David Ives
David Ives (born July 11, 1950) is an American playwright, screenwriter, and novelist renowned for his witty, philosophical one-act plays that explore language, time, and human absurdity.[1] Ives was born in Chicago, Illinois, to Polish-American parents, and grew up attending Catholic schools before earning a B.A. in English from Northwestern University in 1971 and an M.F.A. in playwriting from Yale Drama School in 1984.[1] His early career involved odd jobs, including work at Foreign Affairs magazine, while he honed his craft in small theaters; his first professional play premiered in a 45-seat Los Angeles storefront in 1972.[2] Over a career spanning more than five decades, Ives has become a staple of American theater, with his works frequently produced Off-Broadway and on Broadway, often blending comedy with existential themes.[3] He gained widespread acclaim for collections of one-acts such as All in the Timing (1994), which includes hits like "Sure Thing" and ran for over 600 performances, and Time Flies (1997).[1] Full-length plays like Venus in Fur (2010), adapted into a 2013 film by Roman Polanski, and The Metromaniacs (2010) further solidified his reputation for sharp dialogue and clever adaptations of classic works.[1] More recent efforts include the 2023 premiere of Here We Are at The Shed in New York and the 2024 world premiere of Pamela Palmer at Williamstown Theatre Festival.[1][4] In addition to theater, Ives has adapted 33 musicals for New York City's Encores! series since 2004 and authored three young adult novels—Monsieur Eek (2001), Scrib (2005), and Voss (2008)—as well as the novel The Phobia Clinic (2010).[1] His contributions have earned prestigious honors, including a 1995 Guggenheim Fellowship in playwriting, the 2011 Sidney Kingsley Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Theatre, and a 2016 Helen Hayes Award for The Metromaniacs.[1] Living in New York City with his wife, Martha Ives, he continues to influence contemporary drama through his innovative approach to form and content.[5]Biography
Early life
David Ives was born on July 11, 1950, in Chicago, Illinois, to Polish-American parents—his father a first-generation immigrant who worked as a machinist at Standard Oil, and his mother a second-generation Polish-American who held various office jobs, often at night.[2] Raised in a working-class family on Chicago's South Side amid the steel mills, Ives grew up in an environment shaped by industrial labor and immigrant heritage.[6][2] Ives attended Catholic grammar schools and later an all-boys Catholic seminary through twelfth grade, where the curriculum emphasized discipline and intellectual rigor, grooming students for roles like the priesthood.[2] It was during his high school years at the seminary that he was first introduced to literature, poetry, and theater, sparking his creative interests.[6] A pivotal moment came when he saw a touring production of Edward Albee's A Delicate Balance featuring Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy, which ignited his passion for the stage and influenced his lifelong commitment to playwriting.[6] From a young age, Ives showed a keen interest in writing and language; he penned his first play at the age of nine, marking the beginning of his literary pursuits.[7] This early fascination with words and storytelling, honed through his seminary education, laid the groundwork for his future career, leading him to pursue higher education at Northwestern University.[6]Education
Ives attended Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, where he majored in English and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1971, supported in part by scholarships.[8] His studies focused on literature, providing a foundational influence on his later work as a playwright through exposure to narrative structures and linguistic play. During his undergraduate years, Ives began writing plays, initiating the creative exercises that would define his style of concise, intellectually engaging one-acts.[3][9][10] After a period of professional pursuits, including a three-year stint as a junior editor at Foreign Affairs magazine in New York City, Ives enrolled at the Yale School of Drama for graduate studies in playwriting in 1981. He completed the program, earning a Master of Fine Arts degree in 1984. The rigorous curriculum at Yale, emphasizing dramatic structure and theatrical innovation, offered Ives key experiences in workshopping scripts and collaborating with peers and faculty, further refining his approach to language-driven theater.[3][11][12] No specific academic recognitions from his time at Yale are documented in available sources.Career
Theater
