Sherry Kramer is an American playwright,[1][2] born in Springfield, Missouri.[3] Kramer attended Wellesley College, as an undergraduate, and earned an MFA Fiction from the Iowa Writers Workshop and an MFA Playwriting from the Iowa Playwrights Workshop at the University of Iowa.[4] She teaches playwriting at Bennington College.

Sherry Kramer
Born
EducationWellesley College (BA)
University of Iowa (MFA)

Bibliography edit

Plays published by Broadway Play Publishing Inc. edit

  • When Something Wonderful Ends (first produced Humana Festival, Louisville, KY)
  • David's Red Haired Death (first produced Woolly Mammoth Theatre, Washington, D.C.)
  • Things That Break (first produced The Theatre of the First Amendment, Fairfax, VA)
  • The Wall of Water (first produced Yale Repertory Theatre, New Haven, CT)[5]
  • What a Man Weighs (first produced Second Stage, New York, NY)[6]
  • The World At Absolute Zero (first produced Ensemble Studio Theatre One Act Festival, New York, NY)
  • A Permanent Signal (first produced Attica Productions, Edinburgh Fringe Theatre Festival)
  • Partial Objects (first produced Mill Mountain Theatre, Roanoak, VA)
  • The Release of a Life Performance (first produced Brass Tacks Theatre, Mlps, MN)
  • About Spontaneous Combustion (first produced Brass Tacks Theatre, Mlps, MN)

Other plays edit

  • How Water Behaves
  • The Dream House
  • Cake
  • The Bay of Fundy: An Adaptation of One Line From the Mayor of Casterbridge
  • The Mad Master (commissioned by A.S.K Theatre Projects)
  • Hold For Three (a 10-minute play)
  • The Long Arms of Jupiter (croquet performance piece)
  • Before and After (first produced Iron Belly Muses, Austin, TX)
  • Napoleon's China (collaboration with Ann Haskell and Rebecca Newton) (first produced Salt Lake Acting Company)
  • The Ruling Passion (workshopped New Harmony Project and Playlabs)
  • The Law Makes Evening Fall (workshopped Sundance Theatre Lab and the Wilma Theatre)
  • Ivanhoe, America (a modern-day adaptation of the novel, set in Missouri during the Vietnam War) (workshopped Arkansas New Play Festival at TheatreSquared)
  • The Master and Margarita (a collaboration with Margaret Pine) (a music theatre adaptation of the novel by Mikhail Bulgakov) (workshopped The O'Neill Music Theatre Conference and the Hall Prince Musical Theatre Workshop)

References edit

  1. ^ "Sherry Kramer". wewantedtobewriters.com. 2011. Retrieved July 31, 2011.
  2. ^ "Bennington College:Faculty". bennington.edu. 2011. Archived from the original on July 17, 2009. Retrieved July 31, 2011.
  3. ^ Sherry Kramer Collection, Missouri State University
  4. ^ UI In the News, University of Iowa
  5. ^ 4 Comedies on the Bill in Yale Rep Winterfest Series, The New York Times
  6. ^ How Restoring Books Is (and Is Not) Like Love, The New York Times

External links edit

Official website