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  1. List of Sam Shepard plays with descriptions, including any musicals by Sam Shepard, playwright. This Sam Shepard plays list includes promotional photos when available, as well as information about co-writers and Sam Shepard characters.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sam_ShepardSam Shepard - Wikipedia

    Shepard's plays are known for their bleak, poetic, surrealist elements, black comedy, and rootless characters living on the outskirts of American society. His style evolved from the absurdism of his early off-off-Broadway work to the realism of later plays like Buried Child and Curse of the Starving Class .

  3. American plays by writer.

  4. Jul 31, 2017 · His best-known plays came in the 1970s and ‘80s, but he never stopped writing — he published a work of fiction, The One Inside, earlier this year. Here are five essential Shepard works. 1.

  5. Eleven of Sam’s plays won Obie Awards, including Chicago, The Tooth of Crime, and Curse of the Starving Class. Other award-winning plays include Fool for Love, A Lie of the Mind, True West and Buried Child, for which he won the Pulitzer Prize in 1979.

  6. May 31, 2024 · Sam Shepard (born November 5, 1943, Fort Sheridan, near Highland Park, Illinois, U.S.—died July 27, 2017, Midway, Kentucky) was an American playwright and actor whose plays adroitly blend images of the American West, Pop motifs, science fiction, and other elements of popular and youth culture.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Buried_ChildBuried Child - Wikipedia

    Buried Child is a play written by Sam Shepard that was first presented in 1978. It won the 1979 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and launched Shepard to national fame as a playwright.

  8. A comprehensive source for the playwright's work and archives.

  9. Aug 1, 2017 · Sam Shepard, the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, actor, and American avant-garde icon died Thursday at his home in Kentucky from complications from Lou Gehrig’s disease. He was 73.

  10. May 11, 2019 · The play suggests that the imaginative world is just as “real” as the actual world. In a series of plays from the late 1960’s to the early 1970’s, Shepard explores isolation and alienation by employing metaphoric sets, characterizations, and actions.

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