David Ives entered the professional theater world in the 1980s, beginning with his first New York production, Canvas, at the Circle Repertory Company in 1972. He honed his skills through short comedies staged at intimate venues like Manhattan Punch Line and Ensemble Studio Theatre, often while supporting himself with editing work at a medical journal. These early Off-Broadway efforts marked his emergence in the New York scene, where he navigated the challenges of initial rejections and limited opportunities typical for emerging playwrights, before achieving breakthroughs with supportive ensembles such as Primary Stages.[3][6] Ives developed a signature style characterized by witty, linguistic one-act plays that probe themes of time, language, and human absurdity through clever wordplay and structural repetition. His works often highlight the quirks of communication and perception, blending intellectual satire with absurdist humor. A landmark example is All in the Timing, a collection of six one-acts that premiered Off-Broadway at Primary Stages in 1993 and enjoyed over 600 performances, establishing his reputation for turning writerly self-consciousness into engaging comedy. Critics have compared this approach to the influences of Samuel Beckett's absurdism and Tom Stoppard's verbal dexterity, noting Ives' ability to make profound ideas accessible through laughter.[13][14][15] In his full-length plays, Ives expanded beyond shorts to explore deeper narratives. New Jerusalem: The Interrogation of Baruch de Spinoza at Talmud Torah Congregation (2008) is a historical drama set in 1656 Amsterdam, dramatizing the philosopher's excommunication for heretical views on faith and reason. Similarly, Venus in Fur (2010), which premiered Off-Broadway at Classic Stage Company, examines power dynamics and gender roles through a tense audition between a director and an actress, blurring lines between performance and reality. These pieces showcase Ives' skill in weaving philosophical inquiry with dramatic tension.[16][17] By the 2000s, Ives' themes evolved from the lighthearted absurdities of his early comic shorts toward more serious, introspective full-length works that grapple with historical, ethical, and interpersonal complexities. This shift reflected a maturation in his oeuvre, moving from rapid-fire linguistic games to sustained explorations of identity and authority, while retaining his core penchant for sharp dialogue and conceptual depth. Primary Stages played a pivotal role in this progression, premiering several key pieces that propelled his career forward. More recent works include the 2024 premiere of Pamela Palmer at the Williamstown Theatre Festival.[13][6][1]Musical theater
David Ives began his involvement in musical theater in the early 1990s, writing librettos that blended his signature linguistic precision with musical storytelling. His first notable contribution was the libretto for the opera The Secret Garden, based on Frances Hodgson Burnett's novel, with music by Greg Pliska; it premiered at the Pennsylvania Opera Theater in Philadelphia in 1991.[18] Around the same time, Ives co-wrote the book for Make Someone Happy, a musical tribute to songwriting duo Betty Comden and Adolph Green starring Phyllis Newman, which debuted at the Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor, New York, in 1991. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Ives expanded his musical theater work by adapting classic American shows for New York City Center's Encores! series, completing 33 such projects over about 15 years, including Out of This World (1995, music by Cole Porter) and The Boys from Syracuse (1997, music by Richard Rodgers).[19] These adaptations modernized dated books while preserving the originals' rhythmic energy, often streamlining dialogue to heighten musical flow.[19] In 2004, he co-authored the book for the Broadway musical Irving Berlin's White Christmas, drawing on the 1942 film and incorporating 17 Berlin songs into a holiday narrative of showbiz ambition and romance.[18] Ives' approach to musical theater draws directly from his background in witty, language-driven plays, where he integrates verbal dexterity—such as puns, rapid-fire dialogue, and linguistic invention—with musical structure to create concise, song-like scenes that propel emotional arcs.[20] He has described his short plays as akin to pop songs, emphasizing tight pacing and rhythmic wordplay that mirrors musical phrasing, allowing humor and absurdity to underscore character revelations without excess verbosity.[20] This technique translates to librettos by prioritizing dialogue that sings alongside the score, as seen in his Encores! revisions where he sharpened verbal interplay to complement vintage melodies.[19] A pinnacle of Ives' musical theater career was his collaboration with Stephen Sondheim on Here We Are, which premiered Off-Broadway at The Shed in New York on October 22, 2023, directed by Joe Mantello.[21] The project originated in 2009 when Sondheim approached Ives to adapt Luis Buñuel's surreal films The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972) and The Exterminating Angel (1962) into a musical satirizing upper-class excess through a nightmarish dinner party where guests are trapped by endless hunger and social farce.[22] Over more than a decade, Ives and Sondheim met weekly, with Ives viewing the films repeatedly (up to 20 times for The Exterminating Angel) to craft a book that amplified Buñuel's absurdity via escalating verbal chaos and thematic echoes of isolation.[22] Left unfinished at Sondheim's death in November 2021, the production used existing material for its second act, ending abruptly to honor the composer's intent.[23] As Sondheim's final work, Here We Are garnered mixed critical reception upon its 2023-2024 run, praised for its sparkling score—including patter songs and ensemble numbers evoking the composer's mature style—but critiqued for structural incompleteness and uneven tonal shifts from comedy to dread.[24] Outlets like The Observer hailed it as "goofy, satirical, and a joy to hear," highlighting Ives' book for its Buñuel fidelity and linguistic wit, while The New York Post found it "underwhelming" amid the hype.[24] Nonetheless, the musical's premiere marked a poignant capstone to Sondheim's oeuvre, underscoring Ives' role in bridging verbal innovation with musical legacy.[24]Other contributions
