John Lahr (born July 12, 1941) is an
American theater critic and the son of actor
Bert Lahr. Since 1992, he has been the senior drama critic at
The New Yorker magazine.
Born in
Los Angeles,
California, Lahr holds a B.A. from
Yale University and a Master's degree from
Worcester College,
Oxford. He has written many books, including the novels "The Autograph Hound" and "Hot to Trot", three
biographies of important theatrical figures: one of his father called
Notes on a Cowardly Lion; one of the
British playwright
Joe Orton called
Prick Up Your Ears; and one of the
Australian
comedian Barry Humphries called
Dame Edna Everage and the Rise of Western Civilization: Backstage with Barry Humphries. In 1987 he co-produced a
film based on his Orton biography and with the same title. Lahr also wrote the foreword to
Love All the People: Letters, Lyrics, Routines: a 1994 collection of
Bill Hicks' work.
In 2002, Lahr became the first drama critic ever to win a
Tony Award for his part in writing actress
Elaine Stritch’s one–woman show, "Elaine Stritch at Liberty", for which he and Stritch also won the Drama Desk Award for the Best Book to a Musical. Among his many awards, Lahr has twice won the George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism.
In 1994, Lahr published a profile in
The New Yorker detailing the vagaries of Lady Maria St. Just, an executor of playwright
Tennessee Williams's estate. The profile helped liberate
Lyle Leverich's biography of Williams,
Tom: The Unknown Tennessee Williams, from a four-year legal stranglehold. While working on a planned second volume in 2000, Leverich died and named Lahr as his favored successor. Lahr agreed to complete the second volume, which will follow Williams from 1945 to his death in 1983. In October 2007, Lahr said that he was taking a half-year sabbatical from writing
New Yorker profiles to work on the biography, and stated, "I'll probably finish it when I'm in my seventies."
In 1988, Lahr began a relationship with former actress
Connie Booth; they married in 2000 and live together in
London,
England. His sister is editor and writer
Jane Lahr.
Bibliography
Biographies and profiles
- Notes on a Cowardly Lion (1969)
- Prick Up Your Ears (1978)
- Sinatra: The Artist and the Man (1997)
- Show and Tell: New Yorker Profiles (2000)
- Honky Tonk Parade: New Yorker Profiles of Show People (2005)
Criticism
- Up Against the Fourth Wall (1970)
- Acting Out America (1972)
- Astonish Me: Adventures in Contemporary Theater (1973)
- Automatic Vaudeville (1984)
- Light Fantastic: Adventures in Theatre (1996)
Edited
- "The Diaries of Joe Orton" (1987)
Co-edited essay collections
- A Casebook on Harold Pinter's The Homecoming (1971) (With Anthea Lahr)
Articles
Novels
- The Autograph Hound (1972)
Plays
- Diary of a Somebody (1989) (adapted from Joe Orton's diaries)