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David Mamet
Mamet in 2008
Mamet in 2008
Born (1947-11-30) November 30, 1947 (age 77)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Occupation
  • Author
  • playwright
  • screenwriter
  • film director
Education Goddard College (BA)
Period 1970–present
Notable works The Duck Variations (1971)
Glengarry Glen Ross (1983)
Spouse
Lindsay Crouse
(m. 1977; div. 1990)
Rebecca Pidgeon
(m. 1991)
Children 4, including Zosia Mamet and Clara Mamet
Signature
David Mamet Signature.svg

David Alan Mamet (/ˈmæmɪt/; born November 30, 1947) is an American playwright, filmmaker, and author.

He won a Pulitzer Prize and received Tony nominations for his plays Glengarry Glen Ross (1984) and Speed-the-Plow (1988). He first gained critical acclaim for a trio of 1970s off-Broadway plays: The Duck Variations and American Buffalo. His plays Race and The Penitent, respectively, opened on Broadway in 2009 and previewed off-Broadway in 2017.

Feature films that Mamet both wrote and directed include House of Games (1987), Homicide (1991), The Spanish Prisoner (1997), and his biggest commercial success, Heist (2001). His screenwriting credits include The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981), The Verdict (1982), The Untouchables (1987), Hoffa (1992), Wag the Dog (1997), and Hannibal (2001). Mamet himself wrote the screenplay for the 1992 adaptation of Glengarry Glen Ross, and wrote and directed the 1994 adaptation of his play Oleanna (1992). He created and produced the CBS series The Unit (2006–2009).

Mamet's books include: On Directing Film (1991), a commentary and dialogue about film-making; The Old Religion (1997), a novel about the lynching of Leo Frank; Five Cities of Refuge: Weekly Reflections on Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy (2004), a Torah commentary with Rabbi Lawrence Kushner; The Wicked Son (2006), a study of Jewish self-hatred and antisemitism; Bambi vs. Godzilla, a commentary on the movie business; The Secret Knowledge: On the Dismantling of American Culture (2011), a commentary on cultural and political issues; Three War Stories (2013), a trio of novellas about the physical and psychological effects of war; and Everywhere an Oink Oink: An Embittered, Dyspeptic, and Accurate Report of Forty Years in Hollywood (2023), an autobiographical account of his experiences in Hollywood.

Early life and education

Mamet was born in 1947 in Chicago to Lenore June (née Silver), a teacher, and Bernard Morris Mamet, a labor attorney. He is Jewish. His paternal grandparents were Polish Jews. Mamet has said his parents were communists and described himself as a "red diaper baby". One of his earliest jobs was as a busboy at Chicago's London House and The Second City. He also worked as an actor, editor for Oui magazine and as a cab-driver. He was educated at the progressive Francis W. Parker School and at Goddard College in Plainfield, Vermont. At the Chicago Public Library Foundation 20th anniversary fundraiser in 2006, though, Mamet announced "My alma mater is the Chicago Public Library. I got what little educational foundation I got in the third-floor reading room, under the tutelage of a Coca-Cola sign".

After a move to Chicago's North Side, Mamet met theater director Robert Sickinger, and began to work occasionally at Sickinger's Hull House Theatre. Thus began Mamet's lifelong involvement with the theater.

Career

Theater

Mamet is a founding member of the Atlantic Theater Company; he first gained acclaim for his off-Broadway plays in 1976, The Duck Variations and American Buffalo. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1984 for Glengarry Glen Ross, which received its first Broadway revival in the summer of 2005. His play Race, which opened on Broadway on December 6, 2009, and featured James Spader, David Alan Grier, Kerry Washington, and Richard Thomas in the cast, received mixed reviews. His play The Anarchist, starring Patti LuPone and Debra Winger, in her Broadway debut, opened on Broadway on November 13, 2012, in previews and was scheduled to close on December 16, 2012. His 2017 play The Penitent previewed off-Broadway on February 8, 2017.

In 2002, Mamet was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame. Mamet later received the PEN/Laura Pels Theater Award for Grand Master of American Theater in 2010.

