Tony Award-winner, Chicago stage champion Frank Galati dies.
His screenwriting credits include “The Accidental Tourist,” for which he was an Oscar nominee. He also was credited for writing the teleplay to Arthur Miller’s play “The American Clock” in 1993.
Galati became a Steppenwolf Theatre ensemble member in 1985 and the Goodman Theatre’s associate director a year later. He remained in that post until 2008. He was also an artistic associate at Asolo Repertory Theatre in Sarasota, Florida. His productions at the Goodman include “The Visit,” “She Always Said Pablo,” “The Winter’s Tale,” “The Good Person of Setzuan” and “Cry the Beloved Country.” He most recently directed Asolo Repertory Theatre’s 2022 world premiere musical “Knoxville,” written by the “Ragtime” team of Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty.
Argentina Últimas Noticias, Argentina Titulares
Similar News:También puedes leer noticias similares a ésta que hemos recopilado de otras fuentes de noticias.
Tony Award-winner, Chicago stage champion Frank Galati diesFrank Galati, an actor, director, teacher and adapter who was a pivotal figure in Chicago’s theater community and a two-time Tony Award winner, has died.
Leer más »
Tony Award-winner, Chicago stage champion Frank Galati diesFrank Galati, an actor, director, teacher and adapter who was a pivotal figure in Chicago’s theater community and a two-time Tony Award winner, has died. He was 79. Galati won twin Tonys in 1990, for best play and best director.
Leer más »
Frank Galati, Tony Award-winning Chicago director, writer, actor, dead at 79Frank Galati, the Tony Award-winning director, writer and actor who helped transform Chicago theater, has died at 79.
Leer más »
Frank Galati, Tony Award-winning Chicago director, writer, actor, dead at 79Frank Galati, the Tony Award-winning director, writer and actor who helped transform Chicago theater, has died at 79.
Leer más »
Frank Galati, pioneering Chicago theater artist and Oscar nominee, is dead at 79Frank Galati, a pivotal figure in Chicago theater, a Tony Award-winning Broadway director, a beloved longtime teacher at Northwestern University, and an ensemble member at both the Steppenwolf and Goodman Theatres, died Monday night at 79 years old.
Leer más »