HUMANA FESTIVAL FUN FACTS
The Humana Festival of New American Plays is made possible
by the generosity of The Humana Foundation.
Over 300 Humana
Festival plays have been produced,
including full-lengths, one-acts, monologues, T(ext) shirt and car plays,
representing the work of over 200 playwrights.
Over three-fourths of the Humana Festival plays have been
published in 17 Actors Theatre anthologies as well as individual acting
editions, making them now part of the permanent
canon of American dramatic literature.
Three Humana Festival plays have
won the Pulitzer Prize: D. L. Coburn's The Gin Game,
Beth Henley's Crimes of the Heart and Donald Margulies' Dinner
With Friends. Keely and Du by Jane Martin and Omnium-Gatherum
by Alexandra Gersten-Vassilaros and Theresa Rebeck were finalists.
Five Humana Festival plays have
won the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize: How to Say Goodbye
by Mary Gallagher, My Sister in this House by Wendy Kesselman,
A Narrow Bed by Ellen McLaughlin, My Left Breast by
Susan Miller, One Flea Spare by Naomi Wallace. Nine others
have been finalists.
Naomi Iizuka's Polaroid Stories won the Pen Center
USA West Award and Bridget Carpenter's The Faculty Room won
the Kesselring Prize for playwriting.
Six Humana Festival plays have won
the American Theatre Critics Award: 2 by Romulus Linney,
Dinner With Friends by Donald Margulies, Talking With
by Jane Martin, Keely and Du by Jane Martin, Jack and Jill
by Jane Martin, Getting Out by Marsha Norman.
Four Humana Festival plays have
won the Obie Award: Slavs! by Tony Kushner, My Left
Breast by Susan Miller, Marisol by José Rivera,
One Flea Spare by Naomi Wallace.
Eight Humana Festival plays have been adapted
for film and television and two for radio.
Over 30 foreign countries are
normally represented by audience members at the festival each year.
Over 90 million Americans
have seen additional productions of the many plays originated in the
Humana Festival, not including film audiences who have seen Humana plays
adapted for the screen.
Actors Theatre's New Play Program encompasses the Humana
Festival of New American Plays, the National Ten-Minute Play Contest
and ongoing contact with more than 200 playwrights.
Approximately 3,000 scripts are
received annually for consideration in the New Play Program.
Nearly 75,000 scripts have been submitted since1976.
The Humana Foundation first sponsored the new play festival
in 1980. In 1982, the festival was renamed the Humana Festival of New
American Plays in honor of the Louisville-based company's ongoing and
generous support. Since its inception, The Humana Foundation has placed an emphasis on civic and cultural development in communities where Humana has a meaningful presence. In a long-standing and thriving partnership, The Humana Foundation supports Actors Theatre of Louisville and its remarkable Humana Festival of New American Plays, demonstrating a joint commitment to artistic exploration and appreciation at home, across the region and around the globe.
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