Robert Patrick (playwright)

For the American actor, see Robert Patrick.
Robert Patrick
Born Robert Patrick O'Connor
(1937-09-27) September 27, 1937
Kilgore, Texas, U.S.A
Nationality American
Information
Period 1960s–present
Genre Dramas, comedies, musicals
Notable work(s) Kennedy's Children, Camera Obscura

Robert Patrick (born September 27, 1937) is an American playwright, poet, lyricist, short-story writer and novelist. He was born Robert Patrick O'Connor in Kilgore, Texas, United States.[1]

Personal life

Patrick's mother always encouraged him to read.

Robert Patrick was born to migrant workers in Texas. Because his parents moved around the Southwestern United States constantly, looking for work, he never went to one school for an entire year until his senior year of high school in Roswell, New Mexico. The only cultural constants in his life were books, film and radio. His mother made sure he learned to read, and arranged that he start school a year early. Lacking social contacts due to constant displacement, he always made poor grades, and dropped out of college after two years. Having experienced no live theatre except a few school shows, he fell in love with stage work while washing dishes at the Kennebunkport Playhouse in Kennebunkport, Maine one summer. Stopping off in New York on his way back to Roswell, he stumbled into the Caffe Cino, the first underground or Off-Off Broadway theatre, on September 14, 1961. He remained there working for free in any required capacity, supporting himself with temporary typing jobs while observing and participating in the production of dozens of plays, including So Long at the Fair by Lanford Wilson. Having long been a poet, in 1964 he got an idea for a play he called The Haunted Host, and because of the casualness of the Caffe Cino, was allowed to mount it almost at once. It was something of a success, and playwriting became his main focus.

Career

Patrick is the author of over 60 published plays.

1960s

Harvey Fierstein, Robert Patrick and Doric Wilson.

His first play, The Haunted Host, was produced in 1964 and premiered at the Caffe Cino in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of New York City, New York. Because Patrick refused the offer of Neil Flanagan, the Caffe Cino's star performer, to play the title role (because Flanagan had recently played Lanford Wilson's gay character, Lady Bright) Patrick himself wound up appearing in the play with fellow playwright William M. Hoffman.

During the 1960s Patrick was a pioneer in Off-Off-Broadway theatre and the gay-theatre movement with over 300 productions of his plays during this decade in New York City alone. In 1972, the play publishing and licensing company Samuel French called Patrick "New York's Most-Produced Playwright."

In 1969, he won the "Show Business" Award for Joyce Dynel, Salvation Army, and Fog. That same year his play, Camera Obscura was produced on PBS starring Marge Champion and was also chosen to be in the all-star-playwright revue, "Collision Course."

1970s

In 1973, Patrick's Kennedy's Children opened obscurely in London in the back room of a pub, and instantly was signed for the West End and productions worldwide.

A 1974 production of The Haunted Host marked the first time Harvey Fierstein appeared on the legitimate stage as a male (having previously only acted as a drag performer). Years later, Fierstein included a recording of Patrick's monologue, Pouf Positive on his compact disc, This Is Not Going to Be Pretty. Pouf Positive was also filmed by Dov Hechtman in 1989.

1974 was also the first season of gay theatre in the United Kingdom, to which Patrick contributed three plays.

Patrick with Tennessee Williams and, standing, Don Parker, Shirley Knight, and Michael Sacks, Sardi's, opening night of "Kennedy's Children," Nov. 3, 1975.

The Broadway-theatre production of Kennedy's Children (1975) earned Shirley Knight a 1976 Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Play. She repeated her role in the 1979 CBS-Cable TV production of the play.

Patrick traveled widely, from Anchorage to Cape Town, seeing productions of Kennedy's Children. For ten years, he visited high schools and high-school-theatre conventions nationwide on behalf of the International Thespian Society.

My Cup Ranneth Over (1976) was commissioned by Marlo Thomas as a vehicle for her and Lily Tomlin. Although a production with them never happened, the play went on to become Patrick's most produced.

T-Shirts, first produced in 1979 and starring Jack Wrangler, was later chosen as the opening piece for Hoffman's anthology Gay Plays: A First Collection.

1980s

Patrick in San Francisco Gay Pride Parade.

Blue Is For Boys was the first play about gay teenagers, and "Blue is for Boys Weekends" in honor of the play were declared by Manhattan Borough Presidents in 1983 and 1986.

The Trial of Socrates was the first gay play presented by New York City.

Hello Bob, an account of Patrick's experiences with the production of Kennedy's Children, was the last play he directed before leaving New York City.

Other works by Patrick include Untold Decades (1988), a history of gay-male life in the United States, told in a humorous vein; and Temple Slave, a "totally romanticized" novel about the early days of Off-Off Broadway and gay theatre.

Later

Robert Patrick has also ghostwritten several screenplays for film and television; contributed poems and reviews to Playbill, FirstHand, and Adult Video News magazines; and had his short stories included in numerous anthologies.

Additionally, Patrick has appeared in the documentaries, Resident Alien (1990) (with Quentin Crisp) and Wrangler: Anatomy of an Icon (2008); and in the videos: O is for Orgy: The Sequel and O Boys: Parties, Porn, and Politics, both produced by the O Boys Network.

Most recently, he has published his memoirs, Film Moi or Narcissus in the Dark, and the plays: Hollywood at Sunset and Michelangelo's Models.

He reviews adult gay-male videos for several publications and maintains 70 pages of photographs at Caffe Cino Pictures.

He retired from theatre in 1990, and has lived in Los Angeles since 1993.

In 2010 he published a DVD of his lecture, Caffe Cino: Birthplace of Gay Theatre. and two books of poems, "A Strain of Laughter" and "Bitter with the Sweet" with Lulu.Com. In 2013 he was talked back onto the stage by young Los Angeles underground theatre people, appearing as a reader, singer, and actor, ultimately in March 2014 presenting a full-length one-man show about his career entitled, "What Doesn't Kill Me Makes a Great Story Later," featuring his a capella renditions of several songs also written by him.

Selected works

Plays

  • The Haunted Host (1964)
  • Joyce Dynel (1969)
  • Salvation Army (1969)
  • Fog (1969)
  • Camera Obscura (1969)
  • Pouf Positive
  • Kennedy's Children (1974)
  • One Man, One Woman
  • Play-By-Play

  • The Golden Circle
  • Tools Not Rules
  • My Cup Ranneth Over (1976)
  • T-Shirts (1979)
  • Mutual Benefit Life
  • Mercy Drop
  • Blue Is For Boys (1983)
  • Untold Decades (1988)
  • Michelangelo's Models

  • Bread Alone
  • The Trial of Socrates
  • Judas"
  • The Trojan Women" (after Euripides)
  • The Last Stroke
  • Hello, Bob
  • Evan on Earth
  • All at Sea (book and score)
  • Hollywood at Sunset
  • What Doesn't Kill Me Makes a Great Story Later(2013-2014)

Collections and anthologies

Poetry

Screenplays

Delusion (film) 2004 Plus numerous ghost-written works

Film and video roles

Awards

References

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Personal websites and blogs
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