Warning: mysql_result(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /usr/home/orangedude/sites/manpaper.com/sessions.php on line 69 Latest Neil LaBute News on Manpaper.com
Samuel L. Jackson and Neil LaBute fell out on the set of new movie Lakeview Terrace because the director ignored his star's request for an alternate ending. The actor plays a racist police officer who will stop at nothing [...] Read more!
Veteran actor Ed Harris refuses to read his reviews, because he still remembers the negative critical reaction to a theatre performance he gave 30 years ago. Harris, best known for his roles in movies such as Pollock, The Rock and A History Of Violence, is returning to the Los Angeles stage in Neil LaBute play Wrecks.[...] Read more!
He is a graduate of Brigham Young University, the University of Kansas, and New York University. While enrolled in the Graduate Dramatic Writing Program at NYU, he was the recipient of a literary fellowship to study at the Royal Court Theatre in London, and also attended the Sundance Institutes Playwrights Lab.
Playwright and filmmaker Neil LaBute has earned a reputation for writing characters who are selfish, mean, misanthropic and misogynistic. His films include In the Company of Men and Your Friends & Neighbors. His plays include "The Mercy Seat", "Some Girls" and "Fat Pig". The New Yorker's John Lahr says his plays are "complex and unnerving," and that "there's no playwright on the planet who is writing better." "Wrecks" is LaBute's new one-man play starring Ed Harris. It opened last night at the Public Theatre in New York.
Actor Ed Harris plays Ludwig van Beethoven in the new film Copying Beethoven, and he's also starring in the new play Wrecks, written and directed by Neil LaBute. The play is set to begin previews at New York's Public Theater on September 26 and open on Oct. 10.
Nicholas Cage makes two kinds of movies good ones and bad ones. This a bad Nicholas Cage movie. Cage stars in Neil LaBute's remake of 'The Wicker Man'. ...
NEW YORK — The protagonist in Neil LaBute's latest play is typical of the characters in his work: self-centered, emotionally hollow, opportunistic and probably a bit pathological.