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'''Lynne Meadow''' is an [[American]] [[theatre producer]] and [[director]], and a [[college professor]].
'''Lynne Meadow''' is an [[American]] [[theatre producer]] and [[director]], and a [[college professor]].


Lynne Meadow has been [[Artistic Director]] of [[Manhattan Theatre Club]] (MTC) since 1972, where she has been responsible for directing and/or producing over 450 New York and world premieres by American and international [[Playwright|playwrights]], including [[Terrence McNally]], [[Beth Henley]], [[John Guare]], [[Athol Fugard]], [[Brian Friel]], [[Harold Pinter]], [[Alan Ayckbourn]], [[John Patrick Shanley]], [[August Wilson]], [[David Lindsay-Abaire]], [[Richard Greenberg]], David Auburn]], and [[Donald Margulies]].
Lynne Meadow has been [[Artistic Director]] of [[Manhattan Theatre Club]] (MTC) since 1972, where she has been responsible for directing and/or producing nearly 500 New York and world premieres by American and international [[Playwright|playwrights]], including [[Terrence McNally]], [[Beth Henley]], [[John Guare]], [[Athol Fugard]], [[Brian Friel]], [[Harold Pinter]], [[Alan Ayckbourn]], [[John Patrick Shanley]], [[August Wilson]], [[David Lindsay-Abaire]], [[Richard Greenberg]], David Auburn]], and [[Donald Margulies]].


Under Meadow's artistic leadership, she has brought MTC to the forefront of the American stage and created one of the nations’s most acclaimed [[not-for-profit]] theatres. MTC productions and plays have been honored with every prestigious theatre award, including 16 [[Tony Awards]], 6 [[Pulitzer Prizes|Pulitzer Prizes for Drama]], 47 [[Obie Awards]], 29 [[Drama Desk Awards]], as well as [[Drama Critics' Circle|New York Drama Critics' Circle Awards]], [[Outer Critics Circle Awards]], and [[Theatre World Awards]].
Under Meadow's artistic leadership, she has brought MTC to the forefront of the American stage and created one of the nations’s most acclaimed [[not-for-profit]] theatres. MTC productions and plays have been honored with every prestigious theatre award, including 16 [[Tony Awards]], 6 [[Pulitzer Prizes|Pulitzer Prizes for Drama]], 47 [[Obie Awards]], 29 [[Drama Desk Awards]], as well as [[Drama Critics' Circle|New York Drama Critics' Circle Awards]], [[Outer Critics Circle Awards]], and [[Theatre World Awards]].

Revision as of 16:47, 21 October 2014

Lynne Meadow is an American theatre producer and director, and a college professor.

Lynne Meadow has been Artistic Director of Manhattan Theatre Club (MTC) since 1972, where she has been responsible for directing and/or producing nearly 500 New York and world premieres by American and international playwrights, including Terrence McNally, Beth Henley, John Guare, Athol Fugard, Brian Friel, Harold Pinter, Alan Ayckbourn, John Patrick Shanley, August Wilson, David Lindsay-Abaire, Richard Greenberg, David Auburn]], and Donald Margulies.

Under Meadow's artistic leadership, she has brought MTC to the forefront of the American stage and created one of the nations’s most acclaimed not-for-profit theatres. MTC productions and plays have been honored with every prestigious theatre award, including 16 Tony Awards, 6 Pulitzer Prizes for Drama, 47 Obie Awards, 29 Drama Desk Awards, as well as New York Drama Critics' Circle Awards, Outer Critics Circle Awards, and Theatre World Awards.

Lynne’s directing credits include Amanda Peet’s The Commons of Pensacola (starring Blythe Danner and Sarah Jessica Parker); The Assembled Parties on Broadway; Collected Stories (with Linda Lavin and Sarah Paulson); 2001 Tony Award-nominated production of The Tale of the Allergist’s Wife on Broadway (starring Linda Lavin, Michele Lee, and Tony Roberts) and in the U.S. national tour (with Valerie Harper); the Broadway production of A Small Family Business (with Brian Murray); Donald MarguliesThe Loman Family Picnic; and the Obie Award-winning Ashes by David Rudkin; and NY premieres of plays by Marsha Norman, Simon Gray, Howard Brenton, Melanie Marnich, Lee Blessing, Sybille Pearson, etc. She has also directed productions for The New York Shakespeare Festival, the Spoleto Festival and the O’Neill Theatre Center.