In 2017, Mamet released an online class for writers entitled David Mamet teaches dramatic writing.

In 2019 Mamet returned to the London West End with a new play, Bitter Wheat, at the Garrick Theatre, starring John Malkovich.

In 2023 it was announced that a new Mamet play, titled Henry Johnson, was expected to debut in Los Angeles starring Shia LaBeouf.

Film

Mamet's first film work was as a screenwriter, later directing his own scripts.

According to Joe Mantegna, Mamet worked as a script doctor for the 1978 film Towing.

Mamet's first produced screenplay was the 1981 production of The Postman Always Rings Twice, based on James M. Cain's novel. He received an Academy Award nomination one year later for the 1982 legal drama, The Verdict. He also wrote the screenplays for The Untouchables (1987), Hoffa (1992), The Edge (1997), Wag the Dog (1997), Ronin (1998), and Hannibal (2001). He received a second Academy Award nomination for Wag the Dog.

In 1987, Mamet made his film directing debut with his screenplay House of Games, which won Best Screenplay awards at the 1987 Venice Film Festival and the Film of the Year in 1989 from the London Film Critics' Circle Awards. The film starred his then-wife, Lindsay Crouse, and many longtime stage associates and friends, including fellow Goddard College graduates. Mamet was quoted as saying, "It was my first film as a director and I needed support, so I stacked the deck." After House of Games, Mamet later wrote and directed two more films focusing on the world of con artists, The Spanish Prisoner (1997) and Heist (2001). Among those films, Heist enjoyed the biggest commercial success.

Other films that Mamet both wrote and directed include: Things Change (1988), Homicide (1991) (nominated for the Palme d'Or at 1991 Cannes Film Festival and won a "Screenwriter of the Year" award for Mamet from the London Film Critics' Circle Awards), Oleanna (1994), The Winslow Boy (1999), State and Main (2000), Spartan (2004), Redbelt (2008), and the 2013 bio-pic TV movie Phil Spector.

A feature-length film, a thriller titled Blackbird, was intended for release in 2015, but is still in development.

When Mamet adapted his play for the 1992 film Glengarry Glen Ross, he wrote an additional part (including the monologue "Coffee's for closers") for Alec Baldwin.

Mamet continues to work with an informal repertory company for his films, including Crouse, William H. Macy, Joe Mantegna, and Rebecca Pidgeon, as well as the aforementioned school friends.

Mamet rewrote the script for Ronin under the pseudonym "Richard Weisz" and turned in an early version of a script for Malcolm X which was rejected by director Spike Lee. Mamet also wrote an unproduced biopic script about Roscoe Arbuckle with Chris Farley intended to portray him. In 2000, Mamet directed a film version of Catastrophe, a one-act play by Samuel Beckett featuring Harold Pinter and John Gielgud (in his final screen performance). In 2008, he wrote and directed the mixed martial arts movie Redbelt, about a martial arts instructor tricked into fighting in a professional bout.

In On Directing Film, Mamet advocates for a method of storytelling based on Eisenstein's montage theory, stating that the story should be told through the juxtaposition of uninflected images. This method relies heavily on the cut between scenes, and Mamet urges directors to eliminate as much narration as possible. Mamet asserts that directors should focus on getting the point of a scene across, rather than simply following a protagonist, or adding visually beautiful or intriguing shots. Films should create order from disorder in search of the objective.

In 2023, reports emerged that Mamet would direct and co-write a new film titled Assassination, his first film since 2008. The film will center around the Chicago Mob ordering the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and will star Viggo Mortensen, Shia LaBeouf, Courtney Love, Al Pacino, and John Travolta. The film's production was scheduled to start in September 2023. In October, Barry Levinson took over as the film's director, while Mamet remained as the screenwriter.

