Encyclopedia > Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play
A Tony Award for the Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play has been awarded since 1949. What is popularly called the Tony Award (formally, the Antoinette Perry Award for Excellence in Theatre) is an annual award celebrating achievements in live American theater, including musical theater, primarily honoring productions on Broadway in New York. ...
1949 (MCMXLIX) was a common year starting on Saturday (the link is to a full 1949 calendar). ...
1940s
Arthur Kennedy in Champion. ...
Cover to the Penguin Group edition. ...
1950s Eli Wallach in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Eli Wallach (born 7 December 1915) is an American film, TV and stage actor. ...
The Rose Tattoo is a Tennessee Williams play. ...
John Philip Cromwell (11 September 1901 – 19 November 1943) was a submariner of the United States Navy. ...
The point of no return or the Rubicon is the point beyond which someone, or some group of people, must continue on their current course of action. ...
John Williams (April 15, 1902 â May 5, 1983) was a British stage, film, and television actor. ...
Dial M for Murder (1954) is a U.S. film directed by Alfred Hitchcock starring Grace Kelly and Ray Milland as a married couple. ...
Tea and Sympathy is a stage play by Robert Anderson that was adapted by Vincente Minnelli into a 1956 movie starring Deborah Kerr. ...
Actor Francis L. Sullivan in Night and the City (1950) Francis L. Sullivan (January 6, 1903 - November 19, 1956) was a London-born film and stage actor. ...
Witness for the Prosecution is a play by Agatha Christie, which has been twice made into a film. ...
Edward James Begley (March 25, 1901 – April 28, 1970) was an American film actor. ...
Inherit the Wind is a play by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee. ...
Anthony Franciosa in the 1989 Twilight Zone episode Crazy as a Soup Sandwich Anthony Franciosa, born Anthony Papaleo (October 25, 1928 â January 19, 2006), was an American actor. ...
A Hatful of Rain is a 1957 dramatic film. ...
Griffith as Andy Taylor on The Andy Griffith Show Andy Samuel Griffith (born June 1, 1926) is an American actor, singer, writer and producer from Mount Airy, North Carolina. ...
Anthony Quayle Sir John Anthony Quayle (7 September 1913 â 20 October 1989) was an English actor and director. ...
An anonymous portrait, often believed to show Christopher Marlowe. ...
Fritz Weaver on The Twilight Zone Fritz Weaver is a prolific American actor and voice actor. ...
The Chalk Garden by Enid Bagnold is: A 1955 Broadway play produced by Irene M. Selznick. ...
Frank Conroy (January 15, 1936 - April 6, 2005) was an American author, born in New York, New York. ...
Separate Tables is a 1958 film, based on the play by Terence Rattigan and directed by Delbert Mann. ...
Robards in Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) Jason Nelson Robards Jr. ...
Long Days Journey into Night is a dramatic play in four acts by Eugene ONeill, generally considered to be his masterwork. ...
Henry Jones (1912 - 1999) was a film actor. ...
Sunrise at Campobello is a 1960 film which tells the story of the struggle by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt against polio. ...
Theodore Bikel. ...
Actor Pat Hingle (born July 19, 1924) has a long list of television and movie credits to his name, going back to 1948. ...
Dark at the Top of the Stairs is a 1960 film with Shirley Winters. ...
George Relph (born January 27, 1888 in Cullercoats, England, died April 24, 1960 in London, England) was a British actor. ...
The Entertainer was a 1960 film which told the story of a failing stage performer who tried to keep his career going even as his personal life fell apart. ...
Charles Sherman Ruggles (February 8, 1886 - December 23, 1970) was a comic American actor. ...
Marc Connelly photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1937 Marcus Cook Connelly (December 13, 1890 - December 21, 1980) was a member of the Algonquin roundtable and composed several musicals with playwright George S. Kaufman: 1921 Dulcy 1922 Merton of the Movies 1925 Beggar on Horseback Categories: 1890 births | 1980 deaths ...
George Grizzard (b. ...
Walter Matthau Walter Matthau (October 1, 1920 â July 1, 2000) was an Academy Award winning American comedy actor. ...
Once More, With Feeling is a one-off musical episode of the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. ...
Actor Robert Morse photo taken by Carl Van Vechten, 1958 Robert Morse, (born May 18, 1931) is an American actor. ...
George C Scott as General Buck Turgidson in Stanley Kubricks George Campbell Scott (October 18, 1927 â September 22, 1999) was a film/stage actor, director, and producer. ...
