NewsPHOTO ARCHIVE: Cynthia Nixon OnstageCynthia Nixon returned to stage Jan. 5 in the Broadway debut of Margaret Edson's Pulitzer Prize-winning Wit. Playbill.com offers a look back at her theatrical career thus far.
By
Matthew Blank
January 11, 2012
Nixon made her stage debut at age 14 in The Philadelphia Story, following up her award-winning performance by appearing in two Broadway shows simultaneously with Hurlyburly and The Real Thing.
Other notable credits include The Heidi Chronicles, Angels in America and The Rabbit Hole.
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Celebrating Cynthia Nixon Onstage
Celebrating Cynthia Nixon Onstage
35 PHOTOS
Nixon won a 1980-1981 Theatre World Award for her Broadway debut in The Philadelphia Story
William Hurt and Cynthia Nixon in Broadway's Hurlyburly, 1984
Martha Swope
Ron Silver, William Hurt, Harvey Keitel, Sigourney Weaver, Jerry Stiller, Cynthia Nixon and Judith Ivey in Broadway's Hurlyburly, 1984
Joan Allen, Joanne Camp, Anne Lange and Cynthia Nixon in Broadway's The Heidi Chronicles, 1989
Jude Law, Cynthia Nixon, Eileen Atkins and Roger Rees in Broadway's Indiscretions, 1995
From top: Kathleen Turner, Jude Law, Eileen Atkins, Cynthia Nixon and Roger Rees in Broadway's Indiscretions, 1995
Jude Law and Cynthia Nixon in Broadway's Indiscretions, 1995
Roger Rees and Cynthia Nixon in Broadway's Indiscretions, 1995
Nixon in Broadway's The Women, 2001
Amy Ryan, Jennifer Coolidge, Lisa Emery, Cynthia Nixon and Lynn Collins in Broadway's The Women, 2001
Joan Marcus
Nixon in Broadway's The Women, 2001
Tyne Daly and Cynthia Nixon in Broadway's The Rabbit Hole, 2006
John Slattery, Cynthia Nixon, Tyne Daly and Mary Catherine Garrison in Broadway's The Rabbit Hole, 2006
Cynthia Nixon and John Slattery in Broadway's The Rabbit Hole, 2006
Cynthia Nixon in Broadway's The Rabbit Hole, 2006
Halley Wegryn Gross, Sarah Steele, Zoe Kazan, Betsy Hogg and Cynthia Nixon in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie Off-Broadway, 2006
Cynthia Nixon and Lisa Emery in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie Off-Broadway, 2006
Directed by MTC artistic director Lynne Meadow, Wit will officially open Jan. 26. Tickets are currently on sale through March 11. Joining Tony and Emmy Award winner Nixon ("Sex and the City," Rabbit Hole) are Pun Bandhu (Technician), Olivier Award winner Suzanne Bertish (E.M. Ashford), Michael Countryman (Harvey Kelekian/Mr. Bearing), Jessica Dickey (Technician), Chiké Johnson (Technician), Greg Keller (Jason Posner), Carra Patterson (Susie Monahan) and Zachary Spicer (Technician).
Wit, according to MTC, "follows a brilliant and exacting poetry professor (Tony and Emmy Award winner Cynthia Nixon) as she undergoes experimental treatment for cancer. A scholar who devoted her life to academia, she must now face the irony and injustice of becoming the subject of research."
The play had its New York premiere in 1998 receiving universal acclaim and ran Off-Broadway for over 500 performances. It was the most-honored play of the season garnering the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and was named Best Play by the New York Drama Critics Circle, the Drama Desk Awards, the Outer Critics Circle Awards, the Drama League, and the Lucille Lortel Awards.
This is Edson's only play. Even at the height of her fame, she said she had no wish to pursue a playwriting career. Her career is teaching elementary school students.
The creative team for the Broadway production includes Santo Loquasto (scenic design), Jennifer von Mayrhauser (costume design), Peter Kaczorowski (lighting design) and Jill BC Du Boff (sound design).
Tickets, priced $57-$116, are available by calling (212) 239-6200, online by visiting www.Telecharge.com or by visiting the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre Box Office (261 W. 47th Street).
For more information visit www.ManhattanTheatreClub.com.