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Neil LaBute

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Neil LaBute
Born
Neil N. LaBute

(1963-03-19) March 19, 1963 (age 61)
Alma materBrigham Young University
University of Kansas
Occupation(s)Film director, screenwriter, playwright, actor

Neil N. LaBute[1] (born March 19, 1963)[1] is an American film director, screenwriter, playwright and actor. He is best-known for a play that he wrote and later turned into a film, In the Company of Men (1997), which won awards from the Sundance Film Festival, the Independent Spirit Awards, and the New York Film Critics Circle. He wrote and directed the films Possession (2002) (based on the A.S. Byatt novel), The Shape of Things (2003) (based on his play of the same name), The Wicker Man (2006), Some Velvet Morning (2013), and Dirty Weekend (2015). He directed the films Nurse Betty (2000), Lakeview Terrace (2008), and Death at a Funeral (2010). LaBute created the TV series Billy & Billie, also directing or writing several of its episodes. He also directed several episodes for the AMC show Hell on Wheels.

Early life

LaBute was born in Detroit, Michigan, the son of Marian, a hospital receptionist, and Richard LaBute, a long-haul truck driver.[2][3] LaBute is of French Canadian, English, and Irish ancestry,[3] and was raised in Spokane, Washington. He studied theater at Brigham Young University (BYU), where he joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. At BYU he also met actor Aaron Eckhart, who would later play leading roles in several of his films. He produced a number of plays that pushed the envelope of what was acceptable at the conservative religious university, some of which were shut down after their premieres. However, he also was honored as one of the "most promising undergraduate playwrights" at the BYU theater department's annual awards.[4] LaBute did graduate study at the University of Kansas,[5] New York University,[5] participated in a writing workshop at London's Royal Court Theatre, [5] and the Royal Academy of London.[citation needed]

Career

LaBute's interest in the film industry came with a viewing of The Soft Skin (La Peau Douce 1964), said the director to Robert K. Elder in a 2011 interview for The Film That Changed My Life.[6]

It exposed me, probably in the earliest way, to “Hey, I could do that.” I’ve never been one to love the camera or even to be as drawn to it as I am to the human aspect of it, and I think it was a film that speaks in a very simple way of here’s a way that you can tell a story on film in human terms. It was the kind of film that made me go, “I could do this; I want to tell stories that are like this and told in this way.” And so it was altering for me in that way, in its simplicity or deceptive simplicity.[7]

In 1993, he returned to Brigham Young University to premiere his play In the Company of Men, for which he received an award from the Association for Mormon Letters. He taught drama and film at IPFW in Fort Wayne, Indiana in the early 1990s where he adapted and filmed the play, shot over two weeks and costing $25,000, beginning his career as a film director. The film won the Filmmakers Trophy at the Sundance Film Festival, and major awards and nominations at the Deauville Film Festival, the Independent Spirit Awards, the Thessaloniki Film Festival, the Society of Texas Film Critics Awards and the New York Film Critics Circle.

In the Company of Men portrays two businessmen (one played by Eckhart) cruelly plotting to romance and emotionally destroy a deaf woman. His next film Your Friends & Neighbors (1998), with an ensemble cast including Eckhart and Ben Stiller, was a shocking[citation needed] portrayal of the sex lives of three yuppie couples in the big city.

His play Bash: Latter-Day Plays is a set of three short plays (Iphigenia in Orem, A Gaggle of Saints, and Medea Redux) depicting essentially good Latter-day Saints doing disturbing and violent things.[8] It ran Off-Broadway at the Douglas Fairbanks Theatre in 1999. 'Medea Redux is a one-person performance by Calista Flockhart.[5][8][9] This play resulted in his being disfellowshipped from the LDS Church (i.e., losing some privileges of church membership without being excommunicated). He has since formally left the LDS Church.[10]

In 2001, LaBute wrote and directed the play The Shape of Things, which premièred in London, featuring film actors Paul Rudd and Rachel Weisz. It was turned into a film in 2003 with the same cast and director. Set in a small university town in the American Midwest, it focuses on four young students who become emotionally and romantically involved with each other, questioning the nature of art and the lengths to which people will go for love. Weisz's character manipulates Rudd's character into changing everything about himself and discarding his friends in order to become more attractive to her. She even pretends to fall in love with him, prompting an offer of marriage, whereupon she cruelly exposes and humiliates him before an audience, announcing that he has simply been an "art project" for her MFA thesis.