Beyond his original theatrical works, David Ives has made significant contributions through adaptations of classic American musicals for New York City's Encores! series at City Center, where he revised 33 librettos from 1995 to 2013 to suit concert-style presentations.[19] His approach emphasized modernization by compressing verbose original books—often reducing them to two-thirds or three-quarters of their length—to heighten rhythmic flow and prioritize the scores, while restoring excised songs and adding transitional material in the style of the original authors to preserve the era's spirit as lively entertainment rather than didactic commentary.[25] Notable examples include his debut adaptation of Cole Porter's Out of This World (1995), which collated multiple scripts and reinstated the standard "From This Moment On," and revisions of Rodgers and Hart's The Boys from Syracuse (1997) and On Your Toes (2013), the latter marking his final Encores! project, where he tailored star vehicles for contemporary performers like Nathan Lane in Do Re Mi (2006).[19][25] These techniques, akin to his "translaptations" of foreign plays, involved literary ventriloquism to update dialogue for modern sensibilities without altering core narratives.[25] Ives has also ventured into screenwriting for television and film. He penned the episode "The Sunset Also Rises" for the AMC drama Remember WENN (1998), which explored radio station dynamics in a 1930s setting.[26] In film, he adapted his own play Venus in Fur into a 2013 screenplay directed by Roman Polanski, earning acclaim for its taut exploration of power dynamics in a casting audition.[27] Additionally, Ives has written unproduced scripts for television and film, extending his witty, concise style to visual media.[28] In journalism, Ives contributed humor pieces to prominent publications during the 1980s and 2000s, including satirical essays for The New Yorker's Shouts & Murmurs section, such as "Hunger Artist" (1995), and comic columns for The New York Times Magazine and Spy Magazine.[29][30] These works showcased his penchant for absurd, philosophical wit, often riffing on everyday absurdities in a manner that echoed his one-act plays.[31] A notable non-theatrical project is The Phobia Clinic (2009), a verse novella blending poetry and narrative in a philosophical horror framework modeled on Dante's Inferno, where a protagonist confronts personalized fears in a surreal clinic.[32] Described as grotesque, satirical, and introspective, the work took a decade to complete and represents Ives' exploration of dread through rhythmic, rhymed prose.[33]Personal life
Family
David Ives married illustrator Martha Stoberock on February 9, 1997, in a ceremony held onstage at New York City's Primary Stages Theater.[34] The couple, who met in the early 1990s, have since shared a life together in New York City, maintaining a close partnership that supports Ives's creative endeavors.[35] Ives has often acknowledged the encouragement from his wife, describing how he wrote many of his early comic one-acts to entertain her during their courtship and marriage.[35] Their collaborative living arrangement in Manhattan has provided a stable environment for his prolific output as a playwright.[5] The playwright hails from a working-class Polish-American family background, which has notably shaped themes of ethnic identity in his work, such as the comedy Polish Joke.[36]Later years
In his later years, David Ives has maintained a long-term residence in New York City, a city that has shaped much of his creative life through its vibrant theatrical scene and diverse influences.[37][38] Ives continues to engage with writing through personal routines, including maintaining detailed notebooks of ideas and observations that he has kept since his mid-20s, reflecting a disciplined habit that persists into his 70s.[2] Post-2020, he has actively updated his personal website, davidives.net, to share unpublished plays, stories, poems, articles, and archival notebooks, providing insight into his creative process and lesser-known works.[2][6] A significant recent activity was his decade-long collaboration with Stephen Sondheim on the musical Here We Are, which premiered in New York in 2023 and marked Sondheim's final work; Ives has described the process as an intense, rewarding partnership that involved refining the book after Sondheim's death in 2021.[22][6] Following the production of Here We Are, Ives retired from active theater involvement in 2023, shifting focus to more personal and archival endeavors while remaining supported by his wife, Martha Stoberock.[6][2] As of 2025, Ives leads a selective life in retirement, occasionally reflecting on his career through website content but prioritizing privacy and family.[6]Awards and honors
