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Daryl Roth (born 1944) is a prominent Broadway theatrical producer. She has produced three plays that have won the Tony Award for Best Play (these are: Proof (2001 winner), The Goat (2003 winner) and August: Osage County (2008 winner)). She has produced six plays that have won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. She started as a theatrical producer at age 44 after being a suburban mother and an interior designer. She started as a producer in 1988 and has since produced or co-produced over 50 shows. [1]
Background and Family
editShe grew up in Wayne, New Jersey, her mother was a homemaker and her father, Jerry Atkins, was the owner of a Chevrolet car dealership in Wayne. She has one sibling, her sister Dale Atkins, who is now a well known psychologist and media personality who has written a book about relationships between sisters [2] [3]. As a child Roth and her family were always interested in Broadway theatre and other cultural events in New York City.
She attended Wayne High School, Syracuse University and New York University, graduating in 1966 with a degree in art history. She worked as an editor and writer for Seventeen magazine and married Steven Roth, a real-estate developer, in 1969. He attended Dartmouth ('62) and had also received an MBA from Dartmouth. [4] They have two children, Amanda and Jordan. [1] Jordan Roth is a theatrical producer and executive; he is the CEO and half-owner of Jujamcyn Amusement Corporation, one of the three principal owners and operators of New York's Broadway theatres.
Daryl Roth's husband, Steven Roth, is a successful real estate executive and developer. He started as a developer of strip malls and is now the Chairman of Vornado Realty Trust, one of the largest institutional investors in commercial real estate in New York and the United States. [5]
Daryl Roth Theatre
editThey bought the Union Square Savings Bank building in 1996 and converted it into a theatre. Started with De La Guarda which lasted seven years. Gutted the garage of the bank and made it into DR2 (DR=Daryl Roth), a 99-seat theatre.
Credits
editShow | Authors | Theatre | Year | hold | bhold |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nick & Nora (musical) | Arthur Laurents (book), Charles Strouse (music) | Marquis Theatre, NYC | 1991 | ||
The Baby Dance | Jane Anderson | Lucille Lortel Theatre, NYC | 1991 | ||
Three Tall Women | Edward Albee | Promenade Theatre, New York City | 1994 | - | Pulitzer |
Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 | Anna Deavere Smith | (solo performance) | |||
Das Barbecu | Jim Luigs and Scott Warrender | Minetta Lane Theatre, NYC | 1994 | ||
Camping with Henry and Tom | Mark St. Germain | Wild Dancer Theatre Company, Lucille Lortel Theatre | 1995 | ||
How I Learned to Drive* | Paula Vogel | Vineyard Theatre, Century Center for the Performing Arts, New York City | 1997 | - | Pulitzer |
Old Wicked Songs | Jon Marans | Jewish Repertory Theatre, Playhouse 91, New YorkCity, 1995, then Promenade Theatre | 1996 | ||
Defying Gravity | Jane Anderson | American Place Theatre, New York City | 1997 | ||
Snakebit | David Marshall Grant | Century Center for the Performing Arts | 1999 | ||
De La Guarda | Pichon Baldinu, Digui James | Daryl Roth Theatre, New York City | 1998 | ||
Wit | Margaret Edson | Manhattan Class Company, Union Square Theatre | 1998 | - | Pulitzer |
The Bomb-itty of Errors | Jordan Allen-Dutton, Jason Catalano, G.Q., Erik Weiner | Culture Project, Forty-Five Bleecker Street Theatre, New York City | 1999 | ||
The Play About the Baby | Edward Albee | Century Center for the Performing Arts | 2000 | ||
Proof | David Auburn | Manhattan Theatre Club, Walter Kerr Theatre, New York City | 2000 | Tony-Best Play-2001 | Pulitzer |
The Tale of the Allergist's Wife | {{Charles Busch]] | Manhattan Theatre Club, Ethel Barrymore Theatre, New York City | 2000 | ||
Bea Arthur on Broadway | - | Booth Theatre, New York City | 2002 | ||
The Goat, or Who is Sylvia? | Edward Albee | John Golden Theatre, New York City | 2002 | Tony-Best Play-2002 | |
Talking Heads | Alan Bennett | Minetta Lane Theatre | 2003 | ||
Our Lady of 121st Street | Stephen Adly Guirgis | Union Square Theatre | 2003 | ||
Harlem Song | |||||
