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Nilo Cruz's Anna in the Tropics Wins the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Drama
By Robert Simonson
07 Apr 2003
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2003 Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Nilo Cruz
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Anna in the Tropics, an all but unknown play by Nilo Cruz, has won this year's Pulitzer Prize in Drama. The winner was announced at Columbia University's School of Journalism on April 7 at 3 PM.
The other finalists were Take Me Out by Richard Greenberg and The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia? by Edward Albee. Both were heavy favorites for the award.
Anna is the first play since Robert Schenkkan's The Kentucky Cycle to win the Pulitzer without having had a production in New York.
Cruz's other plays include Night Time to Bolina, A Park in Our House, Dancing on Her Knees and Two Sisters and a Piano. The latter two were both presented at the Public Theater, the largest New York productions Cruz has received.
The five member jury included Linda Winer (Newsday), Misha Berson (Seattle Times), Dominic Papatola (St. Paul Pioneer Press), Bruce Weber (New York Times) and Edwin Wilson, a CUNY professor and former Wall Street Journal critic.
Anna in the Tropics was commissioned by the New Theatre in Coral Gables, FL. Cruz was playwright-in-residence there during the 2001-2002 season. Anna premiered at the New Theatre
during the 2002-03 season.
The drama is set Ybor City (Tampa), Florida, in 1930, and deals with "a family of cigar makers whose loves and lives are played out against the backdrop of America in the midst of the Depression."
Rafael de Acha, the artistic director of the New Theatre, first found out that the Cruz play had won when Playbill On-Line called him at 3:20 PM. After repeating "Oh, my God," several times, he told PBOL that the company would be presenting the world premiere of Cruz' new play, Beauty of the Father, in the 2003-04 season.
The Cuban-born Cruz's work is heavily lyrical and symbolic. Cruz has described his work, in a twist on the literary label Magic Realism, as "realism that is magical." He often draws on his own experiences. His family were Cuban exiles who came penniless to "Little Havana" in Miami with a then 10 year-old Nilo in tow. His father got work in a shoe store and his mother in a purse factory.
Chicago's Victory Gardens, South Coast Rep in California and New Jersey's McCarter Theatre will all produce Anna in the coming season.
*
Last year's winner was Topdog/Underdog by Suzan-Lori Parks.
All entries for this year's Pulitzer Prize for Drama were submitted by a March 1, 2003, deadline. Productions that opened between March 2, 2002, and March 1, 2003, were eligible. Entries require a completed entry form, photograph and biography of the playwright, dates and place of production and six copies of the play.
The Pulitzer Prize — named for American journalist and publisher Joseph Pulitzer — was established in 1917, a stipulation of Mr. Pulitzer's will. The first Pulitzer Prize in Drama was awarded in 1918 to Jesse Lynch Williams' Why Marry?. Other recent recipients include Proof, Dinner with Friends, Wit, How I Learned to Drive, Rent, The Young Man From Atlanta, Three Tall Women and Angels in America: Millennium Approaches. The complete list of Pulitzer Prize in Drama winners is listed below: 2001-02: Topdog/Underdog by Suzan-Lori Parks
