MENU

Bio
Wishlist

SEARCH



RECENT STOPS

The Show Will Not Go On
Technical difficulties
My Favorite Dance Company
My Brother's Keeper
Mojo Workin'
Ok-maybe I'll come back
Gone Fishing
Off the cutting room floor
Personal Responsibility
Ain’t Much to Say



FELLOW TRAVELERS

A Burst of Light

AfroerotiK

AllAboutGeorge

The Allen Gallery

Better Days Coming

Black Gay Blogger

Black Griot

Blabbeando

BrothaLove RantSpace

Clay Cane

culturekitchen

Daily Views, Pop Culture, Rants, and News

Donald

EJ Flavors

Edge of Night

The Emancipation of ProfessorGQ

Ergane in Retrograde

Every Shut Eye Ain't Sleep

Flan! Flan! Flan!

Frank Leon Roberts

Front Porch Storytellin'

Getting Myself Together

Greasy Guide

J-Notes

J's Theater

Jasmyne Cannick

Journey Back To Joy

Journey Into Light

Just be dat

Keith Boykin

The Larry Lyons Experience

Lee’s Space

Lynne d Johnson

Mama Junkyard's

The Mad Professah Lectures

Mandrake Society Radio

Mark Your Truth Here

Ms. World's Guide

Nalo Hopkinson

Negrophile

Noctuary: a record of what passes in the night

Notformi.ca

Novaslim

Old Gold Soul

On a Path

Opera and Cookies

Pam’s House Blend

Pica 12

Pink Mafia Radio

Pondering Negro

Prime

Professor Kim's News Notes
Prometheus 6

Republic of T

Rocka Candy

rod 2.0:beta

Seasoned Yet New in Da Life

Shavar's blog

Steven G. Fullwood

Street Writer

Taylor Siluwé

The Brotherlove

The LoveHater

The Ryan Chronicles

The Starr Report

The Unconquerable Soul

Troy

Water


INTERESTING SITES ALONG THE WAY

Albany Times Union
AntiViolence Project

AlJazeera Network

AlterNet

Alvin Ailey Dance Company

BBC News

Billy Porter

Broadway.com

City Limits

CSPAN

Dhani Jones

Epicurious.com

ESPN

Evidence Dance Company

Food Network

Garth Fagan Dance

Gay City News

GayHealth

Gotham Gazette

I Love NY Theater

Le Monde

LOGO

Los Angeles Times

MoveOn.org

National Black Justice Coalition
New York Blade

New York City Homepage

New York State Black Gay Network

New York State Homepage

New York Theatre

NY Times

NYC Bloggers

OutPOCPAC

PlanetOut

Playbill

TheaterMania

Toronto Globe & Mail

Village Voice

Washington Post

eXTReMe Tracker


REST AREA

©2005 Bernard J. Tarver
Content protected by Creative Commons.
Syndicate this site (XML).
Powered by Movable Type 4.0
� Copping a Plea | Main | The Dream Sequence �


August 26, 2005

Playwright August Wilson Is Diagnosed With Liver Cancer

August Wilson, one of America's greatest playwrights and the author of an epic cycle of dramas about the African-American experience in the 20th century, is dying of liver cancer.The news was reported simultaneously on Aug. 26 in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Pittsburgh is the writer's birthplace, and Seattle is his adoptive home.

John Breglio, Wilson's longtime legal representative, confirmed the diagnosis.

His condition was discovered on June 14 by doctors at the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle. They recommended chemoembolization, which the Post-Gazette described as "cancer-fighting drugs injected directly into the tumor," and a liver transplant. However, it turned out that the disease was at too advanced a stage for treatment.

Doctors have given him three to five months to live, the paper reported. Wilson is 60.

The shocking news comes just two months after Off-Broadway's Signature Theatre—which devotes each season to the work of a single playwright—announced it had decided to push back an August Wilson line-up previously announced for 2005-06 to the 2006-07 season. The Wilson season is to begin in fall 2006 with a new production of Two Trains Running. The season was also to feature Wilson's one-man show How I Learned What I Learned, which he performs himself.

With Radio Golf, now playing at the Center Theatre Group's Mark Taper Forum through Sept. 18, Wilson completed his ten-play cycle, which chronicles the African-American experience in the past century decade by decade. The 1990s-set work involves real estate developers who look to tear down the home of recurring Wilson character Aunt Esther.

The other plays in Wilson's grand undertaking (in order of decade which the drama is set) include Gem of the Ocean, Joe Turner's Come and Gone, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, The Piano Lesson, Seven Guitars, Fences, Two Trains Running, Jitney and King Hedley II. All have played Broadway, except for Jitney, which was an Off-Broadway hit. All of the Broadway productions were nominated for a Tony Award for Best Plays. Fences won the prize.

Wilson has won two Pulitzer Prizes for Drama, for Fences and The Piano Lesson.

"I'm glad I finished the cycle," Wilson told the Pittsburgh paper.

Wilson's wife, Constanza Romero, told the Seattle Post-Intelligencer that Wilson plans to fight the disease and hopes for recovery. "He's taking it very well, with a lot of strength and determination," she said. The playwright told the Pittsburgh paper, "I've had a blessed life. I'm ready."

From Playbill.com

Posted by bernie at August 26, 2005 10:20 AM
TrackBack


Comments

Post a comment










Remember personal info?