Major awards
David Ives has received several prestigious awards recognizing his contributions to theater, particularly in playwriting and adaptation. In 1994, he received the Outer Critics Circle's John Gassner Playwriting Award for All in the Timing, acknowledging his innovative dramatic works. For his adaptation of The Liar (based on Corneille's Le Menteur), Ives earned the 2011 Charles MacArthur/Helen Hayes Award for Best Play.[1] In 2008, Ives was awarded the Hull-Warriner Award from the Dramatists Guild Foundation for New Jerusalem: The Privation of Saint Joan, recognizing its historical drama exploring religious persecution and intellectual freedom.[39] In 2006, he received the Joseph Jefferson Award for Best Adaptation for his version of Feydeau's A Flea in Her Ear at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company, as well as the Prince Prize for New Work for the same production.[1] In 2011, Ives received the Sidney Kingsley Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Theatre.[1] In 2016, he received the Helen Hayes Award for The Metromaniacs.[1] In 2012, Ives received the Honorary Miss Lilly Award.[1] These accolades have contributed to Ives' recognition in Off-Broadway and regional theater.Nominations and fellowships
David Ives received a Tony Award nomination for Best Play in 2012 for Venus in Fur. He also earned Drama Desk Award nominations for Outstanding Play, including for All in the Timing in 1994.[40] In 1995, Ives was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship in Playwriting, providing support for his work.[1] Ives was nominated for Lucille Lortel Awards, including Outstanding Revival for Venus in Fur in 2012 and for All in the Timing in 2013 (which won).[41][42] These nominations and fellowships have supported Ives' career in experimental theater.Works
Plays
David Ives is renowned for his witty, intellectually playful original plays, which often explore themes of language, time, and human relationships through innovative structures and sharp dialogue. His works span one-act comedies and full-length pieces, frequently premiering at Off-Broadway venues like Primary Stages. Many of his plays have been published by Dramatists Play Service and Grove Press, making them widely available for production and study.[43][44][30] One of Ives' most celebrated works is the one-act collection All in the Timing, which premiered Off-Broadway at Primary Stages in 1993. This evening of six short plays, including the iconic "Sure Thing"—a comedic exploration of romantic possibilities through repeated resets—and "Words, Words, Words," a satirical take on three chimpanzees typing Shakespeare, showcases Ives' mastery of linguistic humor and absurdism. The collection was first published by Dramatists Play Service in 1994, with an expanded edition of fourteen plays issued by Vintage Books later that year.[45][44] Among his full-length plays, Ancient History marked an early milestone, premiering Off-Broadway at Primary Stages in May 1989. This two-act comedy examines a couple's relationship unraveling amid revelations about their pasts and faiths. It was published by Dramatists Play Service in 1990, with a revised edition appearing in 1996.[3][46][47] Ives continued with Don Juan in Chicago, a full-length comedy that premiered in March 1995 at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago before transferring Off-Broadway. The play reimagines the Don Juan legend across centuries, blending farce with philosophical inquiry into immortality and desire. It was published by Dramatists Play Service in October 1995.[48][49][50] In 2001, Polish Joke had its world premiere at A Contemporary Theatre in Seattle from July 12 to August 5, directed by Jason McConnell Buzas. This full-length satire follows a man's misguided attempts to woo a woman by adopting Polish stereotypes, critiquing ethnic humor and identity. The play was published by Grove Press in 2004 as part of the collection Polish Joke and Other Plays, with an acting edition from Dramatists Play Service the same year.[51][52][53] Other notable full-length plays include New Jerusalem: The Interrogation of Baruch de Spinoza (2008), which premiered Off-Broadway at the Culture Project and explores the philosopher's trial, earning Ives an Outer Critics Circle Award nomination, and The Metromaniacs (2010), a verse comedy adapted from a classic French play that premiered at Primary Stages.[54][55] More recently, Ives developed The Phobia Clinic as a verse play, evolving from his 2010 philosophical horror novelette in terza rima. Written over subsequent years, including a stage version explored during a 2016 residency at the Public Theater, it remains a work in progress without a major premiere as of 2025, blending grotesque satire with personal introspection.[33][56][32]Musicals