1960s McDowall as a child actor Roderick Andrew Anthony Jude McDowall (September 17, 1928 â October 3, 1998) was a British actor. ...
Warren Beatty Henry Warren Beaty (born March 30, 1937), now known as Warren Beatty, is an American actor, producer, screenwriter, and director. ...
Harry Guardino (December 23, 1925 â July 17, 1995) was an American television actor. ...
Rip Torn in Men in Black. ...
Sweet Bird of Youth is a Western Australian up coming band currently recording an Ep with Sound Lab Studio. ...
Lawrence Winters (1915–1965), baritone, was an African American opera singer during the 1940s. ...
Martin Gabel (born June 19, 1912 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; died May 22, 1986 in New York, New York, USA from a heart attack) was an American actor, film director and film producer. ...
This article is being considered for deletion in accordance with Wikipedias deletion policy. ...
This page is about the movie. ...
A Shot in the Dark is a 1964 film directed by Blake Edwards and is the second installment (and considered by many to be the best) in the Pink Panther series. ...
Joseph Campanella (born November 21, 1933 in New York, New York) is an American actor who has appeared in over 200 TV and film roles since 1955, including a recurring role on the soap opera The Bold and the Beautiful from 1997 to 2003. ...
Ross (Ros in Scottish Gaelic) is a region of Scotland and a former mormaerdom, earldom and county. ...
Alan Wolf Arkin (born March 26, 1934) is an American actor. ...
Barry Gordon (born December 21, 1948) is an American film and television actor. ...
A Thousand Clowns is a 1965 film which tells the story of a young boy who lives with his eccentric uncle, who is forced to conform to society in order to keep custody of the boy. ...
The Honorable Paul Rogers is a former member of the US House of Representatives, where he served the citizens of Floridas eleventh Congressional District for 24 years. ...
Frank Silvera (July 24, 1914âJune 11, 1970) was an African American actor and theatrical director. ...
Hume Blake Cronyn, OC (July 18, 1911 â June 15, 2003) was a stage and film actor. ...
A detail of the engraving of Daniel Maclises 1842 painting The Play-scene in Hamlet, portraying the moment when the guilt of Claudius is revealed. ...
Lee Allen (1926 - 1994) was a tenor saxophone player. ...
Michael Dunn (born Gary Neil Miller on October 20, 1934 in Shattuck, Oklahoma; died August 30, 1973 in London) was an American actor and singer. ...
Jonathan Jack Albertson (June 16, 1907 - November 25, 1981) was considered a complete entertainer from the old school. ...
The Subject Was Roses is a 1968 film which tells the story of a young soldier who comes home to find that his parents marriage is on the verge of collapse. ...
Murray Hamilton Murray Hamilton (born March 24, 1923; died September 1, 1986) was an American stage, screen, and television character actor. ...
Martin Sheen Ramón Gerardo Antonio Estévez (born August 3, 1940), better known as Martin Sheen, is an American actor, best known for his roles in the film Apocalypse Now, and most recently as President Josiah Bartlet on the television drama The West Wing. ...
Clarence Williams III (born August 21, 1939) is an American actor. ...
Patrick Magee (31 March 1924 - 14 August 1982) was a Tony Award winning British actor best known for his collaborations with Samuel Beckett and his role as the victimised writer Mr Alexander in Stanley Kubricks film A Clockwork Orange. ...
The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade, published in 1963, is a play by Peter Weiss, directed both on stage and screen by Peter Brook. ...
Cactus Flower is a 1969 film with Goldie Hawn. ...
Generation (From the Greek γιγνομαι), also known as procreation, is the act of producing offspring. ...
For Eamon Kelly (Actor) see Eamon Kelly (Actor) Eamon Michael Kelly is the President Emeritus of Tulane University, having served as its president for seventeen years. ...
Sir Ian Holm Sir Ian Holm CBE (born 12 September 1931), born as Ian Holm Cuthbert, is an English actor. ...
The Homecoming is a play by Harold Pinter, first published in 1965. ...
The School for Scandal, a play by Richard Brinsley Sheridan, is a comedy of manners. ...
Sydney Walker (May 5, 1921 - September 30, 1994) was an American actor. ...
The Wild Duck is a play by Henrik Ibsen, written in 1884. ...
James Patterson is an award winning American author. ...
The Birthday Party is the second play by Harold Pinter. ...
