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Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992

Hailed by Newsweek as “the most exciting individual in American
theater,” playwright and performance artist Anna Deavere Smith
uses her singular brand of theater to explore issues of race, community
and character in America. She was awarded the prestigious MacArthur Foundation “genius” Fellowship
for creating “a new form of theater — a blend of theatrical
art, social commentary, journalism and intimate reverie.”
Smith is perhaps best known as the author and performer of two one-woman
plays about racial tensions in American cities — Fires in the
Mirror (Obie Award-winner and runner-up for the Pulitzer
Prize) and Twilight:
Los Angeles, 1992 (Obie Award-winner and Tony Award nominee).
Combining the journalistic technique of interviewing subjects from all
walks of life with the art of recreating their words in performance,
Smith transforms herself onstage into an astonishing number of characters
(up to 46 in one show), expressing their own points of view on controversial
issues.
From
learning Korean to play a shop owner devastated by the Rodney King riots
to rehearsing (to idiosyncratic perfection) such well-known figures as
Al Sharpton and oral historian Studs Terkel, Smith extends her great
artistic ability to depict America’s immense diversity in culture
and thought.
Smith plays National Security Advisor Nancy McNally on NBC’s The
West Wing and co-starred in the CBS drama, Presidio Med, a series by
the original writing-producing team for NBC’s ER. She has appeared
in the films Philadelphia, Dave, The American President and on TV’s
The Practice. The film version of Twilight premiered at the 2000 Sundance
Film Festival.
She also is the author of Talk to Me: Travels in Media & Politics,
which documents the creative process behind her play, House Arrest. In
an effort to discern the mythic role of the presidency in American society,
Smith interviews over 400 people in all walks of life, from prison inmates
to President Clinton. The New York Times Book Review wrote, “[The
book] succeeds in teaching one crucial lesson: those who truly listen,
truly hear.”
In 1998, in association with the Ford Foundation, Smith founded the Institute
on the Arts & Civic Dialogue at Harvard. The Institute's mission
is to explore the role of the arts in relation to vital social issues.
Smith
is a tenured professor at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University
and is affiliated with the NYU School of Law, where she teaches a course
on “The Art of Listening.” She is currently working on a
new book, Letter to a Young Artist, and will appear in The Human Stain
(Fall 2003), a new film starring Anthony Hopkins and Nicole Kidman.
Excerpted from Royce
Carlton, Inc.
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