David Ives has made significant contributions to musical theater as a librettist and book writer, often collaborating with renowned composers and adapting classic works for modern stages. His involvement spans original pieces, revisions, and concert adaptations, emphasizing witty dialogue and structural clarity to enhance musical narratives. While much of his early work focused on adapting American musicals for New York City Center's Encores! series—where he revised librettos for 33 productions between 1995 and 2012, including Out of This World (1995) and Wonderful Town (2003, which transferred to Broadway)—Ives has also crafted books for full-scale musicals that blend humor, romance, and social commentary.[19] One of Ives' most prominent original contributions is the book for Irving Berlin's White Christmas, co-written with Paul Blake. Premiering at the Curran Theatre in San Francisco on November 23, 2004, the musical adapts the 1954 film, featuring 17 Irving Berlin songs like "Blue Skies" and "White Christmas." Ives' libretto emphasizes themes of camaraderie and holiday spirit, following two entertainers who stage a show to save a Vermont inn. The production toured extensively, reaching Broadway's Marquis Theatre on November 14, 2008, for 145 performances, and has since enjoyed international runs, including London's West End in 2014. The script is published by Rodgers & Hammerstein Theatre Library and remains widely licensed for regional and stock productions. In 2002, Ives contributed book revisions to Dance of the Vampires, a musical adaptation of Roman Polanski's 1967 film Fearless Vampire Killers. Working with composers Jim Steinman and Michael Kunze, Ives helped streamline the narrative for its Broadway premiere at the Minskoff Theatre on October 5, running for 56 performances. His revisions aimed to heighten the comedic horror elements, focusing on a professor and his assistant battling vampires in Transylvania. Though the production closed quickly, Ives' structural adjustments have influenced subsequent European stagings. The libretto, credited to Kunze with Ives' revisions, is available through MTI Shows. Ives' collaboration with Stephen Sondheim on Here We Are marks his most recent and acclaimed musical effort, serving as Sondheim's final work. Ives wrote the book, inspired by Luis Buñuel's films The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972) and The Exterminating Angel (1962), exploring surreal social satire among affluent friends trapped in a restaurant and later a mansion. The world premiere occurred off-Broadway at The Shed in New York City from September 28, 2023, to January 21, 2024, directed by Joe Mantello. Featuring Sondheim's score with songs like "The Shoe" and "Suddenly," the musical received praise for its elegant absurdity and Ives' taut scripting. A European premiere followed at London's National Theatre in April 2025, and the script was published by Nick Hern Books on May 22, 2025, making it available for future productions. An original cast recording was released by Ghostlight Records in May 2024.[21][57][58]Operas
David Ives has made a limited but notable contribution to opera through his work as a librettist, leveraging his linguistic precision in crafting sung narratives that align with classical musical forms. Unlike his extensive output in plays and musicals, his operatic involvement centers on a single major project, highlighting his versatility in adapting literary sources for the stage. His primary operatic work is the libretto for The Secret Garden, an opera based on Frances Hodgson Burnett's 1911 novel of the same name. Composed by Greg Pliska, the opera premiered on April 27, 1991, at the Pennsylvania Opera Theater in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, under the direction of Bruce Coughlin.[18][31] The production featured a cast including soprano Elizabeth Hynes as Mary Lennox and baritone Eugene Perry as Archibald Craven, with the orchestra conducted by Steven Crawford.[59] Ives' libretto condenses Burnett's story of orphaned Mary Lennox discovering a hidden garden that aids in the emotional and physical healing of her invalid cousin Colin, emphasizing themes of renewal and familial bonds through lyrical dialogue suited to Pliska's score. The work received positive initial reviews for its atmospheric adaptation, with critics noting the effective integration of Ives' witty yet poignant text with the composer's lyrical melodies.[60] Subsequent performances have been sparse, including a 1995 staging by the Utah Opera, underscoring the opera's niche status within Ives' broader oeuvre focused on theatrical and musical theater forms.[60][61]Translations