Paul Hecht (b. ...
DVD cover Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead is a humorous, absurdist, tragic and existentialist play by Tom Stoppard, first staged in 1966. ...
John Wood (born 1930) is an English actor. ...
Al Pacino (right) with Robert Duvall in The Godfather. ...
Richard S. Castellano (September 4, 1933 â December 10, 1988) was an actor. ...
Lovers and Other Strangers is a 1970 film with Richard Castellano. ...
Anthony Roberts is an Australian politician, elected as a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly. ...
Play It Again Sam (also known by its acronym, PIAS) is an international record label. ...
1970s Ken Howard (born Kenneth Joseph Howard, Jr. ...
Childs Play is a 1988 horror film, written by Don Mancini and directed by Tom Holland. ...
Dennis King (born 1941) is an American investigative journalist. ...
ÃA Patriot For Me is a play by John Osborne based on the true story of Alfred Redl. ...
Donald Pickering is an English actor born in 1933. ...
Vincent Gardenia (January 7, 1922 - December 9, 1992) was an American stage, film, and television actor. ...
The Prisoner of Second Avenue is an American comedic (somewhat of a black comedy) play that ran on Broadway from November 1971 until September 1973. ...
Douglas Rain is a Canadian actor and narrator born in 1928 in Winnipeg, Manitoba. ...
Lee Richardson (b. ...
Lenny is a 1974 film about the life of the comedian Lenny Bruce, starring Dustin Hoffman. ...
John Lithgow John Arthur Lithgow (pronounced lith-go) (born October 19, 1945 in Rochester, New York) is a stage, television, and film actor best known for his starring role as Dick Solomon in the 1996-2001 NBC sitcom 3rd Rock from the Sun. ...
Much Ado About Nothing is a comedy by William Shakespeare. ...
Don Juan is a legendary fictional libertine, whose story has been told many times by different authors. ...
Hayward Morse (born September 13, 1947, London, England) is a British stage and voice actor. ...
A 1974 film starring Alan Bates, based on the play of the same name by Simon Gray. ...
Ed Flanders (December 29, 1934-February 22, 1995) was an American actor best known for his roles as Lieutenant Bricker in the television series M*A*S*H and Doctor Donald Westphall in the television series He was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota on December 29, 1934. ...
René Murat Auberjonois (born June 1, 1940 in New York, New York) is an American actor best known for his early 1980s role as Clayton Endicott III on the television show Benson and his role as Odo on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. ...
Neil Simons The Good Doctor is a play composed of a series of scenes in which the only connecting thread is the character of the Writer, a curious amalgamation of Simon himself and Anton Chekhov. ...
Frank Langella (born January 1, 1940 in Bayonne, New Jersey) is an American stage and film actor. ...
Seascape is a play by the US playwright Edward Albee. ...
Larry Blyden (June 23, 1925 - June 6, 1975) was an American actor. ...
Absurd Person Singular is a 1972 play by Alan Ayckbourn. ...
Leonard Frey (born September 4, 1938 in Brooklyn, New York; died August 24, 1988 in New York) was an actor. ...
Philip Locke (born 29 March 1928 in London, England) is an actor. ...
Sherlock Holmes as imagined by the seminal Holmesian artist, Sidney Edward Paget, in The Strand magazine. ...
George Rose (17 June 1744 — 13 January 1818) was a British politician. ...
Edward Herrmann, (born July 21, 1943 in Washington, D.C.), is one of the most recognizable character actors in American television and movies. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
Barry Bostwick (born February 24, 1946 in San Mateo, California) is an American actor, particularly associated with made-for-television movies and mini-series. ...
They Knew What They Wanted is a 1940 film with Carole Lombard, Charles Laughton, William Gargan, Harry Carey, and Karl Malden (in his film debut). ...
October 4, 1919, in Brooklyn, New York. ...
Woody Woodpecker first appeared in the film Knock Knock on November 25, 1940. ...
Jonathan Pryce as Sam Lowry in Brazil Jonathan Pryce (b. ...
A comedian (also comedienne, female) is a person who attempts to make people laugh through a variety of methods, normally through joke telling. ...
Bob Dishy, born in Brooklyn, New York, is an actor known for his deadpan humor. ...
Note: Sly Fox is also the name of a 1980s pop music duo Sly Fox is a comedic play by Larry Gelbart, based on Ben Jonsons Volpone (The Fox), updating the setting from Renaissance Venice to 19th century San Francisco, and changing the tone from satire to farce. ...