In March 2024, Mamet stated that he is currently writing a screenplay centering about Hunter Biden, the second son of U.S. President Joe Biden. In June, Deadline reported that the film, titled The Prince, will directed by Cameron Van Hoy and star Scott Haze as the lead character Parker; alongside Nicolas Cage, J.K. Simmons, Giancarlo Esposito, and Andy Garcia. Mamet added that the film won't be "a travelogue", and will be inspired by Hunter's life, rather than serve as a biopic.

Books

Mamet published the essay collection Writing in Restaurants in 1986, followed by the poetry collection The Hero Pony in 1990. He has also published a series of short plays, monologues and four novels, The Village (1994), The Old Religion (1997), Wilson: A Consideration of the Sources (2000), and Chicago (2018). He has written several non-fiction texts, and children's stories, including True and False: Heresy and Common Sense for the Actor (1997). In 2004 he published a lauded version of the classical Faust story, Faustus, however, when the play was staged in San Francisco during the spring of 2004, it was not well received by critics. On May 1, 2010, Mamet released a graphic novel The Trials of Roderick Spode (The Human Ant).

Mamet detailed his conversion from modern liberalism to "a reformed liberal" in The Secret Knowledge: On the Dismantling of American Culture in 2011. Mamet published Three War Stories, a collection of novellas, in 2013 ; the novel The Diary of a ... Star by Priscilla Wriston-Ranger: As Told to David Mamet With an Afterword by Mr. Mamet in 2019; and the political commentary Recessional: The Death of Free Speech and the Cost of a Free Lunch in 2022. In 2023 Mamet recounted his experiences in Hollywood and the movie-making industry in Everywhere an Oink Oink: An Embittered, Dyspeptic, and Accurate Report of Forty Years in Hollywood.

Television and radio

Mamet wrote one episode of Hill Street Blues, "A Wasted Weekend", that aired in 1987. His then-wife, Lindsay Crouse, appeared in numerous episodes (including that one) as Officer McBride. Mamet is also the creator, producer and frequent writer of the television series The Unit, where he wrote a well-circulated memo to the writing staff. He directed a third-season episode of The Shield with Shawn Ryan. In 2007, Mamet directed two television commercials for Ford Motor Company. The two 30-second ads featured the Ford Edge and were filmed in Mamet's signature style of fast-paced dialogue and clear, simple imagery. Mamet's sister, Lynn, is a producer and writer for television shows, such as The Unit and Law & Order.

Mamet has contributed several dramas to BBC Radio through Jarvis & Ayres Productions, including an adaptation of Glengarry Glen Ross for BBC Radio 3 and new dramas for BBC Radio 4. The comedy Keep Your Pantheon (or On the Whole I'd Rather Be in Mesopotamia) was aired in 2007. The Christopher Boy's Communion was another Jarvis & Ayres production, first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on March 8, 2021.

Personal life

Mamet and actress Lindsay Crouse married in 1977 and divorced in 1990. The couple have two children. Mamet has been married to actress and singer-songwriter Rebecca Pidgeon since 1991, and they have two children. Mamet and Pidgeon live in Santa Monica, California.

Mamet is a Reform Jew and strongly pro-Israel.

Works

Theatre (selected)

  • Lakeboat (1970)
  • The Duck Variations (1972)
  • Lone Canoe (1972)
  • Squirrels (1974)
  • American Buffalo (1975)
  • Reunion (1976)
  • The Water Engine (1976)
  • A Life in the Theatre (1977)
  • The Woods (1977)
  • The Revenge of the Space Pandas, or Binky Rudich and the Two-Speed Clock (1978)
  • Mr. Happiness (1978)
  • Prairie du Chien (1979)
  • The Blue Hour (1979)
  • Lakeboat (revision) (1980)
  • Edmond (1982)
  • The Frog Prince (1983)
  • Glengarry Glen Ross (1983)
  • The Shawl (1985)
  • Goldberg Street: Short Plays and Monologues (1985)
  • The Poet & The Rent (1986)
  • Speed-the-Plow (1988)
  • Bobby Gould in Hell (1989)
  • Oleanna (1992)
  • The Cryptogram (1994)
  • The Old Neighborhood (1997)
  • Boston Marriage (1999)
  • Faustus (2004)
  • Romance (2005)
  • The Voysey Inheritance (adaptation) (2005)
  • Keep Your Pantheon (2007)
  • November (2007)
  • The Vikings and Darwin (2008)
  • Race (2009)
  • School (2009)
  • The Anarchist (2012)
  • China Doll (2015)
  • The Penitent (2017)
  • Bitter Wheat (2019)
  • The Christopher Boy's Communion (2020)
  • Henry Johnson (2023)

