Bruce Bonafede is an American playwright.[1][2][3][4][5] He is a Lifetime Member of the Dramatists Guild.
Bonafede's first produced play, Advice to the Players, is a drama that studies the relationship between art and politics.[2][3][4][6][7][8][9][10][11][12] The play's inspiration was an incident at the 1981 International Theater Festival in Baltimore, where two acclaimed South African actors were caught up in an international boycott of South Africa's apartheid policies.[2][3][4][6][7][8][9][10][11][12] The play was first produced as part of Actors Theatre of Louisville's "Shorts" Festival in November 1984, the original production starred Delroy Lindo and Joe Morton.[2][4][8][9][13] The play was produced again at the Actors Theatre of LouisvilleHumana Festival for New American Plays in April 1985, and won the Heideman Award as best one-act play of the festival.[1][4][6][14] Following the production at Actors Theatre of Louisville, a 90-minute version without intermission was produced at the Philadelphia Festival of New Plays in 1986.[2][4][6] Advice to the Players was published in Literary Cavalcade, a Scholastic magazine, and the anthology Best Short Plays-1986.[15][16] The 90-minute version of the play was published by Samuel French in 2015.[14]
Bonafede is a contributor and editor for the business book Manager's Guide to Crisis Management (ISBN0071769498) by Jonathan Bernstein (Briefcase Books Series), published in 2011.[17]
Other writing projects remain confidential due to contractual agreements.
^ abcB A Young (March 28, 1985). "Arts: Review of Humana Drama Festivalin Louisville, Kentucky". Financial Times.
^ abcMel Gussow (March 28, 1985). "Critic's Notebook; In New Plays, Mystical Visions And Broken Glass". The New York Times.
^ abMegan Rosenfeld (December 3, 1984). "Success Story". The Washington Post.
^ abHap Erstein (June 28, 1990). "New troupe springs to life with local playwright fest". "The Washington Times. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)