Richard France (born Richard Zagami, May 5, 1936) is an American playwright, author, actor, and film and drama critic. He is a recognized authority on the stage work of American filmmaker Orson Welles. His publication, The Theatre of Orson Welles, [1] which received a CHOICE Outstanding Academic Book Award in 1979, [2] has been called "a landmark study" [3] and has been translated into Japanese. [4] His 1990 companion volume, Orson Welles on Shakespeare [5] has been praised by Welles critics and biographers. [6]
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Richard France was born Richard Zagami in Boston, Massachusetts, son of N. Roy Zagami, a U.S. Army officer, and Rita (Foster) Zagami. His father's military postings led France to spend nearly half of his early years abroad: in Japan (1947–49), Australia (1949–50), and Germany (1953–57).
France dropped out of high school in 1955 in Kaiserslauten and returned to the United States, where he began working at odd jobs, including apprentice trophy maker, radio announcer, and encyclopedia salesman. The resonant, expressive voice that would make France a sought-after narrator and voice-over performer was already evident when he found employment in the mail room at NBC Studios, and was chosen to participate in the NBC Radio Workshop, whose members were coached and mentored by many of the network's distinguished announcing staff.
While never attending college at the undergraduate level, France was admitted to the Yale School of Drama as a Special Fellow in Playwriting (1964–66). From there, he went on to earn an M.F.A. in Dramatic Writing (1970) and a Ph.D. in Theatre History/Dramatic Literature (1973) from Carnegie-Mellon University.
While serving as a psychiatric aide in New York (1958–59), France met Czechoslovakian playwright Mirko Tuma, a survivor of the Nazi concentration camp Terezin. [7] Tuma, who had not previously written in English, suggested that they collaborate on a play, with France's native fluency complementing Tuma's playwriting skills. The Walk (later retitled Don't You Know It's Raining?) received four Broadway options between 1960 and 1971 and premiered at the Dallas Theatre Center, in cooperation with the Rockefeller-funded Office for Advanced Drama Research, [8] in August 1970.
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In the spring of 1960 France left New York City for San Francisco, California. He would remain there for four years, writing fourteen plays whose central characters, "eccentric outsiders … locked in open conflict with the established order, which eventually destroys them", would reappear in his later work. His one-act play, The Image of Elmo Doyle, premiered at the Yale School of Drama in October 1964, and was staged at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Arts in New York in June 1965, translated into Japanese by the prominent Japanese playwright and scholar Masakazu Yamazaki, and staged at the Walnut Theatre in Tokyo in October 1970. (Yamazaki would also translate The Theatre of Orson Welles for the publisher Kodansha.) The Image of Elmo Doyle would later be selected for inclusion in The Best Short Plays of 1979. [9]
In 1965, France received writing grants from the Shubert and Golden foundations, then left Yale to become resident playwright at the University of Pittsburgh. He also received grants from the Ford and Rockefeller foundations. [10] That year also saw the production of Envoys, a series of 106 haiku and his only verse drama, which premiered at the Yale School of Drama and would be performed as a ballet at Venice's College of Music in 1997.
Upon obtaining his doctorate from Carnegie-Mellon University in 1972, France left Pittsburgh for San Francisco as a guest of the American Theatre Association. His outspokenness in moderating a playwrighting session at the ATA convention led Forum magazine to feature him in an article in its August 16, 1972 issue, titled "France: Criticizing the Critics".
His docudrama, Station J, received the support of the late Senator Daniel K. Inouye, enabling France to obtain previously withheld government documents. It was inspired by France's childhood years in Japan and his experiences in San Francisco in the early 1960s. The play, which would earn France a Silver PEN Award for Playwriting [11] [12] and his second NEA Creative Writing Prize, takes the evacuation and internment of Japanese Americans during the Second World War as a jumping-off point for a nuanced exploration of the nature of democracy and its often problematic on-the-ground implementation.
Perhaps France's most popular play, measured by number of performances, is one of the three he wrote for children, and a marked departure from his oeuvre: The Magic Shop, which by 1980 had been performed internationally by over 150 theater groups.
In 2006, his play, Obediently Yours, Orson Welles, premiered at the Théâtre Marigny in Paris, [13] France, and has since been translated into several languages. The Spanish production, which began in Barcelone in 2008, [14] [15] [16] toured for over two years, before its conclusion at the Teatro Bellas Artes in November 2010. Also in 2010, a second French-language production opened at the Atelier Théâtre Jean Vilar in Louvain-la-Neuve [17] (where it played as Moi, Orson Welles et Don Quichotte, in a translation written by its star, Armand Delcampe). The Spanish-language text, Su seguro servidor, Orson Welles, was one of three finalists for the 2009 Premios Max Award and published by Arola Editions. [18]
In 2011, it was featured as one of three plays selected by Oberon Books (London) for its anthology Hollywood Legends: 'Live' On Stage, with an introduction by Simon Callow. [19]
In addition to its multiple translations and international stagings, Obediently Yours, Orson Welles and actor José María (Josep Maria) Pou's enactment of Welles in Barcelona — where the play's Spanish translation, adapted and directed by film scholar, professor and screenwriter Esteve Riambau for Spanish- and Castilian-speaking lands as Su seguro servidor, Orson Welles, premiered at the Theatre Romea on 30 June 2008 as part of the Festival Grec [20] — were the subject of the feature-length documentary Màscares (Masks, 2009), which premiered at the San Sebastian Film Festival. [21] The film follows Pou as he prepares to take on the title role in Obediently Yours …. It received several Broadway options in 1997-98.
Other works in France's playwriting canon include:
Several of France's plays have also been published. They include:
France's published essays include:
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France has appeared in several films, beginning as a zombie (uncredited) in George A. Romero's original Night of the Living Dead (1968) and including, among others, as Dr. Watts in Romero's The Crazies (1973), as Dr. Rausch in the director's Dawn of the Dead (1979), and as a white slaver in Charles Ludlam's The Sorrows of Dolores (1986). [22] He also appeared as the therapist in Scott B and Beth B's stylish low-budget 1982 noir film Vortex, which premiered at the Lincoln Center Film Festival, and as the brute in Ludlum's 16mm short Museum of Wax (1987), having been a stage actor in the company's New York home from 1980–81.
From 1969-73, France was a film and drama critic for Newsroom on WQED-TV, the PBS affiliate in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, also becoming producer for the station's Jewel Walker's Mime Circus in 1972.
In 1996, France was a scholarly consultant for, and was featured as the Welles authority in the documentary film, The Battle Over Citizen Kane , which was nominated for an Academy Award. Subsequently, it aired on the PBS series The American Experience . [23] His other work for PBS includes Jewel Walker's Mime Circus (1973), which he co-produced, and Southern Odyssey, on which he worked as a writer and narrator.
In the 1970s, France was a college professor and chairman of the theater department at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. [24] [25] Thereafter, he taught on a visiting or adjunct basis at Brown University (Rhode Island), Hunter College (New York), the University of Southern California, the University of Massachusetts Boston and other universities. [26]
George Orson Welles was an American director, actor, writer, and producer who is remembered for his innovative work in film, radio, and theatre. He is considered to be among the greatest and most influential filmmakers of all time.
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