Richard Foreman, B.A., MFA, Hon D
In the Edge Annual Question What is your dangerous idea?, Richard Foreman said
In my area of the arts and humanities, the most dangerous idea (and the one under who’s influence I have operated throughout my artistic life) is the complete relativity of all positions and styles of procedure. The notion that there are no “absolutes” in art — and in the modern era, each valuable effort has been, in one way or another, the highlighting and glorification of elements previous “off limits” and rejected by the previous “classical” style.
Such a continual “reversal of values” has of course delivered us into the current post-post modern era, in which fragmentation, surface value and the complex weave of “sampling procedure” dominate, and “the center does not hold”.
Richard Foreman, B.A., MFA, Hon D
is a playwright and avant-garde theater pioneer. He is the founder of the
Ontological-Hysteric Theater.
Books studying his work have been published in
New York, Paris, Berlin and Tokyo.
Richard graduated from
Brown University (B.A. 1959), and received a MFA
in
Playwriting from Yale Drama School in 1962. In 1993, Brown presented him
with an honorary doctorate. His dramatic works are driven by
misunderstanding instead of the more traditional conflict. He describes
his works as a “Theatre of Coincidence”. The goal of his performances is
a “Disorientation Massage”, in contrast to
Aristotle’s goal of
catharsis.
He has written, directed and
designed fifty-seven of his own plays both in New York City and abroad.
Five of his plays have received
Obie Awards for Best Play of the
Year — and he has received five other Obies for directing and for
“sustained achievement”. He has received the annual Literature Award from
the
American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, a “Lifetime
Achievement in the Theater” award from the
National Endowment for the Arts, the
PEN American Center Master American Dramatist Award, a
MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship, and in 2004 was elected officer of the
Order of Arts and Letters of France. His archives and work materials
have recently
been acquired by the
Bobst Library at New York University (NYU).
His work has been primarily done at the Ontological-Hysteric Theater in
New York, though he has gained acclaim as director for such productions
as Bertolt Brecht’s The Threepenny Opera at
Lincoln Center and the
premiere of Suzan-Lori Parks’s Venus at the
Public Theater.
Richard’s plays have been co-produced by such organizations as
The New York Shakespeare Festival,
La Mama Theatre,
The Wooster Group, the
Festival d`Automne in Paris, and the
Vienna Festival. He has collaborated
(as
librettist and stage director) with composer
Stanley Silverman on 8
music theater pieces produced by
The Music Theater Group &
The New York City Opera. He wrote and directed the feature film,
Strong Medicine.
He has also directed and designed many classical productions with major
theaters around the world including, The Threepenny Opera,
The Golem and
plays by
Václav Havel, Botho Strauss, and Suzan-Lori Parks for The
New
York Shakespeare Festival, Die Fledermaus at the
Paris Opera, Don Giovanni at the
Opera de Lille, Philip Glass’s Fall of the House of Usher
at the
American Repertory Theater and
The Maggio Musicale in Florence,
Woyzeck at
Hartford Stage Company, Molière’s Don Juan at the
Guthrie Theater and The New York Shakespeare Festival, Kathy Acker’s Birth of the Poet at the
Brooklyn Academy of Music and the
RO theater in Rotterdam,
and Gertrude Stein’s Dr. Faustus Lights the Lights at the Autumn
Festivals in
Berlin and Paris.
Richard authored
Bad Boy Nietzsche! and Other Plays,
Unbalancing Acts : Foundations for a Theater,
Richard Foreman (Art + Performance),
My Head Was a Sledgehammer : Six Plays,
Paradise Hotel,
No-body : A Novel in Parts,
Love & Science : Selected Music-Theatre Texts,
the innovative Amazon download
Death. (personal reflections on death) : An article from:
Discourse,
and
edited
Lacanian Ink 9.
Read the full
list of his publications!
Read his freely
available notebooks!
Read his
interview by Eric Bogosian.
Read quotes
by Richard!
Watch him on
PBS.
Read his PBS
interview. Listen to his
Charles Bernstein
interview.