Laurence George Luckinbill (born November 24, 1934 in Fort Smith, Arkansas) is an American television and film actor. ...
Look up da in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Freeman in Batman Begins, 2005 Morgan Freeman (born June 1, 1937) is an Academy Award-winning American actor and film director. ...
Victor Joseph Garber, born March 16, 1949, in London, Ontario, Canada, is a film, stage, and television actor of Russian Jewish descent. ...
Chapter Two is a 1979 film which tells the story of a man whose first wifes death interferes with his starting a new relationship. ...
Michael Gough (born November 23, 1917 in Malaya) is an English character actor. ...
The term may refer to Bedroom farce -- a genre of comedy Bedroom Farce -- a comedy by Alan Ayckbourn. ...
Bob Balaban (born August 16, 1945 in Chicago) is an American actor and director. ...
The Inspector General or The Government Inspector (in Russian, РевизоÑ) is a satirical play by 19th century Russian playwright and novelist Nikolai Gogol, published and produced in 1836. ...
Joseph Maher (December 29, 1933 - July 17, 1998) was a character actor born in Westport, County Mayo, Ireland and educated by the Irish Christian Brothers. ...
Edward James Olmos as Commander William Adama on Battlestar Galatica Edward James Olmos (born February 24, 1947) is an American actor. ...
Written By Luis Valdez, this play tells the story of Henry Reyna, a pachuco gangster and his gang, who were unfairly prosecuted and thrown in jail for a murder they did not commit. ...
1980s This article is about David Dukes, the character actor. ...
Poster for the Royal National Theatre production of Bent Bent is a 1979 play (which starred Richard Gere in its original production) by Martin Sherman that was adapted into a 1997 movie by director Sean Mathias. ...
George Hearn is an American actor, primarily in Broadway musical theatre. ...
Earle Hyman (born October 11, 1926) is an American actor. ...
Brian Backer (b. ...
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The Little Foxes is a 1941 film directed by William Wyler and starring Bette Davis & Teresa Wright. ...
This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
Mokae with Donald Sutherland in the film A Dry White Season Zakes Mokae is a South African-born actor. ...
Edward Petherbridge is a British actor. ...
The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby, (or Nicholas Nickleby for short) is a comic novel of Charles Dickens. ...
David Threlfall (born 12 October 1953, Manchester) is a British actor known for his role as Frank Gallagher in the Channel 4 comedy-drama series Shameless. ...
Matthew Broderick (born March 21, 1962) is an American film and stage actor who is perhaps best known for his role as the title character in Ferris Buellers Day Off. ...
Brighton Beach Memoirs is a semi-autobiographical coming-of-age comedy by Neil Simon. ...
Stephen Moore (born December 11, 1937) is a British actor from Brixton, London. ...
Alls Well That Ends Well is a comedy by William Shakespeare, which is also considered one of his problem plays. ...
Joe Mantegna as Detective Will Girardi in Joan of Arcadia Joe Mantegnas character, Fat Tony in The Simpsons Joseph Anthony Mantegna, Jr. ...
Glengarry Glen Ross is the title of a 1984 Pulitzer Prize-winning play by David Mamet. ...
In the words of AC Ward in his introduction to Bernard Shawâs play Heartbreak House âthe prime theme⦠was, that cultured, leisured Europe (words used at the beginning of the Preface) was drifting to destruction because those in a position to guide it to safety had failed to learn...
Robert Prosky (born on 13 December 1930 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA) is an American character actor who has appeared in such films as Christine, The Natural, Broadcast News, Green Card, Hoffa, Rudy and Dead Man Walking. ...
Douglas Seale provided the voice of The Sultan in the movie Aladdin. ...
Noises Off is a stage play by British author Michael Frayn which premièred at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith, London, in 1982 (ISBN 1400031605); and a 1992 comedy film directed by Peter Bogdanovich based on Frayns play, with a screenplay by Marty Kaplan. ...
Barry Miller (born 6 February 1958 in Los Angeles, California) is an American actor. ...
Biloxi Blues, a play by Neil Simon, is the second in what is known as Simons Eugene Trilogy, the first being Brighton Beach Memoirs, and the third being Broadway Bound. ...
Charles Dutton (born January 30, 1951 in Baltimore, Maryland) is an American actor/director. ...
Ma Raineys Black Bottom is a 1982 play; one of a ten-play cycle by August Wilson that chronicles 20th Century African American experience. ...