LaBute's 2002 play The Mercy Seat was a theatrical response to the September 11, 2001 attacks.[11][12] Set on September 12, it concerns a man who worked at the World Trade Center but was away from the office during the infamous 2001 terrorist attack – with his mistress. Expecting that his family believes that he was killed in the towers' collapse, he contemplates using the tragedy to run away and start a new life with his lover. Starring Liev Schreiber and Sigourney Weaver, the play was a commercial and critical success.[13] While hesitant to term The Mercy Seat "political theater", Labute said, "I refer to this play in the printed introduction as a kind of emotional terrorism that we wage on those we profess to love." He dedicated this edition to David Hare, in response to Hare's "straightforward, thoughtful, probing work".[14]

His next play, reasons to be pretty, played Off-Broadway from May 14 to July 5, 2008, in a production by MCC Theater at the Lucille Lortel Theatre. It went on Broadway in 2009, with previews at the Lyceum Theatre beginning 13 March, and its opening on 2 April. The play was nominated for three 2009 Tony Awards, including Best Play, Best Leading Actor in a Play (Thomas Sadoski), and Best Featured Actress in a Play (Marin Ireland), but did not win in any category. The production's final performance was on June 14.[15] In March 2013, the play was mounted at the San Francisco Playhouse.[16]

Critics have responded to his plays as having a misanthropic tone.[17][18][19] Rob Weinert-Kendt in The Village Voice referred to LaBute as "American theater's reigning misanthrope".[20] The New York Times said that critics labeled him a misanthrope, on the release of his film, Your Friends & Neighbors. The UK's Independent newspaper dubbed him "America's misanthrope par excellence".[21] Citing In the Company of Men and The Shape of Things, critic Daniel Kimmel identified a thread running through his work: "Neil LaBute is a misanthrope who assumes that only callous and evil people who use and abuse others can survive in this world." Critics labeled him a misogynist after the release of In the Company of Men.[22]

LaBute directed Death at a Funeral, a remake of a 2007 British film of the same name. It was written by Dean Craig (who also wrote the original screenplay and starred Chris Rock.

LaBute wrote a new Introduction and new scenes for the Chicago Shakespeare Theater production of The Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare from April 7 to June 6, 2010. LaBute framed the classic play in overtly metatheatrical terms and added a lesbian romance in a subplot.

LaBute's first produced play, Filthy Talk for Troubled Times (1989) — a series of biting exchanges between two "everyman" characters in a bar – was staged from June 3–5, 2010 by MCC Theater as a benefit for MCC's Playwrights' Coalition and their commitment to developing new work. LaBute also directed the reading. Originally when it premiered in New York City at the Westside Dance Project, the entire audience stood up and booed afterward. One audience member cried out, "Kill The Playwright!"[citation needed]

The Break of Noon premiered Off-Broadway at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in an MCC Theatre production on October 28, 2010 (previews), running to December 22, 2010.[23] The play then opened in 2011 in Los Angeles at the Geffen Theater, again directed by Jo Bonney, with 25 January preview and opening on February 2. It ran through March 6. It featured Tracee Chimo, David Duchovny, John Earl Jelks, and Amanda Peet.[24]

The Unimaginable, a short play by LaBute, premiered as part of the Terror 2010 season at the Southwark Playhouse in London, UK from October 12 – 31, 2010.

He also took part in the Bush Theatre's 2011 project Sixty Six Books, for which he wrote a piece based upon a book of the King James Bible.[25]

In 2012 Labute joined the Chicago-based storefront theatre company, Profiles Theatre as a Resident Artist.[26]

His play, The Way We Get By, opened Off-Broadway at the Second Stage Theatre on May 19, 2015, starring Amanda Seyfried and Thomas Sadoski, with direction by Leigh Silverman.[27]

The LaBute New Theater Festival is a festival of world premiere one-act plays that is produced by St. Louis Actors' Studio each summer at their Gaslight Theater[28] and each winter at 59E59 street theaters in New York.[29]