Medea | Euripides | Brooks Atkinson Theatre, New York City | 2002 | ||
Salome (staged reading) | Oscar Wilde | Ethel Barrymore Theatre | 2003 | ||
Tea at Five | Matthew Lombardo | Promenade Theatre | 2003 | ||
Anna in the Tropics | Nilo Cruz | Royale Theatre, New York City | 2003 | - | Pulitzer |
Beckett/Albee | Samuel Beckett, Edward Albee | Century Center for the Performing Arts | 2003 | ||
Caroline, or Change (musical) | Tony Kushner and Jeanine Tesori | Eugene O'Neill Theatre, New York City | 2004 | ||
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? | Edward Albee | Broadway | 2005 | ||
Thom Paine | |||||
Manuscript | |||||
Sandra Bernhardt | |||||
Coram Boy | Helen Edmundson | Broadway | 2007 | ||
Curtains (musical) | Rupert Holmes, Fred Ebb and John Kander, | Broadway and Los Angeles | 2007 | ||
Deuce | Terrence McNally | Broadway | 2007 | ||
The Year of Magical Thinking | Joan Didion | Broadway | 2007 | ||
Assisted Loving | |||||
Indoor Outdoor | |||||
Esoterica | |||||
August: Osage County | Tracy Letts | bb | - | Tony-Best Play-2008 | Pulitzer |
A Catered Affair | Harvey Fierstein & John Bucchino | Broadway | 2008 | ||
The Country Girl | Clifford Odets | Broadway | 2008 | ||
Is He Dead? | Mark Twain | Broadway | 2007 | ||
Thurgood | George Stevens, Jr. | Broadway | 2008 | ||
Die, Mommie, Die! | Charles Busch | Off-Broadway | 2007 | ||
Irena's Vow | Dan Gordon | Broadway | 2009 | ||
Desire Under the Elms | Eugene O'Neill | Broadway | 2009 | ||
What's That Smell? | David Pittu | ||||
Mary Stuart | Peter Oswald | Broadhurst Theatre | 2009 | ||
The Temperamentals | Jon Marans | ||||
Vigil | |||||
A Little Night Music | Steven Sondheim, Hugh Wheeler | ||||
Fela | Bill T. Jones and Jim Lewis | Eugene O'Neill Theatre | 2009 | ||
Love, Loss, and What I Wore | Nora Ephron & Delia Ephron | Off-Broadway | 2009 | ||
Closer Than Ever (musical revue) | Richard Maltby, Jr. and David Shire | Cherry Lane Theatre, NYC | 1989 | ||
The Root | - | Atlantic Theatre, NYC | 1993 | ||
Tapestry: The Music of Carole King | - | Union Square Theatre, NYC | 1993 | ||
Ears on a Beatle | DR2, off-Broadway production | 2004 | |||
The Mambo Kings (musical) | Carlos Franzetti music | Golden Gate Theatre,San Francisco, CA | 2005 | ||
Accent On Youth | Samson Raphaelson | Broadway | 2009 |
|-
|Film Executive Producer
|-
|I Think I Do, Strand Releasing||1997
|-
|Waking Dreams (short film), Big Film Shorts||2004
|-
|Television Executive Producer
|-
|Movies
|-
|(With others) Dinner with Friends, HBO||2001
The Daryl Roth Creative Spirit Award
editDedicated to nurturing and supporting theatre artists, is given annually to an artist who has demonstrated exceptional talent and promise in his or her field. Recent recipients include:
- Directors: Michael Wilson, Michael Mayer, Mark Brokaw, Steven Williford;
- Playwrights: Sinan Ünel, Sybille Pearson, Edwin Sanchez, Kia Corthron, Karen Hartman;
- Designer G.W. Mercier;
- Actor Debra Monk;
- Muscial Theater Works: organization devoted to creating and developing new musicals, 1983 to 2004 (closed)
- The New Dramatists, a center for the support of playwrights [7]
Factoids
edit- Daryl and Steven Roth purchased the Montauk home of convicted Wall Street felon, Bernie Madoff in October, 2009. [8]
TO DO; ck plays vs her webiste nd add authors and add pulitzer mentions.
ck googl books
File:Proof, A Play.jpg
References
edit- ^ a b Ian Parker, Annals of Theatre, “How to Be a Producer,” The New Yorker, November 4, 2002, p. 60 abstract (subscription required for full text online).
- ^ Sisters, A Practical, Helpful Exploration of the Intimate and Complete Bond between Female Siblings, Dale V. Atkins, 1984 Published by Arbor House
- ^ article about Dr. Dale Atkins Westport News, April 16, 2004
- ^ Forbes.com capsule biography of Steven Roth
- ^ Interview with Daryl Roth - video interview, on "Obsessed" with Samantha Ettus
- ^ Film Reference.com listing for Daryl Roth
- ^ New Dramatists website
- ^ "Vornado Realty's Roth Buys Madoff's Montauk Estate" Wall Street Journal, October 23, 2009.
Video interview American Theatre Wing
http://www.celebrityparentsmag.com/magazine/
Great Producers: Visionaries of American Theater, by Iris Dorbian, Allworth Press, 2008, ISBN 978-1581156461
External links
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