Will Arbery
Will Arbery is an American playwright, screenwriter and TV writer, known for his plays Heroes of the Fourth Turning, Plano, and Evanston Salt Costs Climbing.
Heroes of the Fourth Turning was a finalist for the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and Arbery was the recipient of the 2020 Whiting Award for Drama.
Early life and education
Arbery was born in Nashua, New Hampshire, but grew up in Dallas, Texas, the only boy in a family of seven sisters.[1] He attended Cistercian Preparatory School in Irving, Texas. His parents, Glenn and Virginia Arbery, taught at the Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture before relocating to Wyoming, where they both taught at Wyoming Catholic College. Arbery's father took over as president of the college in 2016. Arbery received his BA in English and drama from Kenyon College in 2011 and his MFA in writing for the screen and stage from Northwestern University in 2015.[2]
Career
Plano was first produced by Clubbed Thumb as a part of their 2018 Summerworks season, followed by an off-Broadway run at The Connelly Theater in 2019.[3] The New Yorker described the play as a "David Lynch script performed as screwball comedy";[4] Helen Shaw, writing in Time Out New York, wrote "It’s delicious to see a playwright binding genres so confidently (body-double horror and rueful family comedy), but the real pleasure is in how much Plano manages to bend how you perceive reality beyond the proscenium";[5] and Vulture proclaimed that "Plano is a fiercely smart contemporary dream play".[6]
Heroes Of The Fourth Turning
In October 2019, Arbery received critical acclaim for his play Heroes of the Fourth Turning, which made its world premiere off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons.[7] The play explores a group of young Catholic intellectuals at a college reunion. Arbery’s idea for the play “crystallized” after he was personally dissatisfied with the media’s coverage of Trump supporters after the 2016 presidential election.[8] It was named one of the best plays of 2019 by The New York Times[9] and one of the eight pieces of Pop Culture that Defined the Trump Era by Politico.[10]
Heroes of the Fourth Turning went on to win a number of awards, including being named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Drama.[11] According to Jesse Green of The New York Times, this “astonishing new play,” directed “with nerves of steel” by Danya Taymor, “explores the lives and ideas of conservatives with affection, understanding and deep knowledge — if not, ultimately, approval.”[12]
According to Sarah Holdren of New York Magazine, “Will Arbery’s Heroes of the Fourth Turning is so frighteningly well written, it’s hard to write about… Arbery’s world [is] murky yet lit by lightning, lyrical and scary, brave and terribly gentle. Arbery is a virtuoso of dream language and logic. He’s an unostentatious surrealist—a Magritte, not a Dali—rigorous and playful and full of love for his subjects, even when, as in Heroes, those subjects are themselves fraught with confusion, aggression, and fearful, fearsome indoctrination.”[13]
Vinson Cunningham of The New Yorker called the play “A formally lovely, subtly horrifying play about the death rattle of ideologies and the thin line between devotion and delusion."[14]
Film and television
Arbery worked as a writer on the upcoming season of Succession and has multiple TV and film projects in development, including with HBO, A24, and BBC Film.[15]
Style
Upon receiving the Whiting Award, the committee said "Despite their wit and charm, Will Arbery's complicated and generous plays are deadly serious... Intellectually audacious, formally sly, he has the courage to let these characters seize the stage with impassioned arguments about morality and meaning. He knows how to make ideas incandescent in time and space and his ear for the rhythms of speech is impeccable, yet he always cracks a window in naturalism, letting a shaft of eeriness in. His writing moves to the beat of multiple metronomes: the rhythm of thought, the counterpoint of competing logics, the heartbeat of human longing."[16]
Works
- Heroes of the Fourth Turning, 2019, Playwrights Horizons
- Plano, 2018, Clubbed Thumb
- Evanston Salt Costs Climbing, 2018, New Neighborhood
- Corsicana, development at Playwrights Horizons & Ojai Playwrights Conference
- Wheelchair, 3 Hole Press[17]
- You Hateful Things, development at the Public, SPACE on Ryder Farm, and NYTW Dartmouth Residency[18]
Awards and honors
- 2020: Heroes of the Fourth Turning – Pulitzer Prize Finalist for Drama[11]
- 2020: Whiting Award for Drama[19]
- 2020: Heroes of the Fourth Turning – Obie Award for Playwriting[20]
- 2020: Heroes of the Fourth Turning – New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play[21]
- 2020: Heroes of the Fourth Turning – Lucille Lortel Award for Best Play[22]
- 2020: Heroes of the Fourth Turning – Outer Critics Circle John Gassner Playwriting Award[23]
- 2019: Tow Playwright in Residence, Playwrights Horizons[24]
- 2017: The Mongoose – Stage Raw Award[25]
- 2016: Edes Foundation Prize[26]
References
- ^ "Will Arbery". Claire Rosen & Samuel Edes Foundation.
