Playwright
Director
Educator
Physician
Pulitzer Finalist
Miss Evers’ Boys
Emmy Award Winning
HBO Film
Examines the Tuskegee Syphillis Study, featuring Alfre Woodard and
Lawrence Fishburne
Miss Evers’ Boys
Widely produced in regional theaters, as well as internationally
Feldshuh, recipient of Distinguished Service Award, Tuskegee University National Center for BioEthics
Current Projects
Orlando’s Gift
(Ecstasy, Laughter and the Art of Staying Alive)
Love Story and Comedy.
”Half laughing, half serious, with great splashes of exaggeration.”
Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf: a writer in despair. Orlando: an eternal character on a dazzling journey. A timeless adventure that brings life to them both.
Ensemble piece with three strong female leads. Minimal set.
Contact management@davidfeldshuh.com for script.
Plays
Scripts available for production and readings. Send inquiries to management@davidfeldshuh.com
Dancing With Giants
a sports play about boxing and a fierce friendship
Politics and sports, fabrication and fact, comedy and drama all collide in this theatrical adventure covering 30 years in 90 minutes. Dancing with Giants recounts a remarkable friendship jeopardized by the world’s most powerful liar. In the years leading up to World War II, three very different men – New York wheeler-dealer boxing manager Joe "Yussel the Muscle" Jacobs, German Boxing champion Max Schmeling and American World Champion boxing great Joe Louis – form a singular bond. For this friendship to survive, they must battle the ruthless manipulation of the truth by Dr. Joseph Goebbels, Hitler’s Minister of Propaganda and Enlightenment.
A story of a time long ago with echoes today.
Antigone by Sophocles
an adaptation
script available, free resource
Sold out run at Baltimore Center Stage
Original poetry by Lady Brion
Directed by Daniel Bryant
Original scripts available:
Orlando’s GIft
Dancing with Giants
Miss Evers’ Boys
Fables Here and Then (with Guthrie Theater ensemble)
Adaptations available:
The Awakening of Spring (adaptation from Wedekind, Spring Awakening)
Antigone (adaptation from Sophocles)
Little Women (adaptation from Louisa May Alcott)
An Italian Straw Hat (adaptation with David Ball)
A Christmas Carol (adaptation with David Ball)
Contact management@davidfeldshuh.com
My Story
David Feldshuh is a director, writer, teacher, actor and board certified, emergency medicine physician.
David trained at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, studied mime with Jacques Lecoq, and began his professional acting career as a McKnight Fellow at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. He remains an enthusiastic, lifelong member of Actor’s Equity.
Appointed an Associate Director at the Guthrie Theater, David directed, wrote, adapted, and created a variety of productions over the next seven years on the Guthrie’s mainstage as well as in its experimental theater space. During this time, he became fascinated by the relationship between acting and Zen meditation, the Japanese martial arts, Gestalt Therapy and other psychophysical disciplines, an interest that began as an undergraduate actor at Dartmouth College. Wanting to learn more, he completed a PhD from the University of Minnesota focusing on creativity and actor training.
Subsequently, David’s theater work supported another of his interests, medicine. Directing plays to work his way through medical school, David earned an M.D. degree from the University of Minnesota, became board-certified in emergency medicine, and a Fellow of the American College of Emergency Physicians. After medical school, David divided his time between professional directing and writing plays and his work as an ER doctor in a Minneapolis Level I Trauma Center.
Intrigued by Cornell University’s determination to build a new building dedicated to theater, film and dance and develop an audience to fill it, David arrived in Ithaca to lead that effort and become the first Artistic Director of the Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts, guiding a resident company of professional actors who taught and worked side-by-side with students from throughout Cornell.
David enjoys directing big productions with large casts. Selected projects include The Coronation of Poppea (Minnesota Opera Company); The Einstein Project (Illusion Theater); Becket, An Italian Straw Hat, Baal, The Measures Taken (Guthrie Theater); and at Cornell, King Lear (with actress Sheriden Thomas as Lear), Angels in America, The Cradle Will Rock, and Leonard Bernstein’s opera, Mass (with a student cast of 138 singer-actors).
David is active in writing and directing his own scripts and using these productions to create theatrical “firsts.” His play Fables Here and Then (University of Minnesota Press) was the first Guthrie play to tour, visiting 52 cities throughout the Midwest. David directed and co-wrote the Guthrie’s first A Christmas Carol, a tradition that was adopted as an annual financial lifeline at other regional theaters and that has continued at the Guthrie for almost five decades. David’s adaptation of Sophocles’ Antigone (professional premiere at Center Stage in Baltimore) was written and produced for Cornell’s First Year Reading Program. David published Antigone free of royalties online, and it has been read and performed throughout the U.S. and internationally. Teachers report that the script has been particularly useful in venues where students can’t afford to buy copies of one of the world’s great classic plays.
David has written screenplays, short stories, and television scripts as well as plays. His most recent professional theater production, Dancing with Giants, tells the story of a remarkable friendship between German boxer, Max Schmeling, and his Jewish manager, Yussel Jacobs, in the run-up years to World War II. His most recent workshopped play (Orlando’s Gift) was inspired by the Virginia Woolf novel, the play merges the tragedy of Woolf’s life with the comedic saga of her fictional character, Orlando.
David’s widely produced play, Miss Evers' Boys, combined his medical and theatrical passions, and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Drama. It was a Sundance Institute Major Project and received the New American Play Award (sponsored by the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation). As an HBO movie, Miss Evers’ Boys received twelve Emmy nominations winning five including Best Picture and the President’s Award for television presentations exploring vital social issues. It also received the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Television Movie, the Cable Ace Award for Best Picture and two Golden Globe Awards. The success of the film helped catalyze an official government apology from President Clinton to the survivors of the so-called, "Tuskegee Study,” a forty-year, government medical experiment.
David has spoken extensively about the use of theater to address important social issues, and Miss Evers’ Boys has become an educational asset in medical schools and courses that consider the influence of cultural bias in contemporary medical care. For its role in education, Miss Evers’ Boys received the National Education Association’s award for "Achievement in Learning Through Broadcasting," as well as the American Medical Association "Freddy" Helen Hayes Award for Best Film on a Medical Subject. To further this educational effort, David co-produced and interviewed survivors of the Tuskegee study to create the Cornell-supported documentary, Susceptible to Kindness (CINE Golden Eagle, the Intercom Gold Plaque, the International Health and Medical Film Festival Award).
As an educator, David has developed original courses including “Acting in Public: Performance in Everyday Life,” a course that aims to reduce performance anxiety and strengthen speaking presence through theatrical training techniques. Using elements from Acting in Public as well as lessons learned from creating a variety of workshops for on-campus Cornell groups, at Cornell Tech, and for leaders in business and academia, David created a 15-week, eCornell Executive Presence distance-learning course that has taught more than 1800 students domestically and globally including students from India, Dubai, Russia, China, and England.
David is active in leading workshops on Executive Presence and Theater for Social Change.