Frost/Nixon (play)
Frost/Nixon | |
---|---|
Original poster | |
Written by | Peter Morgan |
Characters |
David Frost Richard Nixon |
Date premiered | 2006 |
Place premiered | Donmar Warehouse, London |
Original language | English |
Subject | The Frost/Nixon interviews |
Genre | Drama |
Frost/Nixon is a 2006 British play by screenwriter and dramatist Peter Morgan based on a series of televised interviews that former U.S. President Richard Nixon granted broadcaster David Frost in 1977 about his administration, including his role in the Watergate scandal.
Performance history
The play premiered at the Donmar Warehouse theatre in London in August 2006, directed by Michael Grandage and starring Michael Sheen as the talk-show host and Frank Langella as the former president. Frost/Nixon received enthusiastic reviews in the British press. It then played at the Gielgud Theatre in London's West End, again starring Langella and Sheen.
On March 31, 2007, the play began previews on Broadway. It officially opened as a limited engagement at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre on April 22 and closed on August 19, after 137 performances. The cast included Langella, Sheen, Remy Auberjonois (John Birt), Shira Gregory (Evonne Goolagong), Corey Johnson (Jack Brennan), Stephen Kunken (James Reston Jr.), Stephen Rowe (Swifty Lazar/Mike Wallace), Triney Sandoval (Manolo Sanchez), Armand Schultz (Bob Zelnick) and Sonya Walger (Caroline Cushing).
TimeLine Theatre Company in Chicago ran the play from August 21 to October 10, 2010.[1][2]
In regional theatre, Frost/Nixon made its Ohio premiere at the Rabbit Run Theatre in Madison, Ohio. The U.S. Rocky Mountain regional premiere was directed and designed by John Thornberry for Longmont Theatre Company in Longmont, Colorado, and ran from November 4 to 19, 2011.
The show received its Philadelphia premiere with New City Stage Company December 5, 2013 to January 4, 2014. The show was a combination of the stage play and the screenplay for the film Frost/Nixon and received wide acclaim. Dan Olmstead, who portrayed Richard Nixon, received a Barrymore Award nomination, and Russ Widdall, who portrayed David Frost, received a citation from Philadelphia Weekly for one of the 2014's most notable performances.
Awards and nominations
- Best Play (Peter Morgan) (nominated)
- Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play (Frank Langella) Winner
- Best Direction of a Play (Michael Grandage) (nominated)
- Outstanding New Play (Peter Morgan) (nominated)
- Outstanding Actor in a Play (Frank Langella) Winner
- Outstanding Director of a Play (Michael Grandage) (nominated)
- Outstanding Music (Adam Cork) (nominated)
- Distinguished Production of a Play (nominated)
- Distinguished Performance (Stephen Kunken) (nominated)
- Distinguished Performance (Michael Sheen) (nominated)
- Outstanding Broadway Play (nominated)
- Outstanding Actor in a Play (Frank Langella) Winner
- Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play (Stephen Kunken) (nominated)
- Outstanding Direction of a Play (Michael Grandage) (nominated)
- Outstanding Lighting Design (Neil Austin) (nominated)
Feature film
Ron Howard directed a film adaptation of the play.[3] The film was produced by Imagine Entertainment and Working Title Films for Universal Pictures. Shooting began on August 27, 2007.[4] Langella and Sheen reprised their roles for the film.
References
- ↑ BWW News Desk (8 April 2010). "TimeLine Theater Announces Their 2010-11 Season". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved on 8 April 2010.
- ↑ "Night and Day, Remy Bummpo Theatre Company ; Frost/Nixon, TimeLine Theatre Company ; Theater Reviews by Terry Teachout - WSJ.com". online.wsj.com. 1 October 2010. Retrieved 2010-11-29.
- ↑ On-line interview with actor Michael Sheen
- ↑ "Arts Briefly", The New York Times, 1 May 2007
External links
- Official sites:
- Frost/Nixon at the Internet Broadway Database
- Frost/Nixon at the Internet Broadway Database
- Michael Billington, Frost/Nixon, The Guardian,(London) 22 August 2006
- Paul Taylor, "Frost/Nixon, Donmar Warehouse, London: Closing shots convey the drama of a TV classic", The Independent (London), 22 August 2006
- Charles Spencer, "Brief but gripping encounters", The Telegraph (London), 23 August 2006
- Benedict Nightingale, Frost/Nixon, The Times Online (London), 22 August 2006
- Ben Brantley, "When David Faced a Wounded Goliath", The New York Times, 23 April 2007 (Broadway production)
- TimeLine Theatre Company, Chicago: Frost/Nixon Study Guide Retrieved 2011-10-02