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Mart Crowley

Mart Crowley

Mart Crowley

Eloise Takes a Bawth will be released on November 15, 2011 in eBook
Nov 15, 2011
Eloise Takes a Bawth is now available in eBook
Nov 15, 2011
Eloise Takes A Bawth will be released on October 22, 2002 in Hardcover
Oct 22, 2002
Eloise Takes A Bawth is now available in Hardcover
Oct 22, 2002
Eloise Takes a Bawth will be released on October 22, 2002 in
Oct 22, 2002
Eloise Takes a Bawth is now available in
Oct 22, 2002
News:
Eloise Takes A Bawth has won an award
Prior to Dec 19, 2008
News:
Eloise Takes A Bawth has won an award
Prior to Dec 19, 2008
News:
Eloise Takes A Bawth has won an award
Prior to Dec 19, 2008

Authors on the Web

Falls Church News-Press, April 26, 2012
...who often preferred the company of such gay geniuses. In fact, Wood's closest personal aide, the gay Mart Crowley, went on to write the screenplay for the first major Broadway (1968) and film (1970) play devoted entirely to the urban gay lifestyle of...
Concord Monitor, March 4, 2012
...guise of heterosexuals. Stanley Kauffman's notorious 1966 New York Times article "Homosexual Drama and its Disguises" prompted Mart Crowley to write a play in which there would be no disguises at all. The Boys in the Band opened off-Broadway in 1968, a...
Home News Tribune, February 25, 2012
...the book focuses on Edmund White, who wrote about sex, art and love. Bram also writes here about Mart Crowley (The Boys in the Band), Armistead Maupin (Tales of the City), Larry Kramer (The Normal Heart) and Pulitzer Prize-winner Tony Kushner (Angels in...
Washington Blade, February 23, 2012
...others, on through to later novelists and playwrights such as Christopher Isherwood, Edward Albee, Edmund White, Armistead Maupin, Mart Crowley and Tony Kushner, was a literary revolution that laid the post-World War II groundwork for the modern gay...
Star Ledger, February 19, 2012
...obscenity, but barriers were further broken down by Edward Albee’s "Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” and Mart Crowley’s iconoclastic "The Boys in the Band.” Eventually, writers like Edmund White and Armistead Maupin started winning literary...
Huffington Post, December 8, 2011
...from shocker to camp to some unusual spot in between, but this film about that show features playwright Mart Crowley, the surviving cast members and many people who can attest to the impact the show had, people like Edward Albee, Tony Kushner, Dominick...
Home News Tribune, February 25, 2012
...the book focuses on Edmund White, who wrote about sex, art and love. Bram also writes here about Mart Crowley (The Boys in the Band), Armistead Maupin (Tales of the City), Larry Kramer (The Normal Heart) and Pulitzer Prize-winner Tony Kushner (Angels in...
Washington Post, February 24, 2012
...in the guise of heterosexuals. Stanley Kauffmans notorious 1966 New York Times article Homosexual Drama and its Disguisesprompted Mart Crowley to write a play in which there would be no disguises at all. The Boys in the Band opened off-Broadway in 1968,...
Medford Mail Tribune, February 19, 2012
...to discuss his professional failures, of which there have been more than a few. Shatner recalls appearing in Mart Crowley's "Remote Asylum" at its world premiere at the Ahmanson Theatre in 1970. The play began with Shatner and an actress coming onstage...
Star Ledger, February 19, 2012
...obscenity, but barriers were further broken down by Edward Albee’s "Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” and Mart Crowley’s iconoclastic "The Boys in the Band.” Eventually, writers like Edmund White and Armistead Maupin started winning literary...
New Jersey Online, February 19, 2012
...The novelist Christopher Bram has just published ?Eminent Outlaws: The Gay Writers Who Changed America? (Twelve, 270 pp., $27.99), his gloriously panoramic look at the battles by such writers as Truman Capote, Gore Vidal, Christopher Isherwood and Tony...
Rock Hill Herald, February 17, 2012
...to discuss his professional failures, of which there have been more than a few. Shatner recalls appearing in Mart Crowley's "Remote Asylum" at its world premiere at the Ahmanson Theatre in 1970. The play began with Shatner and an actress coming onstage...
TheDay.com, February 16, 2012
...to discuss his professional failures, of which there have been more than a few. Shatner recalls appearing in Mart Crowley's "Remote Asylum" at its world premiere at the Ahmanson Theatre in 1970. The play began with Shatner and an actress coming onstage...