C10 The Boston Globe WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 2020
Obituaries
By Harrison Smith
WASHINGTON POST
WASHINGTON — Mart
Crowley, a Tony Award-winning
playwright whose comic trage-
dy ‘‘The Boys in the Band’’
helped bring openly gay charac-
ters onto the stage and screen,
emerging as a landmark depic-
tion of gay life more than a year
before the Stonewall riots gal-
vanized a national liberation
movement, died March 7 at a
hospital in Manhattan. He was
84.
The cause was complica-
tions from heart surgery, said
his goddaughter Natasha Greg-
son Wagner. Her mother, ac-
tress Natalie Wood, was one of
Mr. Crowley’s closest friends,
hiring him as an assistant and
housing him from time to time
in the home Wood shared with
her husband, Robert Wagner.
For much of his career, Mr.
Crowley was overshadowed by
gay playwrights such as Larry
Kramer, whose drama ‘‘The
Normal Heart’’ wrestled with
the AIDS crisis of the early
1980s, and Tony Kushner,
whose two-part epic ‘‘Angels in
America’’ won the Pulitzer
Prize. But his 1968 examination
of gay identity, repression, and
self-loathing was a milestone
for artists and other theatergo-
ers who recognized themselves
as one of ‘‘The Boys in the
Band,’’ even if some of the play’s
acid-tongued dialogue would
come to seem dated.
‘‘We all stand firmly on the
shoulders of that play,’’ said
writer and producer Ryan Mur-
phy, who brought ‘‘The Boys in
the Band’’ to Broadway in 2018
and is producing an upcoming
movie adaptation for Netflix.
As a gay youth in Indiana,
Murphyaddedbyphone,‘‘I
thought I was an alien’’ — a sen-
timent that vanished after see-
ing the 1970 movie adaptation,
directed by William Friedkin
and written and produced by
Mr. Crowley. Since then, he
said, ‘‘The play never left my
subconsciousness.’’
Mr. Crowley wrote ‘‘The
Boys in the Band’’ at a time
when homosexuality was crimi-
nalized across most of the coun-
try and gay characters were
rarely seen in pop culture, often
appearing only for comic effect
or in marginal roles that ended
in tragedy.
Nonetheless, three of the
country’s leading playwrights
— Edward Albee, William Inge
and Tennessee Williams — were
widely known to be gay, a fact
that spurred a notorious New
York Times essay by critic Stan-
ley Kauffmann, who lamented
‘‘disguised homosexual influ-
ence’’ in the theater and called
on dramatists to address gay
themes head-on, without using
straight characters as stand-ins.
His 1966 essay amounted to
a kind of dare for Mr. Crowley, a
gay 30-year-old screenwriter
with a self-described ‘‘sugar-
cane accent’’ from Mississippi.
He was then broke, unem-
ployed, and frequently drunk,
albeit building a happier life for
himself in Hollywood than he
had as a young man in the
South, where he was molested
by a family friend as a child but
found refuge watching movies
and plays.
In a 2009 episode of the pub-
lic television show ‘‘Theater
Talk,’’ Mr. Crowley recalled
writing ‘‘The Boys in the Band’’
while staying at the home of a
wealthy friend, actress Diana
Lynn, the daughter-in-law of
New York Post publisher Doro-
thy Schiff. Living for five weeks
‘‘in the lap of luxury — nannies
butlers, maids, and cooks’’ — he
returned to his own home with
the script of ‘‘The Boys in the
Band,’’ which took its name
from a throwaway line in the
1954 remake of ‘‘A Star Is Born.’’
‘‘There was a little of me in
all the characters in that play,’’
Mr. Crowley once said. ‘‘I was
determined to write a new kind
of drama about homosexuality.
All the plays I had ever seen on
the subject were stereotyped,
sensational, embarrassed, or
evasive. I tried to be thoughtful
and honest and adult.’’
Centered on a group of gay
men gathered for a birthday
party, ‘‘The Boys in the Band’’
premiered off-Broadway at
Theater Four on Easter Sunday,
- The production ‘‘did for
plays what ‘Oklahoma!’ did for
musicals,’’ the playwright Neil
Simon later told writer-produc-
er Richard Kramer, adding that
‘‘he’d never seen such honesty
on the stage before,’’ according
to a 1993 New York Times re-
port.
The original production nev-
er made it to Broadway but ran
for more than two years and
1,001 performances, with a cast
that included Cliff Gorman in
an Obie-winning turn as Emo-
ry, who drops an f-bomb to de-
liver one of the play’s iconic
lines about trading sex for a
drink.
New York Times theater crit-
ic Clive Barnes called ‘‘The Boys
in the Band’’ ‘‘the frankest treat-
ment of homosexuality I have
ever seen on the stage,’’ declar-
ing that it was so vitriolic it
made Albee’s ‘‘Who’s Afraid of
Virginia Woolf?’’ ‘‘seem like a
vicarage tea party.’’ Mr. Crow-
ley’s script, he added, ‘‘remorse-
lessly peels away the preten-
sions of its characters and re-
veals a pessimism so
uncrompomising in its honesty
that it becomes in itself an affir-
mation of life.’’
That pessimism was brac-
ingly evident in one of the play
and movie’s most shocking
lines — ‘‘You show me a happy
homosexual and I’ll show you a
gay corpse’’ — and defended by
Mr. Crowley, who said that of-
fering a stream of purely ‘‘posi-
tive images’’ was the role of po-
litical activists, not artists.
