WARD MOREHOUSE III |
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Nationality: n/a Email: n/a Website: n/a |
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Literary Agent: n/a |
Please send me a biography and information about this Playwright
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Plays by Ward Morehouse III |
Gangplank | ||
| 1st Produced: | American Theatre of Actors, 314 West 54th Street, New York, NY 10019 >>> | 19 Apr 2010 | ||||
Company: | n/a | |||||
| 1st Published: | I don't think it has been published. Try emailing Playwright or Agent where listed at top of page. | ISBN/ASIN: | - | |||
| Music: | - | doollee no | #101827 | |||
To Buy This Play: | If Publisher (above) is underlined then the play may be purchased by direct click from the Publisher, otherwise (below) are AbeBooks for secondhand, signed & 1st eds and other Booksellers for new copies | |||||
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Genre: | Thriller | |||||
| Parts: | Male | 1 | Female | 2 | ||
Parts other: | - | |||||
Notes: | Written by Mark Druck and Ward Morehouse III | |||||
Synopsis: | Gangplank is set on former Time Magazine reporter David Montgomary's vintage cabin cruiser, now a ramshackle nightclub and hotel moored on Lake Ontario near the Canadian border. Early on we find the half-soused yet remarkably articulate Montgomary, his piano virtuoso daughter on the brink of suicide and the woman he once loved (not) strangely reappearing after 22 years of silence. | |||||
Further Reference: | - | |||||
If It Was Easy | ||
| 1st Produced: | Douglas Fairbanks Theater | 08 Mar 2001 | ||||
Company: | Stellar Productions Int., Inc. and James M. Nederlander | |||||
| 1st Published: | Performing Books/Applause, 2001 | ISBN/ASIN: | 978-1557835949 | |||
| Music: | - | doollee no | #104836 | |||
To Buy This Play: | If Publisher (above) is underlined then the play may be purchased by direct click from the Publisher, otherwise (below) are AbeBooks for secondhand, signed & 1st eds and other Booksellers for new copies | |||||
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Genre: | Comedy | |||||
| Parts: | Male | 5 | Female | 2 | ||
Parts other: | voices | |||||
Notes: | written by Stewart F Lane and Ward Morehouse III | |||||
| Never was the theatre ruled more by collaboration than during Broadway's Golden Age, when dunamic duos sucjh as Kaufman and Hart, Rodgers and Hammerstein, and Lindsay and Crousse fuelled the footlights. Now the marquee is lit up again by another deadly deuce | |||||
Further Reference: | - | |||||


