The House of Blue Leaves

The House of Blue Leaves
Author: John Guare
Publisher: Samuel French, Inc.
Total Pages: 84
Release: 1971
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780573610288

Artie Shaugnessy is a songwriter with visions of glory. Toiling by day as a zoo-keeper, he suffers in seedy lounges by night, plying his wares at piano bars in Queens, New York where he lives with his wife, Bananas. Who is. Much to the chagrin of Artie's downstairs mistress, Bunny Flingus who'll sleep with him anytime but refuses to cook until they are married. On the day the Pope is making his first visit to the city, Artie's son Ronny goes AWOL from Fort Dix stowing a home made-bomb intended to blow up the Pope in Yankee Stadium. Also arriving are Artie's old school chum, now a successful Hollywood producer, Billy Einhorn with starlet girlfriend in tow, who holds the key to Artie's dreams of getting out of Queens and away from the life he so despises. But like many dreams, this promise of glory evaporates amid the chaos of ordinary lives.

A Free Man of Color

A Free Man of Color
Author: John Guare
Publisher: Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
Total Pages: 113
Release: 2011-10-04
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 0802145663

John Guare’s new play is astonishing, raucous and panoramic. A Free Man of Color is set in boisterous New Orleans prior to the historic Louisiana Purchase. Before law and order took hold, and class, racial and political lines were drawn, New Orleans was a carnival of beautiful women, flowing wine and pleasure for the taking. At the center of this Dionysian world is the mulatto Jacques Cornet, who commands men, seduces women and preens like a peacock. But, it is 1801 and the map of New Orleans is about to be redrawn. The Louisiana Purchase brings American rule and racial segregation to the chaotic, colorful world of Jacques Cornet and all that he represents, turning the tables on freedom and liberty.

Chaucer in Rome

Chaucer in Rome
Author: John Guare
Publisher: Dramatists Play Service Inc
Total Pages: 68
Release: 2002
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780822218401

THE STORY: In the Holy Year of 2000 in Rome, Matt has learned that his painting has given him a curable form of cancer. In return for survival, he must abandon paint for a new artistic medium. Ultimately he chooses to dress in religious garb, video

Four Baboons Adoring the Sun

Four Baboons Adoring the Sun
Author: John Guare
Publisher: Dramatists Play Service, Inc.
Total Pages: 84
Release: 1995
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780822210344

The extraordinary tragicomedy of race, class and manners. Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved.

Marco Polo Sings a Solo

Marco Polo Sings a Solo
Author: John Guare
Publisher: Dramatists Play Service, Inc.
Total Pages: 60
Release: 1977
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780822207337

THE STORY: The time is 1999, the place an island off the coast of Norway. Stony McBride, a young movie director and adopted son of an aging Hollywood star, is writing a film about Marco Polo, in which, it is hoped, his father will make a comeback.

Bosoms and Neglect

Bosoms and Neglect
Author: John Guare
Publisher: Dramatists Play Service Inc
Total Pages: 76
Release: 1999
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780822217282

THE STORY: Scooper, a successful but emotionally insecure man edging reluctantly into his forties, discovers that his aged, blind mother, Henny, has been hiding the fact that she is suffering from cancer. With some difficulty he persuades her to undergo s

A Few Stout Individuals

A Few Stout Individuals
Author: John Guare
Publisher: Grove Press
Total Pages: 148
Release: 2003
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780802140029

This latest work from award-winning playwright John Guare, author of House of Blue Leaves and Six Degrees of Separation, addresses ideas of history and memory, fame and ignominy, reason and insanity with his trademark Guare imagination. In a Fifth Avenue brownstone in 1880s New York, Ulysses S. Grant is penniless, dying of throat cancer, and attempting to finish his memoirs while he's cajoled and pestered by everyone from his wife and children to his publisher Samuel Clemens (aka Mark Twain) and, via his drugged hallucinations, the emperor of Japan. Although the memoirs are eventually completed, the audience is left questioning their accuracy and, ultimately, the authenticity of history itself.

Six Degrees of Separation

Six Degrees of Separation
Author: John Guare
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 137
Release: 1990-11-14
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 0679734813

In this soaring and deeply provacative tragicomedy of race, class, and manners, John Guare has created the msot important American play in years. Six Degrees of Separation is one of those rare works that capture both the supercharged pulse of our present era and the deepest and most mysterious movements of the human heart. Six Degrees of Separation won the 1990 New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, as well as the Hull Warriner Award and the Obie.

Two Gentlemen of Verona

Two Gentlemen of Verona
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 4
Release: 1971
Genre:
ISBN:

St. James Theatre, owned and operated by Jujamcyn Theatres, Samuel H. Schwartz, The New York Shakespeare Festival, produced by Joseph Papp joyfully presents "Two Gentlemen of Verona," a grand new musical, adapted by John Guare & Mel Shapiro, lyrics by John Guare, music by Galt MacDermot, based on the play by William Shakespeare, starring Jonelle Allen, Diana Davilla, Clifton Davis, Raul Julia, Norman Matlock, Alix Elias, Frank O'Brien, Jose Perez, Frederic Warriner, Alvin Lum, and John Bottoms, directed by Mel Shapiro, setting designed by Ming Cho Lee, costumes designed by Theoni V. Aldredge, lighting by Lawrence Metzler, choreography by Jean Erdman, musical supervision by Harold Wheeler, additional musical staging by Dennis Nahat, sound by Jack Shearing, associate producer Bernard Gersten.

John Guare’s Theatre

John Guare’s Theatre
Author: Robert J. Andreach
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2009-01-14
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 144380391X

From the 1960s to the present day, John Guare’s plays have ranged from one-act to cyclic, realistic to surrealistic, naturalistic to experimental, and tragic to comic dramas. This study’s approach to the cornucopia the playwright himself provided when in an interview he gave a fundamental aesthetic principle of his craft. Like a person—and Guare’s plays develop the personal as well as the artistic self—a play must be grounded in reality; only then can it soar. The ground is traditional theatre with characters, no matter how larger than life they can be, and plot, no matter how illogical it can be. The soaring is in interrupting the action with monological narratives and musical interludes, bringing characters back from the dead, and having the action take hairpin turns into a mixture of genres and styles, modes and tones. In verbal and visual images, the flight invokes works by authors as varied as Aeschylus and Whitman, Dante and Feydeau, Verdi and Romberg. Soaring from ground to new ground, the theatre creates the transmission of the American heritage in Lake Hollywood, an idealism corrupted by a fraudulent American Dream in Lydie Breeze, and the recovery of the past in A Few Stout Individuals. As Guare said about his plays: they “interconnect.”