Murphy Guyer

Murphy Guyer
Born 25 December 1952
Dover, Delaware, USA
Occupation Playwright, actor, writer, director
Nationality American

Murphy Guyer (born 25 December 1952) is an actor, playwright, writer and director, best known for his plays and for appearances in the films The Devil's Advocate (1997), The Jackal (1997) and Arthur (2011).

Early years

Murphy Guyer was born in Dover, Delaware, and grew up in rural eastern Maryland. He moved to New York City at the age of nineteen to attend the American Academy of Dramatic Arts on an acting scholarship, and soon discovered a talent for writing jokes and comic sketches. He began his professional career writing for various stand-up comics and improv groups.[1]

Career

In the early 1980s, Guyer's first play Eden Court premiered at the Humana Festival of New American Plays in Louisville, Kentucky. The play was later produced on Broadway and made into a film. During the course of his career, Guyer has written works for stage, screen and radio, and tends to farce and satire.[2] His plays have been produced Off-Broadway and at regional theaters in the USA, Canada, Ireland, Britain, Europe and Russia. His play The Realists was listed as one of the Best Plays of 1988-1989,[3] and his adaptation of The Emancipation of Valet de Chambre was noted as one of the Best Plays of 1999-2000.[4]

In 1991 Guyer began acting in TV and films, with his first appearance as Tommy Gallagher in the Law & Order episode "Heaven."[5] Between 1996 to 2003, Guyer served as Associate Artistic Director for Playwrighting at the Cleveland Play House.[6]

Works

Selected plays include:

References

  1. Murphy Guyer, retrieved 20 September 2015
  2. Drake, Sylvie (29 October 1986), Stage Review : Murphy Guyer Serves His Sly Satire In 1-acts, LA Times, retrieved 20 September 2015
  3. Guernsey, Otis L.; Sweet, Jeffrey (1989), The Best Plays of 1988-1989: The Complete Broadway and Off-Broadway Sourcebook, Applause Theater
  4. Guernsey, Otis L. (2001), The Best Plays of 1999-2000, Limelight
  5. Murphy Guyer Biography, retrieved 20 September 2015
  6. Kaeja d'Dance (Cleveland Public Theatre), 2002, retrieved 20 September 2015

External links

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