Ayad Akhtar is a screenwriter, playwright, actor, and novelist. He is the author of the novel American Dervish and was nominated for a 2006 Independent Spirit Award for best screenplay for the film The War Within. His plays include Disgraced, recipient of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for Drama; The Who & The What and The Invisible Hand, both of which received Off-Broadway runs and are being produced around the world; and Junk, produced at Lincoln Center in 2017 He lives in New York City.
"Skillfully adopts the well-worn dramatic device of the imploding
dinner party to scratch beneath the surface of multicultural
harmony.... Smart, spiky entertainment.... A stimulating, sobering
work from a distinctive new American playwright."--David Rooney,
Hollywood Reporter
"Terrific.... DISGRACED...unfolds with speed, energy and crackling
wit.... The evening will come to a shocking end, but before that,
there is the sparkling conversation, expertly rendered on the page
by Akhtar.... Talk of 9/11, of Israel and Iran, of terrorism and
airport security, all evokes uncomfortable truths. Add a liberal
flow of alcohol and a couple of major secrets suddenly revealed,
and you've got yourself one dangerous dinner party..... In the end,
one can debate what the message of the play really is. Is it that
we cannot escape our roots, or perhaps simply that we don't ever
really know who we are, deep down, until something forces us to
confront it? Whatever it is, when you finally hear the word
'disgraced' in the words of one of these characters, you will no
doubt feel a chill down your spine." ---Jocelyn Noveck, AP "Offers
an engaging snapshot of the challenge for upwardly mobile Islamic
Americans in the post-9/11 age." ---Thom Geier, Entertainment
Weekly "Akhtar digs deep to confront uncomfortable truths about the
ways we look at race, culture, class, religion, and sex in this
bracingly adult, unflinching drama... [He] writes incisive, often
quite funny dialogue and creates vivid characters, managing to
cover a lot of ground in a mere four scenes and 80 minutes. Akhtar
doesn't offer any solutions to the thorny issues he presents so
effectively. What he does is require us to engage them, and that's
a very good and necessary thing." ---Erik Haagensen, Backstage.com
"DISGRACED stands among recent marks of an increasing and welcome
phenomenon: the arrival of South Asian and Middle Eastern Americans
as presences in our theater's dramatis personae, matching their
presence in our daily life. Like all such phenomena, it carries a
double significance. An achievement and a sign of recognition for
those it represents, for the rest of us it constitutes the
theatrical equivalent of getting to know the new
neighbors-something we had better do if we plan to survive as a
civil society." ---Michael Feingold, The Village Voice
"The best play I saw last year.... [a] quick-witted and shattering
drama.... DISGRACED rubs all kinds of unexpected raw spots with
intelligence and humor." ---Linda Winer, Newsday "A sparkling and
combustible contemporary drama.... Ayad Akhtar's one-act play
deftly mixes the political and personal, exploring race, freedom of
speech, political correctness, even the essence of Islam and
Judaism. The insidery references to the Hamptons and Bucks County,
Pennsylvania, and art critic Jerry Saltz are just enough to make
audience members feel smart.... Akhtar...has lots to say about
America and the world today. He says it all compellingly, and none
of it is comforting." ---Philip Boroff, Bloomberg Businessweek
"Compelling... DISGRACED raises and toys with provocative and
nuanced ideas." ---Jesse Oxfeld, New York Observer "A continuously
engaging, vitally engaged play about thorny questions of identity
and religion in the contemporary world.... In dialogue that
bristles with wit and intelligence, Mr. Akhtar...puts contemporary
attitudes toward religion under a microscope, revealing how tenuous
self-image can be for people born into one way of being who have
embraced another.... Everyone has been told that politics and
religion are two subjects that should be off limits at social
gatherings. But watching Mr. Akhtar's characters rip into these
forbidden topics, there's no arguing that they make for
ear-tickling good theater." ---Charles Isherwood, New York Times
"[A] blistering social drama about the racial prejudices that
secretly persist in progressive cultural circles." ---Marilyn
Stasio, Variety
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