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David Alan Mamet (born November 30, 1947) is an American playwright,
screenwriter, director and poet born to a Jewish family in Flossmoor,
Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, Illinois. Educated at the Francis W. Parker
School and Goddard College and a founding member of the Atlantic Theater
Company, Mamet first gained acclaim for a trio of off-Broadway plays in
1976, The Duck Variations, Sexual Perversity in Chicago, and American
Buffalo.
He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1984 for Glengarry Glen Ross, which
received its first Broadway revival in the summer of 2005.
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His work is characterized by playful plots overturning conventions and
typically features strong male characters and their tough posturings,
rhythmically profane dialogue, and charged verbal confrontations. His first
screenplay was the 1981 production of The Postman Always Rings Twice based
upon James M. Cain's novel. He was given an Academy Award nomination for his
next script, The Verdict.
In 1987 Mamet made his film directing debut with House of Games, starring
his then-wife, Lindsay Crouse and a host of longtime stage associates. He
remains a prolific writer and director, and has assembled an informal
repertory company for his films, including William H. Macy, Joe Mantegna,
Crouse, Rebecca Pidgeon (his wife since 1991), and Ricky Jay.
Like independent director John Sayles, Mamet funds his own films with the
pay he gets from credited and uncredited rewrites of typically big-budget
films. For instance, Mamet has done rewrites of the scripts for Hannibal and
Hoffa, and turned in an early version of a script for Malcolm X that
director Spike Lee rejected.
Three of Mamet's own films, House of Games, The Spanish Prisoner, and Heist
have involved the world of confidence tricksters.
Mamet has published three novels, The Village in 1994, The Old Religion in
1997, and "Wilson: a Consideration of the Sources in 2003. He has also
written several non-fiction texts as well as a number of poems and
children's stories. For his film work, he sometimes writes under the name
"Richard Weisz."
As a drama practitioner, he argues in his book True and False against the
practice of teaching drama students the 'method' of Constantin Stanislavski.
For Mamet, time spent searching for emotion memory or considering
character's biographies is time wasted, and he suspects that it is an
academic bluff working to keep actors uncertain.
He recommends a simple, honest style of acting, where the actor's job is to
learn the lines, find their mark, and speak up simply. Work on character, he
asserts, is the playwright's job.
In July 2004, Cambridge University Press published The Cambridge Companion
to David Mamet, edited by Christopher Bigsby. The book includes essays
analyzing Mamet's biography, his impact during various decades, and several
of his plays.
Since May 2005 he's been a contributing blogger at The Huffington Post. He
has two daughters by ex-wife Lindsay Crouse. He has been married to actress
and singer-songwriter Rebecca Pidgeon since 1991. They have two children,
Clara and Noah. |
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DAVID MAMET PICTURES |
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