Bartlett Sher


Bartlett Sher Biography

Bartlett Sher (born March 27, 1959), also "Bart", is an American theatre director. He received both the 2008 Tony Award and the Drama Desk Award for his direction of the Broadway revival of South Pacific. The New York Times has described him as "one of the most original and exciting directors, not only in the American theater but also in the international world of opera". Sher has been nominated for Tony awards in 2005, 2006, 2008 (winning,) 2009, and 2013.

Early life

Sher was born in San Francisco, California, USA, the son of Aird (Stewart) and Joseph Sher. He had six siblings, including a twin brother. He was raised Catholic (during his teenage years, he found out that his Lithuanian-born father was Jewish). Sher attended St. Ignatius College Preparatory and later the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts. He returned to St. Ignatius to teach English and run the theatre program. During the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games he was influenced by the arts programs associated with the Games, particularly by the work of Polish director Tadeusz Kantor.

Career

Sher served as associate artistic director at Hartford Stage (Hartford, Connecticut) and company director at the Guthrie Theater (Minneapolis, Minnesota) where he worked with Garland Wright, who was a mentor as was Robert Woodruff. Sher has directed, taught and led workshops across the country and internationally. He was Artistic Director at Intiman Theatre in Seattle and in 2008 was named Resident Director at Lincoln Center Theater in New York City.

Intiman Playhouse, Seattle

Sher served as Artistic Director at Intiman Playhouse in Seattle from 2000-2010. During 2010 Sher handed over this job to his successor, Kate Whoriskey. (The Intiman cancelled its 2011 season due to financial problems). His productions at Intiman have included:

  • Nickel and Dimed, a world premiere by Joan Holden based on the book by Barbara Ehrenreich;
  • Tony Kushner's Homebody/Kabul (British housewife becomes fascinated with Afghanistan);
  • Ingmar Bergman's Nora; (adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House)
  • G. B. Shaw's Arms and the Man;
  • Shakespeare's Cymbeline and Titus Andronicus;
  • Carlo Goldoni's Servant of Two Masters.
  • Works by Craig Lucas:
The Dying Gaul (a funny and tragic story of a grieving Hollywood scriptwriter)
The Singing Forest (world premiere) "? (neurotics and therapists sparring)
Prayer for My Enemy (dysfunctional family, friendship, war in Iraq)
The Light in the Piazza (musical), book by Craig Lucas (chance meeting in Florence leads to romance)

Other theatre and opera

  • Mourning Becomes Electra (Levy) for Seattle Opera;
  • At the Theatre for a New Audience ("TFANA", New York) he directed productions of:
2000 "? Waste by Harley Granville Barker (American premiere and 2000 OBIE for Best Play),
2002 "? Cymbeline by Shakespeare
2003 "? Dom Juan by Moličre
2004 "? Pericles, Prince of Tyre by Shakespeare
  • He directed Cymbeline, Don Juan and Pericles at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
  • In 2006 Sher directed Gioachino Rossini's Il barbiere di Siviglia (The Barber of Seville) at the Metropolitan Opera in Lincoln Center.
  • In 2009 Sher directed the opera Tales of Hoffman at the Metropolitan Opera in New York (opening December 3, 2009).
  • In 2010 Sher directed a musical production of Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, based on the 1988 film by Pedro Almodóvar. The show opened November 4, 2010 on Broadway in a Lincoln Center Theater production. The musical was criticized by Ben Brantley of the New York Times as being distracted, gimmicky and overdesigned.
  • In March 2011, Le Comte Ory by Rossini opened at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, in a production directed by Sher. The reviewer for the New York Times called the production "lively, colorful and inventive."
  • In June, 2011, Sher's production of the world premiere of Nico Muhly's Two Boys was presented at the English National Opera. The American debut is planned for October, 2013, at the Metropolitan Opera in New York.
  • The previously announced revival of Funny Girl that Sher was expected to direct with a Broadway opening in February 2012 has been postponed.
  • In December, 2012 Golden Boy by Clifford Odets as directed by Sher opened in New York to a positive review in the New York Times. This production was staged at the Belasco Theatre, the same spot where Golden Boy was first presented on Broadway, 75 years earier. The production received eight Tony award nominations, including Sher's fifth for directing. Sher had directed Odets' Awake and Sing in 2006.

Recognition and awards

Sher has received national and international recognition for his work as a director, including the following productions:

  • Sher was honored with the 2002 Joe A. Callaway Award from the Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation for his production of Cymbeline in New York. That play marked his Intiman directing debut and, produced by Theatre for a New Audience ("TFANA") in New York, it went on to become the first American Shakespeare production to be seen at the Royal Shakespeare Company.
  • The Light in the Piazza by Lucas and Adam Guettel with book by Craig Lucas at Chicago's Goodman Theatre, for which he has received a Joseph Jefferson Awards nomination;
  • In 2005 he was nominated for the Best Director Tony Award for his work on the Broadway production of The Light in the Piazza.
  • In 2006 he was nominated for Best Director Tony award for the revival of Clifford Odets' Awake and Sing.
  • In 2008, he won a Tony as Best Director of a Musical for South Pacific, which had not been seen on Broadway for more than 45 years.
  • In 2009 Sher's production of August Wilson's "Joe Turner's Come and Gone" opened April 16, 2009 at Broadway's Belasco Theatre to rave reviews. President and Michelle Obama chose this show for one of their "date nights" in the Summer of 2009. Sher received a 2009 Best Director Tony nomination for this production, one of six nominations this show received that year (see 63rd Tony Awards). Sher's work as director of this play was controversial as this was the first Broadway production of this play to ever have had a white director (something August Wilson opposed during his lifetime).
  • In 2012, Clifford Odets' Golden Boy was presented on Broadway by Lincoln Center Theater. It received eight Tony award nominations, including Sher's fifth for directing.

Personal life

Sher recently lived in New York with his wife Kristin Flanders (a Yale trained actress) and two daughters. His father, an insurance broker whom he described to The New York Times as a "brilliant businessman, very charismatic", was also a serious philanderer who had a second family with another woman. Sher's childhood was marked by a drawn-out divorce.

His mother soon met a Chinese-American man, Doug Chang, who moved in, helped rear the family and brought them much needed stability. Sher's experiences with interracial blended families informed his directing of South Pacific.

See also

  • Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play "? 2006 nomination (Awake and Sing!) and 2009 nomination (Joe Turner's Come and Gone)
  • Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical "? 2005-nomination (The Light in the Piazza) and 2008-winner (South Pacific)

Further reading




This webpage uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bartlett_Sher" and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. Reality TV World is not responsible for any errors or omissions the Wikipedia article may contain.
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