Photo de l'auteur

Richard Greenberg (1) (1958–)

Auteur de Take Me Out: A Play

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Richard Greenberg, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

22+ oeuvres 600 utilisateurs 15 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Richard Greenberg [credit: Mark Avery]

Œuvres de Richard Greenberg

Take Me Out: A Play (2002) 224 exemplaires
Eastern Standard (1874) 61 exemplaires
Three Days of Rain: A Play (1601) 53 exemplaires
The Violet Hour: A Play (2004) 51 exemplaires
The Assembled Parties (2014) 25 exemplaires
Life Under Water (1985) 23 exemplaires
The Author's Voice (1987) 12 exemplaires
The American Plan (1991) 12 exemplaires
Night and Her Stars (1997) 10 exemplaires
Jenny Keeps Talking (1995) 10 exemplaires
The Dazzle and Everett Beekin (2003) 8 exemplaires
The Dazzle (2003) 7 exemplaires
Our mother's brief affair (2016) 7 exemplaires
The Babylon Line (2016) 7 exemplaires
The Maderati (1987) 5 exemplaires
Vanishing Act (1987) 3 exemplaires
The Author's Voice 1 exemplaire
The house in town (2008) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Telling Tales and Other New One-Act Plays (1993) — Contributeur — 114 exemplaires
Moving Parts: Monologues from Contemporary Plays (1992) — Contributeur — 59 exemplaires

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Membres

Critiques

The full cast recording by L.A.T.W. was excellent. The play itself was OK (2 family dinners at Christmas, occurring 20 years apart) but it was never entirely clear to me why this Upper West Side Jewish family were having Christmas gatherings...

I listened to the free streaming audio from the L.A. Theatre Works website:
https://latw.org/broadcasts#broadcast
½
 
Signalé
leslie.98 | Dec 22, 2019 |
I enjoyed reading this collection. There were colorful stories about the wonderfully weird empires of New York City. It's big, funny, selfish, and entertaining. If you're a word nerd in search of a collection that adds color to mundane experience, this is the collection for you. I struggled remembering the title, but the gasps, sighs, chuckles, and grins I sustained throughout empowered me. That made this read a blast.

I have never been to New York. But it's a collection that has a learning curve. If you're not terribly invested in expanding your mind, the stories will read like the ramblings of an unhappy old man. If you can appreciate odd gifts in unusual places, the book might get you through a boring patch in your life.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
HaroldMillican | 2 autres critiques | Dec 15, 2019 |
Rules for Others to Live By: Comments and Self-Contradictions by Tony award winning playwright Richard Greenberg is a collection of his rumination on incidents from his life and observations on the New York lifestyle. I leave the book with the idea that either it is trying too hard to be clever or I am not clever enough to get it. Either way, this one is not the reading experience for me.

Read my complete review at rel="nofollow" target="_top">http://www.memoriesfrombooks.com/2016/10/rules-for-others-to-live-by.html.

Reviewed for the Penguin First to Read program.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
njmom3 | 2 autres critiques | Oct 9, 2016 |
Catharsis, anyone?

Rules For Others To Live By is collection of biographical and autobiographical stories from playwright Richard Greenberg’s circle. Since he lives in Chelsea and works on Broadway, that’s what most of it is about. The stories are short (sometimes a single paragraph), but they cover a lot of territory, because they are deeply personal. They are not so much the presentation of a scene or of a person, but Greenberg’s perception of that scene or person, which is a very different narrative. What he notices, and how he values it, is a unique angle for the story and the book. How he navigates it all is revealing in another dimension. Sometimes the stories connect, sometimes the same friends show up in later stories, and at the end, two of his best friends meet for an evening at his place. It’s all very tight in Greenberg’s New York.

My favorite is a two page piece called Opinions. It is pure, vintage Robert Benchley, striking the perfect note of Man thinking outside his little box, trying to master his own world, and second-guessing himself to a standstill. It is a small gem, highly polished.

Another very fine story is Greenberg’s appreciation of his friend Jill Clayburgh. It’s a side of her we never saw, and it’s worth knowing.

There are honest human insights too. After all, Greenberg is first and foremost a playwright. I particularly liked this one of a friend who died young: “On a single afternoon, she made me feel that life in the city could be off the cuff, and abundant. It hasn’t turned out like that. It never does.”

Going forward, I will look at Richard Greenberg plays very differently.

David Wineberg
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
DavidWineberg | 2 autres critiques | May 20, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
22
Aussi par
3
Membres
600
Popularité
#41,875
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
15
ISBN
46

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