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Pictured at the June 4th reception at ASCAP are (l-r) DreamWorks Animation's chief executive Jeffrey Katzenberg, Lindsay-Abaire,
and ASCAP's AVP/Director of Musical Theatre
Michael A. Kerker.

Lindsay-Abaire, Harrington and Solly Win 2008 Kleban Awards

ASCAP members David Lindsay-Abaire, Laura Harrington and Bill Solly are among the winners of the 2008 Kleban Awards. Lindsay-Abair has been named most promising lyricist and the Award for most promising librettist resulted in a tie between Harrington and co-librettists Solly and Donald Ward. The announcement was made by New Dramatists, which administer the musical theatre awards on behalf of The Kleban Foundation. The Awards were presented on June 4, 2008 at a private ceremony held at ASCAP's New York office.

The Kleban Foundation was established in 1988 under the will of Edward L. Kleban, best known as the Tony and Pulitzer Prize award winner for the musical A Chorus Line. The will made provision for two annual Awards of $100,000 to be given to the most promising librettist and lyricist in American Musical Theatre. The judges making the final determination this year were Beth Blickers, Linda Kline and Gilbert Parker.

About the 2008 Kleban Award Winners:

David Lindsay-Abaire is the book and lyric writer for Shrek the Musical, which premieres on Broadway this fall. Most recently, he was awarded the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for his play Rabbit Hole, which premiered on Broadway at Manhattan Theatre Club's Biltmore Theater. The play also received five Tony Award nominations including Best Play, a Dramatists Guild Hull-Warriner Award nomination, and the Spirit of America Award from the Barbara Barondess MacLean Foundation. In addition to his work in theatre, he wrote the screenplay for the upcoming Newline feature "Inkheart," and is currently at work on screen adaptations of his plays Rabbit Hole for 20th Century Fox, and Kimberly Akimbo for Dreamworks and Killer Films. He is an alumnus of New Dramatists, which administers the Kleban, and a graduate of Sarah Lawrence College and the Juilliard School, as well as a member of the WGA and the Dramatists Guild Council.

Laura Harrington's recent credits include Alice Unwrapped (music and Lyrics by Jenny Giering); Crossing Brooklyn (music by Jenny Giering), produced 2007 by Transport Group Off-Broadway; Resurrection (music by Tod Machover), produced by Houston Grand Opera; N (Bonaparte), seen at Pilgrim Theatre, Boston; Hallowed Ground, a Boston IRNE Award for Best New Play and a New Orleans "Big Easy" Award-winner; Martin Guerre (music by Roger Ames), seen at Hartford Stage Company, directed by Mark Lamos and nominated for three Connecticut Critics Circle Awards, including Outstanding Musical; Marathon Dancing, directed by Anne Bogart for En Garde Arts in New York City; The Perfect 36 (music by Mel Marvin), seen at Tennessee Repertory Theatre and the NAMT Festival; Lucy's Lapses (music by Christopher Drobny), Portland Opera and Playwrights Horizons. She is currently writing a series of choral cantatas with Roger Ames and a new opera with Deborah Drattell. She teaches playwriting at M.I.T and is a frequent guest artist at Tufts, Harvard, Wellesley and elsewhere. She has twice won both the Massachusetts Cultural Council Award in playwriting and the Clauder Competition for best new play in New England. Other awards include a Bunting Institute Fellowship at Harvard/Radcliffe, a Whiting Foundation Grant-in-Aid, the Joseph Kesselring Award for Drama, a New England Emmy, and a Quebec Cinemateque Award. She is a New Dramatists alum and a member of the Dramatist Guild.

Bill Solly and Donald Ward have co-authored the books for eight musicals, the best-known being The Great American Backstage Musical and Off-Broadway's Boy Meets Boy. Sweet William, submitted for this year's Kleban Award, "imagines what might have happened in the year 1586 when the young Will Shakespeare left his home in Stratford-on-Avon and set off on the road to London." Their Tent Show "tells the story of Moses as seen through the eyes of his father-in-law, Jethro." Their other musicals are Starring in Alphabetical Order, 100 Miles from Nowhere, It Must be Magic and an adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen's The Snow Queen. In addition to writing the music and lyrics for all of the above, Bill Solly has written the musicals Smile & Say Hello (with Chris Weikel), based on his CD "Gay Friendly," Let the Piper Come and many musicals for children, of which the best-known is The Cat in the Castle. Donald Ward has published two mystery novels, "Death Takes the Stage" and "Our Little Secret" and has completed a third, "Nothing Like a Dame." Both authors are members of the Dramatists Guild. Bill Solly is also a member of ASCAP.

Submission guidelines and an application for the 2008-09 Kleban Awards are available at the New Dramatists website, www.newdramatists.org. The postmark deadline for the next competition is September 15, 2008.

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