In August 2016, the Utah Shakespeare Festival produced a preview of LaBute's play, How to Fight Loneliness in Cedar City, Utah, and announced its intention to stage the play during its 2017 summer season.[30]

Honors

In 2013, LaBute was named one of the winners of the American Academy of Arts and Letters' Arts and Letters Awards in Literature.[31]

Style

LaBute's style is very language-oriented. His work is terse, rhythmic, and highly colloquial. His style bears similarity to one of his favorite playwrights, David Mamet. LaBute even shares some similar themes with Mamet including gender relations, political correctness, and masculinity.[32]

Filmography

Television

Plays

References

  1. ^ a b "Neil LaBute Biography (1963-)". FilmReference.com. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  2. ^ Jordan, Pat (March 29, 2009). "Neil LaBute Has a Thing About Beauty". The New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
  3. ^ a b Bigsby, C.W.E. (2007). Neil LaBute: stage and cinema. Cambridge University Press. pp. 2, 235. ISBN 0-521-88254-0.
  4. ^ People in the arts, Deseret News. May 6, 1984
  5. ^ a b c d "Neil LaBute Biography" The New York Times (From All Movie Guide), accessed May 8, 2015
  6. ^ [1]
  7. ^ LaBute, Neil. Interview by Robert K. Elder. The Film That Changed My Life. By Robert K. Elder. Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2011. N. p2.48. Print.
  8. ^ a b Brantley, Ben. "Theater Review. The Face of Evil, All Peaches and Cream" The New York Times, June 25, 1999
  9. ^ Lefkowitz, David. [2] "Calista Flockhart Has a bash Off-Bway w/LaBute, June 24-July 25", playbill.com, June 24, 1999
  10. ^ [3] Times & Seasons, An Interview with Neil LaBute
  11. ^ Salamon, Julie. [4] "THEATER; A Response to 9/11 So Unheroically Human", The New York Times, December 15, 2002
  12. ^ Hernandez, Ernio. [5] "Neil LaBute's 'Mercy Seat' Opens Off-Broadway, Dec. 18", playbill.com, December 18, 2002
  13. ^ [6] Ben Brantley, THEATER REVIEW: Yes, He Survived Sept. 11, bu What's in It for Him?, The New York Times, 19 December 2002
  14. ^ Baitz, Jon Robin (Spring 2003). "Neil Labute". Bomb. Retrieved July 22, 2011.
  15. ^ [7] Reasons to be Pretty Listing on Broadway, playbillvault.com, accessed May 8, 2015
  16. ^ Hurwitt, Robert (March 31, 2013). "'Reasons to be Pretty' review: Growing up". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  17. ^ [8] broadwayplaypubl.com
  18. ^ [9] hackwriters.com
  19. ^ [10] npr.org
  20. ^ [11] Jailbait Evokes a More Human Neil LaBute, Village Voice, April 7, 2009
  21. ^ [12] A heart-warming tale from America's master misanthrope,, FIRST NIGHT: Fat Pig, Trafalgar Studios, London. The Independent (2008)
  22. ^ [13] Neil LaBute has a Thing About Beauty, The New York Times, March 25, 2009
  23. ^ [14] Dan Bacalzo, REVIEW: The Break of Noon, theatermania.com, November 22, 2010
  24. ^ [15] The Break of Noon Opening Night, broadwayworld.com
  25. ^ [16]
  26. ^ [17] Season (2012) profilestheatre.org
  27. ^ [18] Olivia Clement, The Way We Get By with Amanda Seyfried and Thomas Sadoski Opens Tonight, playbill.com, May 19, 2015
  28. ^ [19]
  29. ^ [20]
  30. ^ [21] Ellen Fagg Weist, STRONG VOICES, Salt Lake Tribune, 14 August 2016, p. D1
  31. ^ [22] Press Release. artsandletters.org
  32. ^ Griffin, Alice. "Neil LaBute". TheaterPro.com. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  33. ^ a b Vasquez, Dorothy Burk (October 18, 2012). "'Stars in Shorts' Makes Short Films Attractive to Viewers Worldwide". PopMatters.
  34. ^ Sherwin, Adam (March 30, 2011). "'Mad Men' saved from real-life advertising row". The Independent. London.
  35. ^ "Full Circle Episode List". IMDB. Retrieved 18 September 2015.