Yuri Rasovsky

American dramatist

Yuri Rasovsky
BornJuly 29, 1944
DiedJanuary 18, 2012(2012-01-18) (aged 67)
OccupationRadio drama writer

Yuri Rasovsky (July 29, 1944 – January 18, 2012) was an American writer and producer working in radio drama in the United States.

He founded and operated The National Radio Theater of Chicago from 1973 to 1986 and later formed the Hollywood Theater of the Ear (since 1993). In the 1990s, he forsook radio for audiobooks. Many of his radio plays have been published as commercial recordings or as Internet downloads. His new plays are being released by Blackstone Audio. He died in 2012 of esophageal cancer.[1][2]

Major works

Rasovsky wrote, directed, or produced more than 150 audio plays. Notable examples include:

  • The Chicago Language Tape. WFMT. 1972.
  • The Odyssey of Homer. National Radio Theatre of Chicago. 1980. Winner of a George Foster Peabody Award.
  • By His Bootstraps. Pacifica Foundation. 1984. Mark Time's Science Fiction Audio Hall of Fame.
  • Craven Street. American Dialogues Radio. 1993.
  • The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. Based on the silent film. Hollywood Theater of the Ear. Revised 1998.
  • 2000X: Tales of the Next Millennium (series of 26 one-hr programs). NPR, Hollywood Theater of the Ear. 1999–2000. Winner of a Bradbury Award.
  • Sweeney Todd and The String of Pearls. Blackstone Audio, Hollywood Theater of the Ear. 2007. Winner of three 2008 Audie Awards: Best Audio Drama, Best Audiobook Original and Distinguished Achievement in Production.
  • The Maltese Falcon, with Michael Madsen, Sandra Oh, Edward Herrmann. Blackstone Audio, Hollywood Theater of the Ear. 2008. Grammy nominated. Winner Audie Award: Best Adaptation.
  • Saint Joan, with Amy Irving, Edward Herrmann, Kristoffer Tabori, Gregory Itzin, Armin Shimerman, Granville Van Dusen, et al.. Blackstone Audio, Hollywood Theater of the Ear. 2010. Winner Audie Award: Best Audio Drama of 2010.
  • The Mark of Zorro, with Val Kilmer, Blackstone Audio, Hollywood Theater of the Ear. 2011. Grammy nominated.

Books

He was the author of The Well-tempered Audio Dramatist (National Audio Theatre Festivals, 2006) and, with Carol Madden Adorjan, co-author of WKID: Easy Radio Plays for Children (Albert Whitman & Co., 1987).[3]

Awards

Over the past three-plus decades, Rasovsky's audio work has won:

Notable relatives

See also

References

  1. ^ Times, By Valerie J. Nelson, Los Angeles. "Yuri Rasovsky dies at 67; big name in radio dramas, audio books". latimes.com.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ "Yuri Rasovsky, Renowned Audio Dramatist, Dies at 67".
  3. ^ irasov.com

External links

  • Yuri Rasovsky Homepage, last revised Nov 19, 2010
  • The Well-Tempered Audio Dramatist, A Guide to the Production of Audio Plays in Twenty-first Century America, by Yuri Rasovsky, last modified July 2006
  • The Chicago Language Tape on YouTube, 1972
  • Yuri Rasovsky's Radio Plays
  • v
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Nebula Award
for Best Script
Ray Bradbury Award
for Outstanding
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