Adam Rapp

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Adam Rapp (born June 15, 1968) is an American novelist, playwright, screenwriter, musician and film director.[1] His play Red Light Winter was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 2006.[2]

Early life

Rapp was born in Chicago to Mary Lee (née Baird; died 1997) and Douglas Rapp (died 2024), and spent most of his youth in Joliet, Illinois.[3]Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

He is a graduate of St. John's Military Academy (Delafield, Wisconsin) and Clarke College (Dubuque, Iowa).[3] At Clarke, he captained the varsity basketball team.[4]

After college he moved to New York City's East Village, where he landed a day job in book publishing and wrote fiction and plays at night. He later completed a two-year playwriting fellowship at Juilliard School.[3][4] His younger brother is actor-singer Anthony Rapp.

Career

Plays

Rapp attended the O'Neill Playwrights Conference in 1996.[5] His play Finer Noble Gases was staged by the Eugene O'Neill Theatre in 2000, by Actors Theatre of Louisville in 2001, by Carolina Actors Studio Theatre in Charlotte in 2003, and by Rattlestick Playwrights Theater in New York City in 2004.[6] In 2001, Nocturne was premiered by the New York Theatre Workshop.[6] It has also been staged at by American Repertory Theater and Berkeley Repertory Theatre.[6] His play Stone Cold Dead Serious was produced in 2002 by the American Repertory Theater.[6]

His play Red Light Winter received the Joseph Jefferson Award (Best New Work) in 2005 for its production at Steppenwolf Theatre Company.[7] The play ran off-Broadway at the Barrow Street Theatre from January 20, 2006 to June 25, 2006, directed by Rapp. The play was nominated for the 2006 Lucille Lortel Award, Outstanding Play, and Rapp received the 2006 Obie Award, Special Citation.[8] The play was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 2006.[2]

Rapp directed a production of Los Angeles, by Julian Sheppard, in 2007 at the Flea Theatre. In 2011, Rapp's The Metal Children was given its regional debut by Swine Palace on Louisiana State University's campus.[9]

He has said that the Edge Theater Company in New York City is his "artistic home": "Edge Theater changed my life back in 2003. They are my family."[10]

He made his Broadway debut with his play The Sound Inside, which began playing at Studio 54 starting on September 14, 2019 (opening officially on October 17, 2019), starring Mary-Louise Parker.[11] The play premiered at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in 2018.[12] It was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Play at the 74th Tony Awards.

Rapp wrote on the book for The Outsiders: A New Musical, a re-imagination of the 1967 S. E. Hinton novel and the 1983 Francis Ford Coppola film adaptation. Broadway performances began on March 16, 2024, at the Bernard Jacobs Theatre in New York City.[13] Rapp was nominated with his co-author Justin Levine for the 2024 Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical. The musical won the 2024 Tony Award for Best Musical.

Teaching

He has taught at the Yale School of Drama.[14]

Style

The majority of Rapp's plays feature small casts and are set in small spaces.[1] Many characters in the plays are working class Americans.[15] His plays often combine stories of Midwestern longing with the idea of finding escape in New York. He combines humor with gloom, preferring dark themes[14]

In a conversation with fellow playwright Gina Gionfriddo published in The Brooklyn Rail, Rapp says: "When you see something powerfully acted on stage, it hits a nerve in the way music hits a nerve … Watching someone twelve feet from you falling in love or being abused … There’s something raw about that experience that you don’t get from film or TV."[16]

Novels

Rapp's first young adult novel, Missing the Piano, was published in 1994. After writing his second book, The Buffalo Tree, which was published in 1997, Rapp was invited to be the first author in residence at Ridgewood High School.[17] The Buffalo Tree was censored by the Muhlenberg School Board in Reading, Pennsylvania due to its themes, graphic language and sexual content.[18] His 2003 novel 33 Snowfish was one of Young Adult Library Services Association's Top Ten Best Books for Young Adults.[19] He released Under the Wolf, Under the Dog in 2004.

His first adult novel, The Year of Endless Sorrows, was released in 2006.[20] Rapp made his graphic novel debut with the release of Ball Peen Hammer in September 2009.[21][22] His second graphic novel, Decelerate Blue, was published in February 2017.

Film, television and music

Rapp directed his first film, Winter Passing, with Zooey Deschanel and Will Ferrell in 2005[23] and was a creative consultant for the television show The L Word.[24]

While working on The L Word, Rapp left in the middle of the season to attend the Edinburgh Festival, where he directed his play, Finer Noble Gases, which won the Fringe First Award.[5] He wrote for the 2010 season of HBO's In Treatment.[25]

He was a member of the band Bottomside, which released the independent CD The Element Man in September 2004.[26] He is a member of Less the Band, which released the album Bear in April 2006.[27]

In 2021, he co-wrote the pilot episode "Cold Snap" for the Showtime special event series Dexter: New Blood.

List of works

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Awards

Source: Gale[1]

Year Award Work Outcome
1995 American Library Association, Best Books for Young Adults Missing the Piano Template:Won
American Library Association, Best Books for Reluctant Readers citation Template:Won
1997 National Playwrights Conference, Herbert & Patricia Brodkin Scholarship Trueblinka Template:Won
1999 Princess Grace Fellowship[28] Template:Won
2000 Kennedy Center Fund for New American Plays, Roger L. Stevens Award Template:Won
2001 Helen Merrill Award for Emerging Playwrights Nocturne Template:Won
2004 American Library Association, Best Books for Young Adults 33 Snowfish Template:Won
Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Young Adult Novel Under the Wolf, Under the Dog Template:CFinalist
2005 American Library Association, Best Books for Young Adults Template:Won
2006 Pulitzer Prize for Drama Red Light Winter Template:Nom
Obie Award Template:Won
Schneider Family Book Award, teen category Under the Wolf, Under the Dog Template:Won
2007 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music in a Play Essential Self-Defense Template:Nom
2010 Michael L. Printz Award Honor Book Punkzilla Template:Won
2012 PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater Award Template:Won
2020 Tony Award for Best Play The Sound Inside Template:Nominated
2024 Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical The Outsiders Template:Nom

References

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External links

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  7. "Press Release" Template:Webarchive jeffawards.org, November 7, 2005
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  10. Rapp, Adam. "Adam Rapp: Finding My Theater Family" broadway.com, March 21, 2007
  11. Clement, Olivia. "Adam Rapp’s The Sound Inside, Starring Mary-Louise Parker, Begins on Broadway" Playbill, September 14, 2019
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  20. Gans, Andrew. "Rapp Discusses New Endless Sorrows Novel Jan. 22" Playbill, January 27, 2007
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  22. Hogan, John. "The Art of the 'Ball Peen Hammer'" graphicnovelreporter.com, accessed November 11, 2015
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  24. Buckley, Michael. "STAGE TO SCREENS: Chatting with Playwright and Screenwriter Adam Rapp" Playbill, February 20, 2006
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  28. "Award Winners Playwrighting" Template:Webarchive pgfusa.org, accessed October 18, 2019