Elizabeth LeCompte

Director

Birthday April 28, 1944

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace New Jersey, U.S.

Age 79 years old

Nationality United States

#16709 Most Popular

1944

Elizabeth LeCompte (born April 28, 1944) is an American director of experimental theater, dance, and media.

1970

A founding member of The Wooster Group, she has directed that ensemble since its emergence in the late 1970s.

LeCompte was born and grew up in New Jersey.

She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Fine Arts from Skidmore College.

She met director and actor Willem Dafoe at The Performance Group and began a professional and personal relationship.

Prior to her work with The Wooster Group, she was a member of the experimental theater company The Performance Group from 1970 to 1975.

Subsequently, LeCompte and Spalding Gray founded The Wooster Group, along with Jim Clayburgh, Willem Dafoe, Peyton Smith, Kate Valk, and Ron Vawter.

1975

With The Wooster Group, she has composed, designed, and directed over forty works for theater, dance, film and video, starting with Sakonnet Point in 1975.

These works characteristically interweave performance with multimedia technologies and are strongly influenced by historical and contemporary visual arts and architecture.

She is known both for taking apart and reworking classics such as Hamlet, The Emperor Jones, and The Hairy Ape as well as constructing new works from scratch.

1977

In 1977 LeCompte began a relationship with actor Willem Dafoe.

1982

Their son, Jack, was born in 1982.

1993

She was included in the 1993 Whitney Biennial.

2004

For her work with these groups, LeCompte was included in Mitter and Shevtsova's 2004 volume discussing 50 influential theater directors around the world.

Other writers consistently include her in the lineage of experimental theater artists that passes through Meyerhold and Grotowski to the present generation of "postdramatic" theater makers.

As a New Yorker writer put it: "Luminaries of the theatrical avant-garde—Richard Foreman, Robert Wilson, and Peter Sellars among them—describe her as first among equals".

LeCompte has lectured and taught at American University, the Art Institute of Chicago, Columbia University, Connecticut College, the Lincoln Center Theatre Directors Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, New York University, Northeastern University, the O’Neill Center, Smith College, the University of London, and the Yale School of Drama.

They never married and ended their relationship in 2004 after 27 years.

The couple have one son, Jack.

2016

She won the 2016 Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize.

2018

In 2018, The New York Times critics ranked House/Lights the 16th greatest American play since Angels in America.

Among her honors, LeCompte has received the National Endowment for the Arts Distinguished Artists Fellowship for Lifetime Achievement in the American Theater, the MacArthur Fellowship, the Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres from the French Cultural Ministry, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, a United States Artists Fellowship, an Anonymous Was A Woman Award, the Theater Practitioner Award from Theatre Communications Group, The Skowhegan Medal for Performance, a Doris Duke Charitable Foundation Performance Artist Award and honorary doctorates from the New School for Social Research and the California Institute of the Arts.