New York Daily News

Broadway playwright Arthur Kopit dies at 83

- BY MARK KENNEDY

Arthur Kopit, a three time Tony Award-nominated playwright and twotime Pulitzer Prize finalist known for fusing disparate genres, absurdism and a darkly comic worldview, has died. He was 83.

Kopit (photo) died Friday, said Rick Miramontez of DKC/O&M public relations. No other details were available.

Kopit earned a Tony nod in 1970 for “Indians,” a critique of the Vietnam War and America’s treatment of Native Americans that starred Stacy Keach as Buffalo Bill. Nine years later, he received another nomination for “Wings,” the story of a stroke victim’s recovery starring Constance Cummings. Both “Indians” and “Wings” were Pulitzer finalists for drama.

Kopit earned his third Tony nomination in 1982 for “Nine,” an adaptation of the Federico Fellini’s film “8½”

“Nine” returned to Broadway in 2003 and won two Tony Awards, including best revival. In 2009, Rob Marshall directed the film based on Kopit’s script.

Kopit’s other works include “Phantom,” a musical version of “The Phantom of the Opera” by Gaston Leroux that has been overshadow­ed by the more popular version by Andrew Lloyd Webber, and “The End of the World,” a mordant investigat­ion of the arms race and nuclear destructio­n.

He made his Broadway debut in 1963 with “Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma’s Hung You in the Closet and I’m Feelin’ So Sad,” which Jerome Robbins directed while Kopit was still an undergradu­ate at Harvard.

Kopit later taught at Wesleyan University, Yale University, and City College. He was a member of the Lark Play Developmen­t Center,

He is survived by his wife, Leslie Garis; his children, Alex, Ben and Kat; his grandchild­ren, Arthur, Beatrix and Clara, and his sister Susan.

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