Английская Википедия:Anne Commire

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description

black and white headshot of Commire - a white woman with shoulder length dark hair
Anne Commire

Anne Commire (11 August 1939 – 23 February 2012) was an American playwright and editor who frequently wrote about women's issues and struggles.[1] Her first play, Shay, about a young pregnant high school dropout, was noted by The New York Times for having "sharp comic dialogue" despite the weighty subject matter.[2]

Commire received the Eugene O'Neill Theater Award four times between 1973 and 1988.[3] She wrote the teleplay Rebel for God for CBS, and also has written for Dick Cavett, and Washington D.C.’s Spread Eagle Review, and Mariette Hartley’s one-woman show.[4] She and Hartley co-wrote Breaking the Silence which was Harley's memoir about her difficult early years and how Hartley would no longer be keeping the secrets of her earlier difficult life.[1][5]

Commire was born in Wyandotte, Michigan and received a bachelor's degree in 1961 from Eastern Michigan University.[1] She initially worked as a teacher and an editor for reference books for Gale Group. She later edited the sixteen-volume Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia which received the Dartmouth Medal for outstanding reference work in 2002.[1]

Commire died of cancer in 2012 and her papers are held by the University of Southern Mississippi.[6][7]

Works

Plays

  • Shay
  • Put Them All Together. Premiered at the Coronet Theatre, 1982.
  • The Melody Sisters
  • Starting Monday
  • The NOW Show

Books

  • (ed.) Yesterday's authors of books for children : facts and pictures about authors and illustrators of books for young people, from early times to 1960, Detroit: Gale Research Co., 1977
  • (with Mariette Hartley) Breaking the Silence, 1990
  • (ed.) 'Historic world leaders, Detroit : Gale Research Inc., 1994
  • (ed.) Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia, 17 vols., 2000.
  • (ed.) Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 women through the ages, Farmington Hills, MI: Thomson Gale, 3 vols., 2007
  • Moorville [8]

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Authority control


Шаблон:US-playwright-stub