Murray Mednick

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born(1939-08-24)August 24, 1939
New York City, U.S.
DiedOctober 17, 2025(2025-10-17) (aged 86)
Occupation
Yearsactive1965–2025
Murray Mednick
Mednick in the 1960s
Born(1939-08-24)August 24, 1939
New York City, U.S.
DiedOctober 17, 2025(2025-10-17) (aged 86)
Occupation
Years active1965–2025

Murray Maurice Mednick (August 24, 1939 – October 17, 2025) was an American playwright and poet. He is best known as founder of the Padua Hills Playwrights Workshop/Festival, where he served as artistic director from 1978 to 1995. Mednick received numerous awards for his plays, including two Rockefeller Grants and an Obie.

Born in 1939 to a family with Jewish roots, Mednick attended Brooklyn College and became involved with New York's off-off-Broadway company Theatre Genesis, where much of his early work was staged. He was eventually appointed to the post of artistic co-director in 1970. In 1974, Mednick moved to Los Angeles after being evicted from his apartment while on a trip to the Yucatán on a Guggenheim grant.

Mednick founded the long-running summer workshop Padua Hills Playwrights Workshop/Festival in 1978 with funding from LaVerne University, where he was teaching at the time. The workshop was meant to be an extension of his collaborations with Ralph Cook, his mentor and founder of Theatre Genesis. In his teachings at Padua, Mednick stressed a strong grounding in theater and literary history, specifically the Ancient Greeks, Shakespeare, and Beckett. Language was especially important. In a 2001 interview, Mednick said that Padua's teaching was "based in a literary knowledge, with a seriousness of purpose that isn't necessarily commercial. Both the writing and the acting are like realism-plus. Ordinary exchanges of life are put in an occasion that heightens them. The dialogue is really the action; it has a life of its own. The story is reflected by the dialogue."[1] Notable participants in the Workshop/Festival included Maria Irene Fornes, Sam Shepard, John Steppling, John O'Keefe, Jon Robin Baitz, and Kelly Stuart".[2]

Padua ceased operation in 1995 and reemerged in 2001, premiering three Mednick works as part of a tribute series honoring influential local playwrights.

Mednick has been mentioned as having influenced other playwrights, including Sam Shepard, Eduardo Machado, and David Scott Milton. Murray Mednick met Sam Shepard in 1965, they went on to start a band called "The Heavy Metal Kid." Murray Mednick directed Sam Shepard's play Action starring Patti Smith.[3] Mednick and Shepard were a part of the Off-Off Broadway movement in New York City.[4]

Mednick died on October 17, 2025, at the age of 86.[5]

Works

Mednick's later productions included Mayakovsky and Stalin,[6] which premiered in Los Angeles starting in October 2018, and moved to the Cherry Lane Theatre in New York, 2019. The Gary Plays (8 separate works/ premiered in Los Angeles 2017), Villon (premiered in Los Angeles, 2014). Past productions include; Scar (starring actor Ed Harris), an autobiographical series 16 Routines, Joe and Betty (concerning his parents' difficult marriage, starring John Diehl and Annabel Gurwitch, which performed in New York starting in June 2002), and Mrs. Feuerstein,[7] as well as Sand, The Hawk, Fedunn (produced by the Audrey Skirball-Kenis theatre), The Coyote Cycle, a series of one-act plays performed outdoors from twilight till dawn, involving four characters such as Spider Grandmother drawn from traditional Native American folklore. The Coyote character was also featured in Destruction of the Fourth World, part of the 2009 series performed by Padua Playwrights.

His published plays include Villon and other plays (2016), Hipsters in Distress (2005), Three Plays (2003), The Coyote Cycle (1993), by Padua Hills Press. His play Switchback was published in 1997 by (Sun and Moon Press). Anthologized plays include Freeze, The Deer Kill, Willie the Germ, The Hawk, Sand, Switchback, Taxes, and others.

Awards and recognition

References

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