Barrie Stavis
Barrie Stavis was an American playwright. Educated at New Utrecht High School, Brooklyn, and Columbia University, he covered the Spanish Civil War from 1937 to 1939 as a foreign correspondent and served in the US Army Signal Corps from 1942-1945 as a Technical-Sergeant. His marriage to Leona Heyert in 1925 ended in divorce in 1939. His second marriage to Bernice Coe lasted more than fifty years, until her death in 2001.
He wrote several plays about men struggling in the vortex of history. His subjects include scientist Galileo, abolitionist John Brown, and labor leader Joe Hill. His play, Lamp at Midnight, about Galileo's struggle with the Catholic Church to get his ideas accepted, was performed and televised on the Hallmark Hall of Fame in 1966. Melvyn Douglas starred as Galileo.
Stavis's plays can be done on a clean, simple stage. They have been translated into 28 languages and have been produced in dozens of major theaters around the world and in numerous college theaters.
Stavis was actively working until his death on February 2, 2007, at the age of 100.
Major plays
- Harpers Ferry. First new play in a classical repertory Guthrie [Theater production history|produced by the Guthrie Theater], Minneapolis, 1967: John Brown adopts guerrilla warfare to overthrow slavery. The raid on Harpers Ferry fails and he is executed, but slavery is eventually abolished.
- Lamp At Midnight. First produced at New Stages, New York, 1947. Television adaptation Hallmark Hall of Fame, 1966: Galileo challenges religious dogma with science and finds enormous resistance to the truth.
- The Man Who Never Died. Joe Hill confronts power by organizing a trade union and pays with his life. First produced at the Jan Hus Theater, New York, 1958.
- The Raw Edge of Victory in Dramatics : George Washington leads a revolution to establish national independence.
Honors
- The National Theater Conference honors an outstanding emerging playwright each year with the '''Barrie and Bernice Stavis Playwriting Award'''