2000-01: Proof by David Auburn 1999-00: Dinner with Friends by Donald Margulies 1998-99: Wit by Margaret Edson 1997-98: How I Learned To Drive by Paula Vogel 1996-97: No award 1995-96: Rent by Jonathan Larson 1994-95: The Young Man From Atlanta by Horton Foote 1993 94: Three Tall Women by Edward Albee 1992-93: Angels in America: Millennium Approaches, by Tony Kushner 1991-92: The Kentucky Cycle, by Robert Schenkkan 1990-91: Lost in Yonkers, by Neil Simon 1989-90: The Piano Lesson, by August Wilson 1988-89: The Heidi Chronicles, by Wendy Wasserstein 1987-88: Driving Miss Daisy, by Alfred Uhry 1986-87: Fences, by August Wilson 1985-86: No award 1984-85: Sunday in the Park With George, by James Lapine and Stephen Sondheim 1983-84: Glengarry Glen Ross, by David Mamet 1982-83: 'night, Mother, by Marsha Norman 1981 82: A Soldier's Play, by Charles Fuller 1980-81: Crimes of the Heart, by Beth Henley 1979-80: Talley's Folly, by Lanford Wilson 1978-79: Buried Child, by Sam Shepard 1977-78: The Gin Game, by D.L. Coburn 1976-77: The Shadow Box, by Michael Cristofer 1975-76: A Chorus Line, by Michael Bennett, James Kirkwood, Nicholas Dante, Marvin Hamlisch and Edward Kleban 1974-75: Seascape, by Edward Albee 1973 74: No award 1972-73: That Championship Season, by Jason Miller 1971-72: No award 1970-71: The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds, by Paul Zindel 1969-70: No Place To Be Somebody, by Charles Gordone 1968-69: The Great White Hope, by Howard Sackler 1967-68: No award 1966-67: A Delicate Balance, by Edward Albee 1965-66: No award 1964-65: The Subject Was Roses, by Frank D. Gilroy 1963-64: No award 1962-63: No award 1961-62: How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, by Abe Burrows, Willie Gilbert, Jack Weinstock and Frank Loesser 1960-61: All the Way Home, by Tad Mosel 1959-60: Fiorello!, by Jerome Weidman, George Abbott, Sheldon Harnick and Jerry Bock 1958-59: J.B., by Archibald MacLeish 1957-58: Look Homeward, Angel, by Ketti Frings 1956-57: Long Day's Journey Into Night, by Eugene O'Neill 1955-56: The Diary of Anne Frank, by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett 1954-55: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, by Tennessee Williams 1953-54: The Teahouse of the August Moon, by John Patrick 1952-53: Picnic, by William Inge 1951-52: The Shrike, by Joseph Kramm 1950-51: No award 1949-50: South Pacific, by Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II and Joshua Logan 1948-49: Death of a Salesman, by Arthur Miller 1947-48: A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams 1946-47: No award 1945-46: State of the Union, by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse 1944-45: Harvey, by Mary Chase 1943-44: No award 1942-43: The Skin of Our Teeth, by Thornton Wilder 1941-42: No award 1940-41: There Shall Be No Night, by Robert E. Sherwood 1939-40: The Time of Your Life, by William Saroyan 1938-39: Abe Lincoln in Illinois, by Robert E. Sherwood 1937-38: Our Town, by Thornton Wilder 1936-37: You Can't Take It With You, by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman 1935-36: Idiot's Delight, by Robert E. Sherwood 1934-35: The Old Maid, by Zoe Akins 1933-34: Men in White, by Sidney Kingsley 1932-33: Both Your Houses, by Maxwell Anderson 1931-32: Of Thee I Sing, by George S. Kaufman, Morrie Ryskind, Ira and George Gershwin 1930-31: Alison's House, by Susan Glaspell 1929-30: The Green Pastures, by Marc Connelly 1928-29: Street Scene, by Elmer Rice 1927-28: Strange Interlude, by Eugene O'Neill 1926-27: In Abraham's Bosom, by Paul Green 1925-26: Craig's Wife, by George Kelly 1924-25: They Knew What They Wanted, by Sidney Howard 1923-24: Hell-Bent fer Heaven, by Hatcher Hughes 1922-23: Icebound, by Owen Davis 1921-22: Anna Christie, by Eugene O'Neill 1920-21: Miss Lulu Bett, by Zona Gale 1919-20: Beyond the Horizon, by Eugene O'Neill 1918-19: No award 1917-18: Why Marry?, by Jesse Lynch Williams 1916-17: No award
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A scene from the Public Theater's production of Nilo Cruz's Two Sisters and a Piano.
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| photo by Michal Daniel |
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