Mr. Grosbard’s work was divided evenly between the theater and the movies, and though his career stretched across nearly half a century, he was highly selective in his projects.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:52PMMr. Murrin, a playwright and avant-garde impresario who became known as the Alien Comic, was apt to put on performances almost anywhere.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 11:42PMMr. Williamson was a Scottish-born actor whose large, renegade talent made him a controversial Hamlet, an eccentric Macbeth, an angry, high-strung Vanya and, on the screen, a cocaine-sniffin…
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:23PMMs. Henderson wrote books that have become standard works on America’s players and playhouses.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:20AMMr. Duell’s understated comic flare enlivened Broadway shows (“A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum”), television series (“Police Squad!) and Hollywood films (One Flew Over…
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:29AMIn her Broadway debut, in “Stick Fly,” Condola Rashad is demonstrating gifts that go far beyond her experience or her famous name.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:54PMMr. Deiber was an actor and director with the Comédie-Française for nearly three decades who brought his dramatic expertise to a second career as an opera director.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:23PMMr. Friedman was a ubiquitous presence in and around New York theaters in the 1950s and 1960s
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 09:18PMMr. Woldin also traveled with the Ink Spots and Lionel Hampton, and played in the “Hello, Dolly!” orchestra on Broadway.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 09:34PMMr. Hastings’s best-known work, “Tom and Viv,” about the first marriage of T. S. Eliot, created a cultural brouhaha.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:42AMMr. Hastings’s best-known work, “Tom and Viv,” about the first marriage of T. S. Eliot, created a cultural brouhaha.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 11:09PMMs. Delaney, whose play “A Taste of Honey” found success in the West End and on Broadway, was just 19 when the work was first performed.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 11:16PMMr. Neville may be best known in the United States as the title character in “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen.”
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:22AMMr. Neville may be best known in the United States as the title character in “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen.”
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 11:50PMMs. Cohn, a theater scholar and drama professor, became the playwright Samuel Beckett’s friend as well as a leading authority on his work.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 07:41PMThe Romanian-born Mr. Ciulei was best known in the United States for leading the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis and for productions at Arena Stage in Washington.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:52AMMs. Tyzack was the winner of a Tony Award for “Lettice and Lovage” and two London Olivier Awards.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:13AMMr. Rose, the producer of shows like “A Raisin in the Sun” and “Purlie Victorious,” advanced the cause of black playwrights and actors and helped widen the scope of American theater.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:08AMMs. Thompson portrayed archetypal mothers, from the loving family caretaker to the brutalizing harridan and mythical adulteress.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:38AMMr. Michaels was the author of a farce called “Tchin-Tchin,” and the musical “Ben Franklin in Paris.”
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:38PMMs. Stenborg’s myriad roles on Broadway ranged from the loopy Sarita Myrtle in Noël Coward’s “Waiting in the Wings” to Rebecca Nurse in “The Crucible.”
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 11:57AMA man who writes about death for a living stepped into a stage coffin for a role in “Play Dead,” an Off Broadway show.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:31PMMs. Stoddard, after a long career onstage and in television roles, brought the works of Noël Coward, James Thurber and Harold Pinter to Broadway.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:43PMMr. McLure, who was best known for plays like “Lone Star” and “Pvt. Wars,” had a following in the West and in regional theaters.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 01:21AMMr. Langham led a formidable roster of leading men and women through the rigors of Shakespeare, Shaw, Molière, Chekhov and others.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:41PMMr. Linney roved along many intellectual paths, refashioning classical works for modern times and adapting contemporary novels for the stage.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 08:16PMMs. Stevenson, who appeared in a handful of movies and television shows, spent most of her career on the stage.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:20AMThe British-born actress had an early start in films before being cast in the Broadway musical at 21.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 01:48AMEd Schmidt’s personal farewell to the theater, “My Last Play,” takes place in his Brooklyn living room.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:25PM