{"title":"Rupert Holmes","role":"Adaptation","image":"","lede":null,"content":"<p><strong>RUPERT HOLMES<\/strong> (Adaptation)<strong> <\/strong>is a 2023 <em>New York Times <\/em>bestselling author and was the first individual to singly win Tony awards for book, music, and lyrics, this for <em>The Mystery of Edwin Drood<\/em>, which also won the Tony for Best Musical. The Drama Desk awarded him the identical honors plus Best Orchestration. He is a recipient of the Bergeret Living Legend award from The New York Gilbert and Sullivan Players, ASCAP\u2019s George M. Cohan Award, and an honorary doctorate from The Manhattan School of Music. Additional Broadway & LORT include: <em>Say Goodnight Gracie<\/em> (Tony Nomination, Best Play); <em>Curtains<\/em> (Drama Desk award, Best Book, Tony nominations Best Book, Best Add\u2019l Lyrics); <em>Accomplice<\/em> (Edgar Award, Mystery Writers of America); Roundabout Theatre\u2019s <em>The Mystery of Edwin Drood<\/em> (2013 Tony nomination, Best Revival), the current <em>All Things Equal: The Life and Trials of Ruth Bader Ginsburg; The Nutty Professor<\/em> (libretto by Holmes, music by Marvin Hamlisch), and <em>The Picture of Dorian Gray<\/em> (music and libretto by Holmes, The British Museum). He created and wrote all four seasons of the acclaimed AMC period dramedy <em>Remember WENN<\/em>; contributed songs to the Golden Globe-winning score of <em>A Star is Born<\/em>; wrote, arranged and conducted platinum recordings by Barbra Streisand as well as his own Billboard top ten hits. He dedicates his work on <em>Pirates<\/em> to his brother Richard, a fixture of The Met and NYGASP, who as a boy steeped him in the entire Gilbert and Sullivan canon.<\/p>","website":"","alt":""}