William Missouri Downs

American dramatist


title: "William Missouri Downs" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["year-of-birth-missing-(living-people)", "living-people", "american-male-dramatists-and-playwrights", "american-male-non-fiction-writers", "american-television-writers", "screenwriters-from-michigan", "american-information-and-reference-writers", "american-instructional-writers", "american-theatre-directors", "american-male-television-writers", "screenwriting-instructors", "ucla-school-of-theater,-film-and-television-alumni", "writers-of-books-about-writing-fiction", "20th-century-american-dramatists-and-playwrights", "20th-century-american-non-fiction-writers", "20th-century-american-male-writers", "21st-century-american-dramatists-and-playwrights", "21st-century-american-non-fiction-writers", "21st-century-american-male-writers", "american-male-screenwriters", "people-from-bay-city,-michigan"] description: "American dramatist" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Missouri_Downs" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American dramatist ::

William Missouri Downs is an American comedy writer, playwright, screenwriter, stage director, and author.

Life and career

William Missouri Downs started as an actor earning an MFA in acting from the University of Illinois, but a bout with viral encephalitis left him with a slight stammer and ended his acting career. So he moved to New York and studied playwriting at the Circle Rep Theatre under Lanford Wilson and Milan Stitt.

He then moved to Los Angeles and earned an MFA in screenwriting from UCLA. While a student at UCLA film school, he won numerous screenwriting awards, including the Jack Nicholson prize.

In Hollywood, he worked as a script secretary on NBC's Moonlighting and studied sitcom writing at the Warner Brothers Sitcom Writing Workshop. He was a staff writer on NBC's My Two Dads, with writing credits on four episodes, under the pen name Bill Streib. As Streib, he was also credited with writing one episode each for the NBC shows Amen and Fresh Prince Of Bel Air. In addition, he sold a movie to Ron Howard's Imagine Entertainment and optioned another to Filmways. He worked with Jim Parsons to develop a TV pilot that was optioned by Hollywood producer Meryl Poster.

Downs has written numerous plays, several of which have won awards. These include: The Exit Interview (which premiered at the Orlando Shakespeare), winner of a rolling premiere from the National New Play Network (NNPN); Women Playing Hamlet (which premiered at the Unicorn Theatre in Missouri), winner of a rolling premiere from NNPN; Mad Gravity, a finalist for Eugene O'Neill Award and winner of the Reva Shiner Comedy Award, premiering at the Bloomington Playwrights Project; Cockeyed winner of The Greenhouse Festival of New Plays; and Seagulls in a Cherry Tree, winner of the Larry Corse Prize for Playwriting.

There have been over 250 productions of his plays, including productions at the Orlando Shakespeare Theatre, the InterAct Theatre in Philadelphia, the San Diego Rep, the Berkeley Repertory Theatre, the Salt Lake City Acting Company, the Actors Theatre of Charlotte, the Jewish Theatre of Toronto, the Bloomington Playwright's Project, the Detroit Rep, and the New York City Fringe Festival.

His plays have been produced in Spain (Fuera de órbita), Canada, South Africa (Durban Performing Arts Center), Russia (Хороший парень - The Serov Theatre Drama After Chekhov, Serov), Singapore (The Hexis Theatre), Switzerland (Franklin University, Lugano,), Austria (stadt Theater walfischgasse, Vienna), Israel (The International Theatre Festival), India (Alliance Francaise de Bangalore, Bangalore), and South Korea (피카소를 훔치는 법 & 실제 게임 at Theatre in Daehangno & Daehakro Theatre, Seoul).

Downs has an extensive publication record including articles, plays, and books. He has co-authored four books, including Naked Playwriting (Silman/James), Playwriting: From Formula to Form (Harcourt Brace), Screenplay: Writing the Picture (Silman/James), and The Art of Theatre (Wadsworth/Cengage). The Art of Theatre has gone through multiple editions and has been adopted as a college textbook in the US.

Awards

Downs has won two rolling premieres from the National New Play Network and has twice been a finalist at the Eugene O'Neill. He also won the Beverly Hills Theatre Guild Julie Harris Award.