William Hurt in Lost in Space. ...
Hurlyburly (1984) is a play written by David Rabe. ...
John Mahoney John Mahoney (born June 20, 1940) is an English-born American actor best known for playing Martin Crane (Marty) in the popular TV show Frasier, as Kelsey Grammers character Dr. Frasier Cranes retired policeman father. ...
Peter Gallagher At i Cucini Restaurant, Santa Monica. ...
Long Days Journey into Night is a dramatic play in four acts by Eugene ONeill, generally considered to be his masterwork. ...
Charles Keating Charles Keating (born October 22, 1941) is a British actor. ...
Loot is a play by Joe Orton. ...
John Randolph (June 1, 1915 - February 24, 2004) was a prolific Tony Award-winning actor. ...
Broadway Bound is a play by Neil Simon. ...
Frankie Faison, often credited as Frankie R. Faison is one of those actors which many people may recognise, but not know his name. ...
Fences is a play by August Wilson; it was his second play to go to Broadway. ...
Jamey Sheridan (born July 12 1951 Pasadena, California) is an American actor. ...
All My Sons (1948) VHS All My Sons is the name of a 1947 play by Arthur Miller, a 1948 movie based on the play, and a 1986 made-for-TV movie, also based on the play. ...
Courtney B. Vance as Assistant District Attorney Ron Carver in Law & Order: Criminal Intent Courtney B. Vance (born March 12, 1960 in Detroit, Michigan) is an American actor. ...
B.D. Wong in L&O:SVU B.D. Wong (Chinese: 黿¦®äº®; Hanyu Pinyin: ; born October 24, 1962) is an openly gay American actor who has had roles in All American Girl, Oz, Jurassic Park and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. ...
M. Butterfly is a 1988 play by David Henry Hwang, which deals with themes about cultural stereotypes of East vs West (see Orientalism), and is loosely based on the real life relationship between Bernard Boursicot and Shi Pei Pu. ...
Delroy Lindo Delroy Lindo (born November 18, 1952, Eltham, London, England, UK) is a British born, American actor. ...
Joe Turners Come and Gone is a play by Pulitzer Prize winning playwright August Wilson. ...
The Heidi Chronicles is a play by Wendy Wasserstein, which won the 1989 Pulitzer Prize in drama, as well as the 1989 Tony Award. ...
Peter Frechette is a television actor. ...
Eric Stoltz Eric Stoltz (born September 30, 1961) is an American actor widely considered one of the most prominent and diverse performers in independent film. ...
Our Town is a play by Thornton Wilder that is set in the fictional community of Grovers Corners, which is based loosely on the actual town of Peterborough, NH. (At the time, Wilders residence was at the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough). ...
A ghetto is an area where people from a specific racial or ethnic background or united in a given culture or religion live as a group, voluntarily or involuntarily, in milder or stricter seclusion. ...
1990s Charles Durning Charles Durning (born February 28, 1923 in Highland Falls, New York) is an American actor of stage and screen, born to an impoverished Irish American Catholic family, which he left as soon as possible to ease the financial pressure on his mother. ...
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is a play by Tennessee Williams. ...
August Wilsons The Piano Lesson was the 1990 Pulitzer Prize winner for drama, and concerned a brother and a sister arguing about whether or not they should sell their family piano. ...
Terry Kinney(b. ...
The Grapes of Wrath is a work of fiction written by John Steinbeck and published in 1939. ...
Gary Sinise (born March 17, 1955, in Blue Island, Illinois) is an Emmy winning American actor and film director. ...
Spacey as Lex Luthor in the upcoming film Superman Returns Kevin Spacey Fowler (born July 26, 1959), better known as Kevin Spacey, is an American actor and London-based theatre director. ...
Lost in Yonkers is a play by Neil Simon. ...
Adam Arkin (born August 19, 1956) is an American television, film, and stage actor. ...
Dylan Baker is an American actor best known for playing supporting roles in both major studio movies (Spider-Man 2 as Dr. Curt Conners a. ...
Stephen Lang is a film actor from New York City, New York, who started in theatre on Broadway. ...
Morpheus in The Matrix Revolutions. ...
Two Trains Running is a play in two acts by American playwright August Wilson. ...
Roscoe Lee Browne (born 2 May 1925 in Woodbury, New Jersey) is a prolific American character actor (Topaz) and voiceover actor of film, theatre and television. ...