Film

Year Title Director Writer Notes
1981 The Postman Always Rings Twice No Yes
1982 The Verdict No Yes
1987 The Untouchables No Yes
House of Games Yes Yes
1988 Things Change Yes Yes
1989 We're No Angels No Yes
1991 Homicide Yes Yes
1992 Glengarry Glen Ross No Yes Also based on his play
Hoffa No Yes Also associate producer
1994 Oleanna Yes Yes Also based on his play
1996 American Buffalo No Yes
1997 The Spanish Prisoner Yes Yes
The Edge No Yes
Wag the Dog No Yes
1998 Ronin No Yes Credited as "Richard Weisz"
1999 The Winslow Boy Yes Yes
2000 Lakeboat No Yes Also based on his play
State and Main Yes Yes
2001 Hannibal No Yes
Heist Yes Yes
2004 Spartan Yes Yes
2005 Edmond No Yes Also based on his play
2008 Redbelt Yes Yes
2023 The Penitent No Yes Also based on his play
TBA The Prince No Yes Filming

Short film (selected)

Year Title Director Writer
2000 Catastrophe Yes No
2010 Inside the Actor's Workshop Yes Yes
The Marquee Yes Yes
Our Valley Yes Yes
Two Painters Yes Yes

Television

Year Title Director Writer Executive
Producer
Notes
1987 Hill Street Blues No Yes No TV Series
Episode "A Wasted Weekend"
1992 The Water Engine No Yes No TV Movie
Also based on his play
1993 A Life in the Theatre No Yes Yes
1994 Texan No Yes No TV Movie
1996 Ricky Jay and His 52 Assistants Yes No No TV Special
1999 Lansky No Yes Yes TV Movie
2004 The Shield Yes No No TV Series
Episode "Strays"
2006-2009 The Unit Yes Yes Yes TV Series; also creator
Directed 4 episodes and wrote 11 episodes
2013 Phil Spector Yes Yes Yes TV Movie

Acting roles

Year Title Role Notes
1987 Black Widow Herb Theatrical feature film
1992 The Water Engine Brown Haired Man TV Movie
1996 Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist Himself (voice) TV animated series
Episode: "New Telephone System"
2011 The Simpsons TV animated series
Episode: "Homer the Father"
2023 Beau is Afraid Rabbi (voice) Theatrical feature film

Awards and nominations

Association Year Category Project Result Ref.
Theater Awards
Drama Desk Awards 1977 Outstanding Play American Buffalo Nominated
1978 The Water Engine Nominated
1983
Edmond Nominated
1984 Glengarry Glen Ross Nominated
1988 Speed-the-Plow Nominated
1993 Oleanna Nominated
1995 The Cryptogram Nominated
New York Drama Critics' Circle 1977 Best American Play American Buffalo Won
1984 Glengarry Glen Ross Won
Pulitzer Prize 1984 Drama Glengarry Glen Ross Won
1995 The Cryptogram Nominated
Tony Awards 1984 Best Play Glengarry Glen Ross Nominated
1988 Speed-the-Plow Nominated
Film and Television Awards
Academy Awards 1982 Best Adapted Screenplay The Verdict Nominated
1997 Wag the Dog Nominated
British Academy Film Awards 1998 Best Adapted Screenplay Wag the Dog Nominated
Golden Globe Awards 1983 Best Screenplay The Verdict Nominated
1987 House of Games Nominated
1997 Wag the Dog Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards 2013 Outstanding Miniseries or Movie Phil Spector Nominated
Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series or Movie Nominated
Outstanding Writing for a Limited Series or Movie Nominated
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