Join acclaimed playwright Sarah Ruhl and Daphna Shohamy, Director of Columbia’s Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, and Codirector of Columbia’s Kavli Institute for Brain Science for a capstone conversation reflecting on Sarah’s residency at the Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute. Together, they will explore key insights, ongoing questions, future collaborations and projects, and the ways stories shape identity, memory, and our perception of reality. The discussion will conclude with an audience Q&A.
This event is open to the Columbia community and the public.
A reception will follow.
Sarah Ruhl is an award-winning American playwright, author, essayist, and professor. Her plays include The Oldest Boy; Dear Elizabeth; Stage Kiss, In the Next Room, or The Vibrator Play (Pulitzer Prize finalist, 2010); The Clean House (Pulitzer Prize finalist, 2005; Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, 2004); Passion Play (Pen American Award, Fourth Freedom Forum Playwriting Award from the Kennedy Center); Dead Man’s Cell Phone (Helen Hayes Award for Best New Play); Melancholy Play; Demeter in the City (nine NAACP Image Award nominations); Scenes From Court Life; How to Transcend a Happy Marriage, For Peter Pan on Her 70th Birthday; Eurydice; Orlando; and Late: A Cowboy Song. Her plays have been produced on Broadway and across the country as well as internationally, and translated into fourteen languages.
Originally from Chicago, Ms. Ruhl received her MFA from Brown University, where she studied with Paula Vogel. She is the recipient of a Helen Merrill Emerging Playwrights Award, a Whiting Writers’ Award, a PEN Center Award for mid-career playwrights, a Steinberg Distinguished Playwright Award, and a Lilly award. She is a member of 13P and New Dramatists and won the MacArthur Fellowship in 2006. She teaches at Yale School of Drama and lives in Brooklyn with her family.
You can read more about Sarah here.