Željko Ivanek (born 15 August 1957) is a television, film, and stage actor. ...
Tony Shalhoub (born October 9, 1953 in Green Bay, Wisconsin), an American actor, is currently the star and executive producer of the USA Network television show Monk in which he plays an obsessive compulsive private detective. ...
Stephen Spinella is an American actor born 11 October 1956 in Naples, Italy. ...
Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes is a play in two parts by American playwright Tony Kushner. ...
Robert Sean Leonard as Dr. James Wilson on House Robert Sean Leonard (born Robert Lawrence Leonard on February 28, 1969, in Westwood, New Jersey) is an American actor who is most noted for his role as an aspiring actor, Neil Perry, in the 1989 movie Dead Poets Society. ...
Candida is a comedy by playwright George Bernard Shaw. ...
Joe Mantello (born 27 December 1962) in Rockford, Illinois is a Tony Award-winning American actor and director. ...
Jeffrey Wright as Jean-Michel Basquiat in Basquiat (1996). ...
Larry Bryggman Larry Bryggman (born Arvid Laurence Bryggman on December 21, 1938) is an American actor. ...
DVD cover for the 1955 film, showing stars William Holden and Kim Novak Picnic is a 1955 Cinemascope color film which tells the story of an ex-college football star turned drifter who arrives in a small Kansas town on Labor Day and is drawn to a girl whos...
Gregory Itzin as President Charles Logan on 24. ...
The Kentucky Cycle is a series of nine one act plays by Robert Schenkkan that tell the story of several generations of the Rowan Family. ...
John Glover (born August 7, 1944 in Salisbury, Maryland) is an American actor, best known for a range of villainous roles in films and television, including Lionel Luthor in Smallville. ...
Love! Valour! Compassion! is a 1995 play by Terrence McNally following the summer of a group of gay men and their family and friends at a summer home in New York. ...
Anthony Heald is an American actor best known for portraying Hannibal Lecters smarmy psychiatrist, Frederick Chilton, in The Silence of the Lambs and Red Dragon, and as deputy principal Scott Guber in Boston Public. ...
Law in The Wisdom of Crocodiles (US title: Immortality) David Jude Law (born December 29, 1972, in Lewisham, South London, England) is an Academy Award nominated English actor. ...
Seven Guitars is a 1995 Play written by noted American playwright August Wilson. ...
James Gammon (born April 20, 1940 in Newman, Illinois) is an American actor. ...
Buried Child is a play by Sam Shepard that won the 1979 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and launched Shepard to national fame as a playwright. ...
The word holiday has related but different meanings in English-speaking countries. ...
A Dolls House (Original Norwegian title: Et dukkehjem) is a 1879 play by Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen. ...
The Last Night of Ballyhoo is a two act play written by Alfred Uhry. ...
The Little Foxes is a 1941 film directed by William Wyler and starring Bette Davis & Teresa Wright. ...
A play by Horton Foote. ...
Tom Murphy (born 1935) is an Irish dramatist who has worked closely with the Abbey Theatre. ...
The Beauty Queen of Leenane is a drama by Martin McDonagh. ...
Ah, Wilderness! is a play by Eugene ONeill, and has the distinction of being the only true comedy he would ever write. ...
The factual accuracy of this article is disputed. ...
Several individuals have the surname Ivanov: Alexander Ivanov, Russian artist (the chess player of the same name is described on the same page) Georgi Ivanov, Bulgarian cosmonaut Igor Ivanov, Russian foreign minister Porfiry Ivanov, Russian mystic who promoted a health system called Detka. Sergei Ivanov, Russian defence minister Sergei Ivanov...
Frank Woodley is the stage name of Australian comedian Frank Wood. ...
Born January 13, 1960 in Gurnee, Illinois, Kevin Anderson is of Polish and Irish extraction. ...
Cover to the Penguin Group edition. ...
2000s Roy Dotrice Roy Dotrice (born 26 May 1923) is a British actor. ...
Daniel Davis as Niles in The Nanny For other people by this name, see Daniel Davis (disambiguation). ...
Derek Mecham Smith (born on January 18, 1975 in American Fork, Utah) is a linebacker in the NFL. He was drafted by the Washington Redskins in the 3rd round (80th overall) in 1997 NFL Draft. ...
Robert Sean Leonard as Dr. James Wilson on House Robert Sean Leonard (born Robert Lawrence Leonard on February 28, 1969, in Westwood, New Jersey) is an American actor who is most noted for his role as an aspiring actor, Neil Perry, in the 1989 movie Dead Poets Society. ...
