Age, Biography and Wiki
Karen Malpede was born on 1945 in Wichita Falls, Texas, is a playwright. Discover Karen Malpede's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 78 years old?
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1945 |
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Wichita Falls, Texas |
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United States |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1945.
She is a member of famous playwright with the age years old group.
Karen Malpede Height, Weight & Measurements
At years old, Karen Malpede height not available right now. We will update Karen Malpede's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Who Is Karen Malpede's Husband?
Her husband is George Bartenieff
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George Bartenieff |
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Karen Malpede Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Karen Malpede worth at the age of years old? Karen Malpede’s income source is mostly from being a successful playwright. She is from United States. We have estimated
Karen Malpede's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
In May, 2021, Theater Three Collaborative will present the world premiere of Malpede's play Blue Valiant, outdoors at Farm Arts Collective, among the first American theaters to come out of pandemic lockdown with a live performance. Blue Valiant was written for and stars Kathleen Chalfant and George Bartenieff, with Millie Ortiz and Arthur Rosen playing the horse on piano. The play is about grief and renewal.
She was a cofounder of the Women’s Salon for Literature, a monthly event featuring the leading writers of the feminist movement, and where her second play Rebecca received its first public reading, and has had 22 plays produced as of 2020.
Her most recently produced play Other Than We, is a utopic-dystopic cli-fi fantasy. Produced at LaMama in November 2019, it was live streamed by the Columbia Earth Institute in the summer of 2020, and is published by Laertes Books.
She is currently at work on an international collaboration with Persona Theater, Athens, for the YouTube staging of her short play Troy Too about Covid-19, the Climate Crisis and Racism; the script will be published in the forthcoming Staging 21st Century Tragedies.
In the summer of 2018, she joined with playwrights Naomi Wallace and Kia Corthron to co-produce at the Signature Theater on 42nd St., Imagine: Yemen, an evening of eight short plays about the war in Yemen.
Her next play Extreme Whether, depicts the struggle of scientists to tell the truth about climate change in the face of opposition from the fossil fuel industry. The play, which premiered at Theater for the New City in New York in 2014, was also presented as a staged reading in French and English as part of ArtCop21, in Paris, 2015, during the negotiation of the Paris Climate Agreement, and restaged in 2018 at La MaMa Experimental Theater Club in New York City Prominent climate scientists, James Hansen and Jennifer Francis and environmental activists spoke with the audience after the production.
Another Life is a surreal yet factual critique of the U.S. government torture program, starring a mogul named Handel, who prefigures and bears striking resemblance to Donald J. Trump. Premiered on September 11, 2011, to commemorate the decade since the attacks of September 2001, the play had four subsequent productions. Each production was accompanied by a Festival of Conscience, in which major writers on torture and lawyers for Guantanamo detainees, held conversations with the audiences.
Prophecy, produced in 2008 in London and 2010 in New York, starring Kathleen Chalfant, is a memory play about an enduring but tumultuous marriage, marked by significant infidelities, and of the acting teacher whose life was impacted by the murder of an antiwar lover, by his commanding officer, in Vietnam and now by a talented Iraq-war veteran student who takes his own life (written and produced at a time when little attention was being paid to veteran suicides).
In 2004, to protest the Iraq war, she co-created an outdoor public ritual to coincide with the Republican National Convention re-nominating George W. Bush. Called “Iraq: Naming the Dead” the event took place each night of the convention, outdoors, in the graveyard of the historic St. Mark’s Church-in-the-Bowery, involving Arab-American, black, white and brown readers of the names of the Iraqi and American dead (a 15-to-1 ratio).
In 1995, she co-founded the Theater Three Collaborative with her husband, George Bartenieff, and the late Lee Nagrin, both actors. The purpose was to enable them "to produce plays that could not be produced elsewhere" because of their social justice themes and poetic character-driven, sometimes, surreal, and epic styles.
Their premiere production in New York in 1995, and at the Dionysia Festival for Contemporary Drama in Veroli, Italy, was The Beekeeper’s Daughter, a play inspired both by the life of poet Robert Graves and by the plight of a victim of a Bosnian rape camp.
Malpede's short stories, reviews, and other writings on the torture program, climate change and feminism have been published in New Theatre Quarterly, the Women's Review of Books, the Kenyon Review, and other periodicals; and in anthologies such as Helen Barolini's The Dream Book: An Anthology of Writings by Italian American Women (1985) and Roberta Mock’s Performing Processes (2000).
Karen Malpede is an American playwright and director whose work reflects an ongoing interest in social justice issues. She is a co-founder of the Theater Three Collaborative in New York City, and teaches theater and environmental justice at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice. She is also the editor of the notable anthology, Women in Theater: Compassion and Hope (1984).
Malpede's first play, A Lament for Three Women, was published in A Century of Plays by American Women, edited by Rachel France. (Richards Rosen Press, 1979). and she has been writing and producing plays ever since.
In 1977, Malpede co-founded New Cycle Theater, with Burl Hash, a free, loft theater in Park Slope, Brooklyn, which later became affiliated with the early Arts at St. Ann’s. Her plays, “The End of War,” “Making Peace: A Fantasy,” “A Monster Has Stolen the Sun,” “Sappho & Aphrodite,” were produced in the loft theater and at St. Ann’s.
Her second book, Three Works by the Open Theater, a collaboration with Chakin, published in 1974, was a seminal study of the influential, experimental theater company.
Malpede is a lifelong peace and social justice activist. Among the historic marches and protests of which she has been a part: The 1967 March on the Pentagon, The 1970 New Haven Rally Protesting the Trial of Bobby Seale and Erica Huggins, The 1979, Washington Lawn Eleven, for which she was arrested, tried and found guilty, alongside writer Grace Paley, photographer Karl Bissinger and eight others. The Women’s Peace Encampment at Seneca Falls and Women’s Pentagon Action, and the summer 2020 Black Lives Matter marches on Dekalb Ave., Brooklyn, during the Covid-19 Pandemic.
Karen Malpede was born, a fraternal twin, in 1945, on Sheppard Air Force Base, in Wichita Falls, TX, to a Jewish mother and an Italian-American father. Both of her parents were from Chicago, and she and her brother were raised on Chicago’s North Shore, in Evanston and Wilmette, IL.
Malpede's one-man play, I Will Bear Witness, is co-adapted with George Bartenieff from the diaries of Victor Klemperer, a German Jew who documented the persecution of Jews in Dresden between 1933 and 1945. The production, which she directed, won Obie Awards for acting for Bartenieff and set design.
Her first book, People’s Theater in Amerika, a history of radical theater in the United States from 1929 to 1972, was a seminal study and brought her into contact with people who become mentors and early supporters of her plays, Joseph Chaikin, founder of the Open Theater, and Julian Beck and Judith Malina, co-founders of The Living Theatre, and lifelong friends.