Zora Howard
Zora Howard | |
---|---|
Personal details | |
Born | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Education | Yale University (BA) University of California, San Diego (MFA) |
Zora Howard is an American actress and writer. Her debut play, STEW, premiered off-Broadway in February 2020 and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.[1][2] She also co-wrote and starred in the 2019 drama Premature.
Early life and education
[edit]Howard was born to veterinarian Julie Butler and Claude Howard[3] and raised in Harlem.[1][4] She began writing poetry at a young age, and performed with the spoken word group The Strivers Row.[5] At age 13 she was the youngest poet ever to win the Urban Word NYC Grand Slam finals.[6] She received her Bachelors of Arts from Yale University in 2014.[1] She received a Masters of Fine Arts from the graduate acting program at the University of California, San Diego.[7]
Career
[edit]The 2019 film Premature is Howard's first starring role and debut feature film screenplay, co-written with director Rashaad Ernesto Green.[8] Howard previously met Green in New York's theater scene when she was 11. When she was 14, he cast her in his student film while a student at NYU Tisch, also called Premature.[9][4] She also worked with Green on his first feature film, Gun Hill Road.[8]
In 2017, Green contacted Howard to develop a feature film script for Premature.[9] The film follows Howard as Ayanna, a 17-year-old New Yorker who strikes up a summer romance with an artist in his twenties (Joshua Boone).[8] It premiered at Sundance 2019.[4] The film received positive critical reception. Writing for Elle, Candace Frederick called it "the kind of confident, remarkably vulnerable drama to which even veteran storytellers aspire."[8] Michael Cuby of Nylon described it as, "a coming-of-age love story that's as much about finding your first love as it is about using that first love to find yourself."[10]
Howard's first play, STEW, ran in February 2020 at Walkerspace in New York.[11][12] It centers a family of three generations of women who must grapple with their personal choices.[2][8] In a mainly positive review for Vulture, Helen Shaw stated, "Howard moves from broad strokes to ontological bewilderment almost before you know it...Howard makes us hear hundreds of years of pain, knocking to be let in."[12]
Accolades
[edit]- 2020-2021 Van Lier New Voices Fellow, The Lark[13]
- 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Finalist (for STEW)[14]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Indie romance 'Premature' challenges Hollywood by portraying black love, not black pain". Los Angeles Times. 2020-02-21. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
- ^ a b Vincentelli, Elisabeth (2020-02-01). "Review: 'Stew' Takes Deeper Emotions Off the Back Burner". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
- ^ Garcia-Narro, Lulu (2020-04-19). "Community Honors Memory Of Harlem Veterinarian, Mentor Who Died During Pandemic". NPR.org. Retrieved 2021-07-05.
- ^ a b c Luers, Erik (24 February 2020). ""No One Was Willing to Sign the Check": Rashaad Ernesto Green and Zora Howard on Premature, Shooting 16mm and Self-Financing". Filmmaker Magazine. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
- ^ Booth, Laura. "Spoken Word on Bleecker Street". Columbia University Arts Initiative. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
- ^ "MOVIE OF THE WEEK February 28, 2020: PREMATURE – ALLIANCE OF WOMEN FILM JOURNALISTS". 23 February 2020. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
- ^ "Zora Howard – Co-Writer and Lead Actress of PREMATURE (Ep29)". Directing Magic - a podcast about women filmmakers. 2019-05-15. Retrieved 2020-05-30.
- ^ a b c d e Candice Frederick (2020-03-05). "'Premature' Is a Coming-of-Age Love Story That Puts Its Heroine First". ELLE. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
- ^ a b Cuby, Michael (12 May 2020). "Dakota Johnson Thinks Shia LaBeouf Might Be The Greatest Actor Of Her Generation". Nylon. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
- ^ Cuby, Michael (28 February 2020). "Zora Howard On Writing And Starring In 'Premature'". Nylon. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
- ^ Clement, Olivia (15 October 2019). "Page 73's Next Production Will be Zora Howard's Stew". Playbill. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
- ^ a b Shaw, Helen (2020-02-02). "Zora Howard's Stew Remixes the Potboiler". Vulture. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
- ^ "In the News: Shoshana Bean, Anika Noni Rose, Laura Bell Bundy, More Celebrate Women Who Get It Done, The Lark Names 2 New Fellows, More | Playbill".
- ^ "Katori Hall Wins 2021 Drama Pulitzer for 'The Hot Wing King'". AMERICAN THEATRE. 2021-06-11. Retrieved 2021-06-12.
External links
[edit]- Living people
- Actresses from Manhattan
- 21st-century American women writers
- African-American poets
- African-American actresses
- Writers from Manhattan
- People from Harlem
- African-American screenwriters
- 21st-century American screenwriters
- Yale University alumni
- University of California, San Diego alumni
- 21st-century African-American women writers
- 21st-century African-American writers