In the aftermath of Stone-
wall, some critics mellowed on
‘‘The Boys in the Band,’’ with
LGBTQ scholar Michael Brons-
ki writing that Mr. Crowley
‘‘made sure that heterosexual
critics and audiences saw what
they really believed: gay men
who were unhappy and willful-
ly cruel to one another.’’ None-
theless, he added, the play ‘‘cre-
ated possibilities for presenting
gay material on the stage,’’ pav-
ing the way for gay characters
in Broadway shows such as
‘‘Find Your Way Home’’ and
‘‘Butley.’’
Mr. Crowley went on to
write several more plays but
primarily supported himself
with television work, including
on the ABC detective series
‘‘Hart to Hart.’’ And while ‘‘The
Boys in the Band’’ was pro-
duced in translation around the
world, it remained far from
Broadway until 2018, when a
star-studded revival featured
actors including Jim Parsons,
Zachary Quinto, and Robin De
Jesús, who was nominated for a
Tony as Emory.
The production received a
Tony Award for best revival of a
play, which served as vindica-
tion of sorts for Mr. Crowley. He
had spent years feeling misun-
derstood by members of the gay
community, said Murphy, who
recalled an emotional exchange
with the playwright after the
award ceremony.
‘‘You gave me something I’ve
never had before,’’ Mr. Crowley
told Murphy, ‘‘which is peace.’’
Edward Martino Crowley
was born in Vicksburg, Miss.,
on Aug. 21, 1935. ‘‘My father
was a drunkard and my mother
was a hypochondriac, depen-
dent upon drugs,’’ he once said.
Mr. Crowley studied drama
at the Catholic University in
Washington, receiving a bache-
lor’s degree in 1957, but was
home in Mississippi for the
filming of director Elia Kazan’s
movie ‘‘Baby Doll.’’
After introducing himself to
the filmmaker, he talked his
way into a job as a production
assistant, later working on ‘‘The
Fugitive Kind’’ (1960), directed
by Sidney Lumet, and ‘‘Splen-
dor in the Grass’’ (1961), a Ka-
zan film starring Wood.
Mr. Crowley ‘‘was hired to
pick my mom up at home and
drive her to work every day,’’
Gregson Wagner said by phone.
‘‘When ‘Splendor’ wrapped he
didn’t have a job, so she hired
him as her assistant.’’
He later developed a close
friendship with Wood’s hus-
band Wagner (they divorced
and later remarried), who
starred in ‘‘Hart to Hart’’ and
helped recruit Mr. Crowley to
the show as a producer and ex-
ecutive script consultant.
Mr. Crowley’s other plays in-
cluded ‘‘Remote Asylum’’
(1970); ‘‘A Breeze From the
Gulf’’ (1973), a semiautobio-
graphical work that ran off-
Broadway; ‘‘For Reasons That
Remain Unclear’’ (1993), about
a sexually abusive Catholic
priest; and ‘‘The Men From the
Boys,’’ a sequel to ‘‘The Boys in
the Band’’ that premiered in
San Francisco in 2002.
He also wrote TV movies in-
cluding ‘‘There Must Be a Pony’’
(1986), starring Wagner and
Elizabeth Taylor, and helped
write the picture book ‘‘Eloise
Takes a Bawth’’ (2002), starring
the devious young Plaza Hotel
resident created by Kay Thomp-
son.
Mr. Crowley, who leaves no
immediate survivors, described
writing as a kind of alchemy, in
which he transformed coal-
black experiences from his own
life into a kind of theatrical
gold, as a well as a form of spiri-
tual nourishment for himself
and his audience.
‘‘I feel my whole life is ob-
serving,’’ he told the Advocate
in 1996, ‘‘and I wish I could get
into the action. I came from a
very ugly background and a
very ugly small town with peo-
ple with very ugly attitudes. I
had a need for beauty, and I
think I share that with lots of
people. That need comes sim-
ply because of all of the sordid-
ness and unhappiness and re-
sentment as well as the calami-
ty of growing up gay when I was
growing up. That’s a round-
about way of saying I never felt
too included.’’
MartCrowley,writerof‘BoysintheBand’
SARA KRULWICH/NEW YORK TIMES
Mr. Crowley accepted the 2019 Tony for best revival of a play for “The Boys in the Band,” at
the 73rd annual Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall in New York.
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passed away on March 8, 2020. Beloved
wifeofthelateRichardM.Walsh.
Devoted mother of Richard M. Walsh
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Visiting Hours at the George F.
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Home, 456 High St., DEDHAM, on
Wednesday, March 11th from 4-8pm.
Funeral from the Funeral Home on
Thursday, March 12th at 9am, followed
by a Funeral Mass at St. Mary’s Church,
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friends kindly invited. Interment Blue
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WALSH, Patricia A.
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Vernon (Leah) Vass, her beloved sister
Cheryl devoted and loving life Partner,
Rupert; her loving sons, Lamarr, Devon
(DJ) and Andre (Casey); her grandchil-
dren; Aniyah, Andre, Jr. and Avery;
nephews Robert (Rachelle) and Karee,
niece Junelle, great-niece Raiana.
She was predeceased by Thomas C.
Allen and James and Julia Walkeer. A
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Baptist Church, 874 Main St., Cam-
bridge Friday, March 13, 11 A.M.
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