin wrote some of the gripping novels of the 1960s and 1970s, including Rosemary's Baby and The Boys from Brazil.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1929-2007)
Author, Playwright
m
-
David Mamet
Playwright, Screenwriter / 1947 -
David Mamet is a playwright and screenwriter known for such heady works as American Buffalo and Glengarry Glen Ross.
See full bio
(1947-)
Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Herman J. Mankiewicz
Journalist, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1897 - 1953
Herman J. Mankiewicz was a journalist and screenwriter who won an Academy Award for his work on the film Citizen Kane.
See full bio
(1897-1953)
Journalist, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Jason Mantzoukas
Actor, Comedian, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1972 -
Actor, scriptwriter and improvisational comic Jason Mantzoukas has played Rafi on the FX show The League and co-starred with Sacha Baron Cohen in The Dictator.
See full bio
(1972-)
Actor, Comedian, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Christopher Marlowe
Playwright, Poet / 1564 - 1593
Playwright, poet. Christopher Marlowe was a poet and playwright at the forefront of the 16th-century dramatic renaissance. His works influenced William Shakespeare and generations of writers to follow.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1564-1593)
Playwright, Poet
-
Somerset Maugham
Author, Playwright / 1874 - 1965
English novelist, playwright, and short-story writer Somerset Maugham is best known for the works Of Human Bondage, The Letter, Rain and The Razor's Edge.
See full bio
(1874-1965)
Author, Playwright
-
François Mauriac
Journalist, Author, Playwright, Poet / 1885 - 1970
French novelist François Mauriac won the 1952 Nobel Prize for Literature. The prolific writer focused on themes about human nature and the desire for God.
See full bio
(1885-1970)
Journalist, Author, Playwright, Poet
-
Cormac McCarthy
Author, Playwright / 1933 -
Cormac McCarthy is a National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist best known for his Border Trilogy, including All the Pretty Horses.
See full bio
(1933-)
Author, Playwright
-
Carson McCullers
Author, Playwright / 1917 - 1967
The work of Carson McCullers, author of The Heart is a Lonely Hunter and The Member of the Wedding, is must-read southern gothic fiction.
See full bio
(1917-1967)
Author, Playwright
-
Thomas Middleton
Playwright / 1580 - 1627
Thomas Middleton is one of the most noteworthy and distinctive Jacobean dramatists who was equally successful in portraying both comedy and tragedy.
See full bio
(1580-1627)
Playwright
-
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Playwright, Poet / 1892 - 1950
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Edna St. Vincent Millay was such a bright young thing of the jazz age that she coined the term "my candle burns at both ends."
See full bio
(1892-1950)
Playwright, Poet
-
Arthur Miller
Playwright / 1915 - 2005
Arthur Miller was an American playwright whose bitting criticism of societal problems defined his genius. His best known play is Death of a Salesman.
See full bio
(1915-2005)
Playwright
-
Anthony Minghella
Director, Television Producer, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1954 - 2008
Anthony Minghella was an Academy Award-winning director best known for his adaptation of Michael Ondaatje's The English Patient. Released in 1996, the film claimed the Oscar for best picture in 1997.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1954-2008)
Director, Television Producer, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Moliere
Theater Actor, Playwright / 1622 - 1673
Moliere was a renowned 17th century French dramatist, actor, director and all-around artist known for his innovative stage comedies.
See full bio
(1622-1673)
Theater Actor, Playwright
o
-
Sean O'Casey
Activist, Journalist, Playwright / 1880 - 1964
Irish nationalist and playwright Sean O’Casey wrote about life in the slums of Dublin, in plays like The Shadow of a Gunman and The Plough and the Stars.
See full bio
(1880-1964)
Activist, Journalist, Playwright
-
Eugene O'Neill
Playwright / 1888 - 1953
Eugene O'Neill was the first American dramatist to regard the stage as a literary medium and the only U.S. playwright to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature.
See full bio
(1888-1953)
Playwright
-
Clifford Odets
Activist, Theater Actor, Director, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1906 - 1963
Clifford Odets was the leading dramatist of the theater of social protest in the United States during the 1930s. He helped form the influential Group Theatre.
See full bio
(1906-1963)
Activist, Theater Actor, Director, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Joe Orton
Playwright / 1933 - 1967
British dramatist Joe Orton first fond success as a playwright in 1964, when his radio play The Ruffian on the Stair was broadcast by the BBC.
See full bio
(1933-1967)
Playwright
-
John Osborne
Theater Actor, Producer, Playwright / 1929 - 1994
British playwright John Osborne's Look Back in Anger ushered in a new movement in British drama and made him known as the first of the "Angry Young Men."
See full bio
(1929-1994)
Theater Actor, Producer, Playwright
p
-
Suzan-Lori Parks
Playwright, Screenwriter / 1963 -
Suzan-Lori Parks is an African American playwright and screenwriter. She received the MacArthur Foundation "Genius" Grant in 2001, and the 2002 Pulitzer Prize.
See full bio
(1963-)
Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Tyler Perry
Film Actor, Entrepreneur, Filmmaker, Playwright, Screenwriter / 1969 -
Writer, actor, producer, and director Tyler Perry has built an entertainment empire that consists of successful films, plays, and a best-selling book.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1969-)
Film Actor, Entrepreneur, Filmmaker, Playwright, Screenwriter
-
Harold Pinter
Activist, Playwright, Poet, Screenwriter / 1930 - 2008
Harold Pinter is a renowned British playwright who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2005.
See full bio
(1930-2008)
Activist, Playwright, Poet, Screenwriter
-
Luigi Pirandello
Author, Playwright / 1867 - 1936
Luigi Pirandello was a playwright, novelist and short story writer who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1934.
See full bio
(1867-1936)
Author, Playwright
r
-
Edmond Rostand
Playwright / 1868 - 1918
French dramatist Edmond Rostand is best known for Cyrano de Bergerac, one of the last examples of the Romantic period.
See full bio
(1868-1918)
Playwright
s
-
Nelly Sachs
Playwright, Poet / 1891 - 1970
German poet and playwright Nelly Sachs won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1966 for expressing the grief and yearning of her fellow Jews after WWII.
See full bio
(1891-1970)
Playwright, Poet
-
Camille Saint-Saëns
Songwriter, Pianist, Journalist, Playwright, Poet / 1835 - 1921
French composer and organist Camille Saint-Saëns wrote the popular opera Samson et Dalila. He was also wrote poems, essays and plays.
See full bio
(1835-1921)
Songwriter, Pianist, Journalist, Playwright, Poet