- ^ "Will Arbery '15 MFA". Northwestern University. Archived from the original on March 1, 2022. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
- ^ Sims, Joey (19 April 2019). "Review: Plano at the Connelly Theater". Exeunt. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
- ^ Romig, Rollo. "Plano". The New Yorker.
- ^ Shaw, Helen (13 April 2019). "Plano". Time Out New York. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
- ^ "Theater Review: The Dizzying Whirl of a Messy Texas Family in Plano". 13 April 2019.
- ^ "Will Arbery, Playwright of Heroes of the Fourth Turning, Wins 2020 Whiting Award for Drama". Broadway.com.
- ^ Wallenberg, Christopher (8 September 2022). "Catholic conservatives who grapple with culture, faith, and politics are people 'Heroes' playwright Will Arbery knows well". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
- ^ Brantley, Ben; Green, Jesse; Collins-Hughes, Laura; Soloski, Alexis; Vincentelli, Elisabeth (3 December 2019). "Best Theater of 2019". The New York Times.
- ^ "The Eight Pieces of Pop Culture That Defined the Trump Era". Politico. January 2, 2021.
- ^ a b "Finalist: Heroes of the Fourth Turning, by Will Arbery". Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
- ^ Green, Jesse (8 October 2019). "Review: In 'Heroes of the Fourth Turning,' a Red-State Unicorn". The New York Times.
- ^ Holdren, Sara (7 October 2019). "Theater Review: Deep in Red America with Heroes of the Fourth Turning". Vulture.
- ^ Cunningham, Vinson (10 October 2019). "A Play About the Nuances of Conservatism in the Trump Era". The New Yorker.
- ^ "Playwright & Filmmaker". Will Arbery. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
- ^ "Will Arbery". Whiting Awards.
- ^ https://www.michigandaily.com/arts/will-arberys-wheelchair-depicts-a-dead-end-in-gentrifying-nyc/
- ^ https://newplayexchange.org/plays/495017/you-hateful-things
- ^ Arbery, Will (March 25, 2020). "Will Arbery, Drama".
- ^ Paulson, Michael (July 15, 2020). "Obies Honor 'A Strange Loop' and 'Heroes of the Fourth Turning'" – via NYTimes.com.
- ^ Gans, Andrew (16 April 2020). "Heroes of the Fourth Turning and A Strange Loop Named Winners of 2020 New York Drama Critics' Circle Awards". Playbill. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
- ^ "Octet and Heroes of the Fourth Turning Lead 2020 Lucille Lortel Award Winners | Playbill".
- ^ "How Theatre Award Ceremonies Are Handling the Coronavirus Shutdown | Playbill".
- ^ "Will Arbery's Heroes of the Fourth Turning Finds Its Off-Broadway Cast | Playbill".
- ^ "Will Arbery".
- ^ "Will Arbery". Claire Rosen & Samuel Edes Foundation. Retrieved 6 November 2022.