Plays

  • Kosher Lutherans, published by Samuel French
  • Women Playing Hamlet, published by Playscripts
  • Mr. Perfect, published by Playscripts
  • Mad Gravity, published by Playscripts
  • Cockeyed, published by Samuel French
  • Forgiving John Lennon
  • The Exit Interview, published by Samuel French
  • Headsets - A View from the Light Booth, published by Heuer Publishing
  • Seagulls in a Cherry Tree, published by Heuer Publishing
  • Innocent Thoughts, published by Next Stage Press
  • Fascism the Musical
    • Life on my Knees*
  • How to Steal a Picasso
  • Angry Psycho Princesses (the musical)
  • You Can't Say That!
  • How to Survive Your Family at Christmas

Books

Monologues and short plays

  • Books on Tape, published by North West Theatre Review, Oregon State University (2008)
  • Exceptional Monologues, published by Samuel French, New York (2009)
  • The Best Women's Stage Monologues of 2016, published by Smith And Kraus (2011)
  • 222 Comedy Monologues, published by Playscripts (2016)
  • Contemporary Scenes For Twentysomethings, Applause Books (2017)
  • Contemporary Monologues For Twentysomethings, Applause Books (2018)
  • Actor's Choice Monologue, published by Playscripts, New York

References

References

  1. "A life in theater is not for the weak of heart, says playwright William Missouri Downs".
  2. Branding Iron. (2015-11-20). "William Downs: 'not your typical professor'".
  3. "Los Angeles Department of City Planning".
  4. Crossett, Laura. (2013-01-31). "The Stage: Interview: William Missouri Downs".
  5. "Scholarships and Fellowships".
  6. "The Exit Interview".
  7. "Cockeyed".
  8. [http://nnpn.org/about/news/unicorn-theatre-launches-nnpn-rolling-world-premiere-0f-women-playing-hamlet-on-march-4th Women Playing Hamlet]
  9. "Women Playing Hamlet by William Missouri Downs {{!}} Playscripts Inc.".
  10. "Reva Shiner Comedy Award".
  11. "Mad Gravity by William Missouri Downs {{!}} Playscripts Inc.".
  12. "Search for plays by title and author name".
  13. Writer, Matthew J. Palm, Orlando Sentinel Arts. (26 September 2012). "'The Exit Interview' makes world premiere at Shakespeare Theater".
  14. "World Premieres".
  15. "San Diego Repertory Theatre Production History".
  16. "The Exit Interview is theater and pop culture on Prozac {{!}} Performing Arts {{!}} Creative Loafing Charlotte".
  17. thecjnadmin. (2010-10-28). "Teatron to stage Kosher Lutherans".
  18. "From the Fringe - Smith College Office of Alumnae Relations Smith College Office of Alumnae Relations".
  19. "Fuera de Órbita, de William Missouri Downs".
  20. "Serov Theatre".
  21. "William Missouri Downs: books, biography, latest update".
  22. "Naked Playwriting".
  23. (1998). "Playwriting from Formula to Form: A Guide to Writing a Play". Harcout Brace College Publishers.
  24. "Screenplay, 2nd Edition".
  25. "Search".
  26. "About - National New Play Network".
  27. "Mad Gravity by William Missouri Downs - 2013 National Playwrights Conference Finalists".
  28. "Playwrights - National New Play Network".
  29. "Beverly Hills Theatre Guild - Present Winners".
  30. "Samuel French, Inc. The House of Plays & Musical Plays for over 175 Years".
  31. "Samuel French, Inc. The House of Plays & Musical Plays for over 175 Years".
  32. "Detroit Events - Things to Do in Detroit This Weekend - Visit Detroit".
  33. moore, john. (October 4, 2011). "national new play network selects william missouri downs". [[Denver Post]].
  34. "Heuer Publishing - HEADSETS".
  35. "Heuer Publishing - SEAGULLS IN A CHERRY TREE".
  36. (March 2022)
  37. {{usurped
  38. "William Missouri Downs {{!}} New Play Exchange".
  39. (2020-01-13). "You Can't Say That".
  40. BWW News Desk. "HOW TO SURVIVE YOUR FAMILY AT CHRISTMAS Opens at No Strings Theatre Company Friday".
  41. (2011-08-12). "The Literary Northwest Series".
  42. (2012). "The Best Women's Stage Monologues and Scenes, 2011". Smith & Kraus Book.
  43. (2018). "Contemporary Scenes for Twentysomethings". Hal Leonard LLC.
  44. (2018). "Contemporary Monologues for Twentysomethings". Applause Theatre & Cinema Books.

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year-of-birth-missing-(living-people)living-peopleamerican-male-dramatists-and-playwrightsamerican-male-non-fiction-writersamerican-television-writersscreenwriters-from-michiganamerican-information-and-reference-writersamerican-instructional-writersamerican-theatre-directorsamerican-male-television-writersscreenwriting-instructorsucla-school-of-theater,-film-and-television-alumniwriters-of-books-about-writing-fiction20th-century-american-dramatists-and-playwrights20th-century-american-non-fiction-writers20th-century-american-male-writers21st-century-american-dramatists-and-playwrights21st-century-american-non-fiction-writers21st-century-american-male-writersamerican-male-screenwriterspeople-from-bay-city,-michigan