Cartoonist, Author, Playwright
Feiffer’s Pulitzer-winning comic strip has been
influencing and entertaining readers for decades. His internationally
syndicated cartoon ran for 42 years in the Village
Voice, weaving the social, political, and personal
into a perceptive, challenging, often hilarious mix. His sensibility
permeates a wide range of creative work: from his Obie Award-winning
play Little Murders
(a prophetic vision of random urban violence), to his screenplay for
Carnal Knowledge
(a controversial examination of the sex wars), to his Oscar-winning
anti-military short subject animation, Munro.
Other works include: the plays Knock
Knock (a Tony award nominee) and Grown-Ups
(nominated for a Pulitzer Prize); the novels Harry
the Rat with Women and Ackroyd;
and the screenplays Popeye
and I Want to Go Home,
winner of the best screenplay award at the Venice Film Festival.
Two of his plays, Grown-Ups
and Hold Me!,
have been adapted for TV. Feiffer himself has been the subject of many
TV interviews and documentaries, including the PBS biography, Feiffer’s
America.
Feiffer’s cartoons have been collected into 19 books, and have
appeared in The New Yorker, Esquire,
Playboy, and The
Nation. He was commissioned by The
New York Times to create its first op-ed page comic
strip which ran monthly until 2000, when Feiffer decided to start off
the new millennium by giving up cartooning, In his mid-sixties, taking
inspiration from his three daughters spanning three generations, he
has reinvented himself as a children’s book author. His first
book, The Man in the Ceiling,
was selected by Publisher’s
Weekly and the New York Public Library, as one
of the year’s best children’s books. Two other award-winning
books, Bark George,
and I Lost My Bear,
are being adapted into animated cartoons. Presently, Feiffer is at work,
creating a full-length animated feature for Sony Pictures.
He has been honored by exhibitions at the Library of Congress, to which
he has donated many of his works, and by the New-York Historical Society
with Julz Rulz,
a major retrospective. His new play, A
Bad Friend (2003) has been commissioned by Lincoln
Center.
Feiffer is an adjunct professor at Southampton College. Previously he
taught at the Yale School of Drama and Northwestern University. He has
been a Senior Fellow at Columbia University’s National Arts Journalism
Program. Feiffer is a member of the Dramatists Guild Council and has
been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters..
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