Lynne is a cum laude graduate of Bryn Mawr College, where she served on the Board of Trustees. She attended the Yale School of Drama and was named a Herbert Brodkin Fellow. She has taught at Circle in the Square Theatre School, Stony Brook University, Yale University, Fordham University and New York University. She is married to attorney Ron Shechtman.

She is the recipient of numerous awards including the Lucille Lortel Award for Lifetime Achievement, the Lilly Award for Lifetime Achievement, and the Museum of the City of New York’s Auchincloss Prize. She was inducted into the Theatre Hall of Fame in 2013. In addition, she has received the Lee Reynolds Award from the League of Professional Theatre Women, the Manhattan Award from Manhattan magazine, the Person of the Year from the National Theatre Conference and the Margo Jones Award. In 2003, Ms. Meadow received the Mr. Abbot award for Lifetime Achievement from the Stage Directors Foundation. She has twice been nominated for Best Director at the Drama Desk Awards: in 1996 for Leslie Ayvazian’s Nine Armenians and in 1988 for Alan Ayckbourn’s Woman in Mind with Stockard Channing.


Directing Credits

  • 2013: Amanda Peet’s The Commons of Pensacola
  • 2013: Richard Greenberg’s The Assembled Parties
  • 2011: Margaret Edson’s Wit
  • 2010: Donald MarguliesCollected Stories
  • 2007: Charles Busch’s Our Leading Lady
  • 2006: David Greig’s The American Pilot
  • 2005: Ron Hutchinson’s Moonlight and Magnolias
  • 2004: Neil Simon’s Rose’s Dilemma
  • 2003: Marsha Norman’s Last Dance
  • 2001: Melanie Marnich’s Blur
  • 2000: Charles Busch’s The Tale of the Allergist’s Wife
  • 1999: Patrick Cook’s Captain Courageous
  • 1996: Leslie Ayvazian’s Nine Armenians (Drama Desk nomination)
  • 1994: Mary Zimmerman's The Arabian Nights
  • 1992: Alan Ayckbourn’s A Small Family Business
  • 1991: Alan Ayckbourn’s Absent Friends
  • 1989: Lee Blessing’s Eleemosynar
  • 1988: Alan Ayckbourn’s Woman in Mind (Drama Desk nomination)
  • 1986: Howard Brenton's Bloody Poetry
  • 1986: Richard Nelson’s Principia Scriptoriae
  • 1984: Israel Horovitz’s Park Your Car in Harvard Yard
  • 1982: Anton Chekhov’s Three Sisters
  • 1982: Sybille Pearson’s Sally and Marsha
  • 1980: S.N. Behrman’s Biography
  • 1980: Steve Metcalf’s Vikings
  • 1979: Joanna M. Glass’ Artichoke
  • 1979: David Edgar’s The Jail Diary of Albie Sachs
  • 1978: Istvan Orkeny’s Catsplay
  • 1977: David Rudkin’s Ashes (Obie Award)
  • 1975: Clifford OdetsGolden Boy
  • 1976: The Pokey
  • 1974: Mark Medoff’s The Wager
  • 1974: Corinne Jacker’s Bits and Pieces
  • 1973: Amos Kenan's Jesus as Seen by His Friends
  • 1972: Anthony Scully's All Through the House


Selected Producing Credits


Awards

  • Lee Reynolds Award from the League of Professional Theatre Women
  • Manhattan Award from Manhattan Magazine
  • Person of the Year Award from the National Theatre Conference
  • Margo Jones Award
  • 2003 Mr. Abbott Award
  • 2011 Lucille Lortel Award for Lifetime Achievement
  • 2011 Lilly Award for Lifetime Achievement
  • 2012 Museum of the City of New York’s Louis Auchincloss Prize
  • 2013 Theatre Hall of Fame Inductee



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