The Invention of Love is a play by Tom Stoppard portraying the life of poet A.E. Housman, focusing specifically on his homosexuality and love for a college roommate. ...
Note: there have been several other people named Charles Brown Charles Brown (September 13, 1922 - January 21, 1999) was an American blues singer and pianist, originally a member of The Blazers. ...
King Hedley II is August Wilsons decades play set in the 1980s, 1985, to be specific. ...
Proof is a play by David Auburn which won the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the 2001 Tony Award for Best Play. ...
Michael V. Hayden as Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence. ...
Maximilian Schell and Richard Widmark in Judgment at Nuremberg Judgment at Nuremberg is a 1961 film which gives a fictionalized account of the post-World War II Nuremberg Trials. ...
Ben Shenkman was born September 26th 1968 in New York. ...
Frank Langella (born January 1, 1940 in Bayonne, New Jersey) is an American stage and film actor. ...
Cover to the 1953 book The Crucible is a play that was written by Arthur Miller in 1952. ...
Sam Robards is an American actor. ...
The Man Who Had All the Luck was an early (1944) play by Arthur Miller. ...
Stephen Tobolowsky (born May 30, 1951 in Dallas, Texas) is an American actor. ...
Denis OHare (born January 17, 1962 in Kansas City, Missouri, USA) is a Tony Award-winning actor. ...
Take Me Out is a Tony Award-winning play by Richard Greenberg which deals with homosexuality in baseball. ...
Ma Raineys Black Bottom is a 1982 play; one of a ten-play cycle by August Wilson that chronicles 20th Century African American experience. ...
Philip Seymour Hoffman Philip Seymour Hoffman (born July 23, 1967) is an Academy Award-winning American actor. ...
Long Days Journey into Night is a dramatic play in four acts by Eugene ONeill, generally considered to be his masterwork. ...
Daniel Sunjata (b. ...
Take Me Out is a Tony Award-winning play by Richard Greenberg which deals with homosexuality in baseball. ...
Frozen is a song by American singer Madonna from her 1998 album Ray of Light. ...
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(19th century - 20th century - 21st century - more centuries) Decades: 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s The 20th century lasted from 1901 to 2000 in the Gregorian calendar (often from (1900 to 1999 in common usage). ...
Ben Chaplin (born Benedict Greenwood on 31st July 1970, London) is an English actor who first came to public attention for his performance as Matthew Malone in the first series of the sitcom Game On. ...
Aidan Gillen (real Name: Aidan Murphy) was born in 1968 in Ireland. ...
The Caretaker is a play by Harold Pinter, first published in 1959. ...
Liev Schreiber Isaac Liev Schreiber (born October 4, 1967) is an American actor. ...
Glengarry Glen Ross is the title of a 1984 Pulitzer Prize-winning play by David Mamet. ...
Alan Alda as Benjamin Franklin Hawkeye Pierce Alan Alda (born Alphonso Joseph DAbruzzo on January 28, 1936) is an Oscar-nominated American actor, writer, director and sometimes political activist. ...
Gordon Clapp (born September 24, 1948) is an American actor, best known for playing the role of Detective Greg Medavoy for 12 seasons on the television series NYPD Blue, winning an Emmy Award in 1998. ...
The Pillowman is a play by Martin McDonagh. ...
Ian McDiarmid as Senator Palpatine in The Phantom Menace. ...
Faith healing is the use of solely spiritual means in treating disease, which, in some cases, is accompanied with the refusal of modern medical techniques. ...
Samuel Augustus Barnett (February 8, 1844 - 1913) was an English clergyman and social reformer particularly associated with the establishment of the first university settlement, Toynbee Hall in east London in 1884. ...
The History Boys is a play by Alan Bennett. ...
The Lieutenant of Inishmore is a black comedy by playwright Martin McDonagh, who wrote the Tony award winning play, The Pillowman, which played at the Booth Theatre from April to September of 2005. ...
Ruffalo in Just Like Heaven, 2005 Mark Alan Ruffalo (born November 22, 1967 in Kenosha, Wisconsin) is an American actor who has received critical acclaim for his film work. ...
Awake and Sing! is a 1935 play by Clifford Odets. ...
Awake and Sing! is a 1935 play by Clifford Odets. ...
Winners with Multiple Tony Awards for Featured Actor in a Play |