{"title":"Sam Shepard","role":"Playwright","image":"","lede":null,"content":"<!-- wp:paragraph -->\r\n<p><\/p>\r\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\r\n\r\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\r\n<p><strong>SAM SHEPHARD (Playwright)<\/strong>\u2019s first New York plays, <em>Cowboys and The Rock Garden<\/em>, were produced by <em>Theatre Genesis<\/em> in 1963.<\/p>\r\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->\r\n\r\n<!-- wp:paragraph -->\r\n<p>For several seasons, he worked with off-off-Broadway theatre groups including La MaMa and Caffe Cino. Eleven of his plays won Obie Awards, including <em>Chicago<\/em>, <em>The Tooth of the Crime<\/em>, and <em>Curse of the Starving Class<\/em>. Other award-winning plays include <em>Fool for Love<\/em>, <em>True West,<\/em> <em>A Lie of the Mind, <\/em>and <em>Buried Child<\/em>, for which he won a Pulitzer Prize in 1979. In 1986, Shepard was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters and received the Gold Medal for Drama from the Academy in 1992. He was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame two years later. As a writer and director, he filmed <em>Far North <\/em>and <em>Silent Tongue. <\/em>As an actor, he appeared in numerous films, including <em>The Right Stuff<\/em>,<em> Days of Heaven<\/em> and <em>Resurrection<\/em>. His final works of prose, <em>The One Inside <\/em>and <em>Spy of the First Person, <\/em>were published in 2017, the year of his death.<\/p>\r\n<!-- \/wp:paragraph -->","website":"","alt":""}