David Ives is renowned for his translations and adaptations of French plays, particularly comedies from the 17th and 20th centuries, which he terms "translaptations." These works preserve the original authors' sharp wit, intricate plots, and satirical edge while updating the dialogue to contemporary American English, infusing modern idioms, cultural references, and rhythmic verse to enhance accessibility and humor for English-speaking audiences.[62][63] One of his prominent translations is The Liar, an adaptation of Pierre Corneille's 1644 comedy Le Menteur. Ives's version premiered at the Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington, D.C., in 2010 and was published by Dramatists Play Service in 2011. The play follows a compulsive liar navigating Parisian high society through escalating deceptions, with Ives incorporating 21st-century slang and pop culture allusions to amplify the farce.[64][65] Ives has also translated Molière's works, notably The School for Lies, based on the 1666 play Le Misanthrope. This rhymed verse adaptation critiques social hypocrisy in a 17th-century Parisian salon, premiering at Classic Stage Company in New York in 2011 and published by Northwestern University Press in 2012. By retaining the period setting but modernizing the couplets with biting, colloquial wit, Ives highlights the timelessness of Molière's misanthropic protagonist.[66][63] In contemporary drama, Ives served as the primary American translator for Yasmina Reza, including her 1994 play Art, which debuted in the U.S. in 1998 and explores friendship strained by a controversial painting purchase. His translation captures Reza's minimalist dialogue and ironic humor, contributing to the play's Tony Award-winning Broadway run. Another Reza work, A Spanish Play (originally Une pièce espagnole, 2004), premiered in English at Classic Stage Company in 2007 under Ives's translation, delving into artistic creation through a chaotic rehearsal process.[67][68] Ives's oeuvre includes additional French translations, such as Georges Feydeau's A Flea in Her Ear (premiered 2006, published Dramatists Play Service 2007) and Jean-François Regnard's The Heir Apparent (premiered 2011, published Smith & Kraus 2011), each emphasizing farce and verbal dexterity through Americanized phrasing.[65][38]Adaptations
David Ives has adapted several classic works for the stage, often infusing them with contemporary wit and structural innovations while diverging from literal translations to emphasize thematic updates or performative clarity. These adaptations highlight his skill in revitalizing older texts for modern sensibilities, particularly in farce, erotic drama, and musical theater. One of his notable adaptations is a new version of Georges Feydeau's 1907 farce La Puce à l'oreille, retitled A Flea in Her Ear, which premiered at the Chicago Shakespeare Theater in March 2006 under director Gary Griffin. Ives' rendition modernizes the dialogue for sharper comedic timing and American audiences, amplifying the original's cascade of mistaken identities, jealous intrigues, and hotel-room mix-ups involving a suspicious wife, her cuckolded husband, and a parade of doubles, all while retaining the frenzied pace of Feydeau's bedroom farce. This version, commissioned specifically for the Chicago production, earned local acclaim for its lively vernacular and streamlined action, distinguishing it from earlier English translations like John Mortimer's by prioritizing rhythmic wordplay over period fidelity.[69][70][71] In Don Juan in Chicago, premiered off-Broadway at Primary Stages in March 1995 and directed by Carolyn Cantor, Ives updates Molière's 1665 Dom Juan, ou Le Festin de pierre by relocating the libertine antihero to contemporary Chicago and intertwining his tale with Faustian motifs. The protagonist, a wealthy but sexually naive nobleman, embarks on a quest not merely for conquests but for existential fulfillment, encountering a supernatural mentor and moral reckonings amid urban grit, which shifts the original's focus from classical satire to a blend of seduction, damnation, and self-discovery. This three-act comedy, published in 1996, diverges from Molière's verse structure and philosophical underpinnings by incorporating American idioms and a more psychological depth to the title character's pursuits.[72][73][74] Venus in Fur, which debuted off-Broadway at Classic Stage Company in January 2010 and was directed by Leigh Silverman, serves as a loose adaptation inspired by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch's 1870 novella Venus in Furs. Rather than a direct retelling, Ives crafts a two-character meta-play about a playwright auditioning an actress for his stage version of the novel, weaving in scenes from Sacher-Masoch's text to probe power dynamics, masochistic desires, and gender roles through escalating role-play and seduction. This structure transforms the source material's epistolary eroticism into a taut, dialogue-driven thriller that critiques artistic control and submission, earning Ives awards including the Hull-Warriner Award; the 2013 Broadway transfer and Roman Polanski's 2013 film adaptation further underscore its impact.[75][76][6] Ives also specialized in adapting musicals for New York City Center's Encores! series, contributing concert versions of 33 shows from the mid-1990s through the 2010s to suit minimalistic stagings with full orchestras. These adaptations often clarified narrative transitions and settings via enhanced dialogue, condensed extraneous plotlines, and integrated musical numbers more seamlessly, breathing new life into rarely performed works without altering scores. Examples include his 2010 take on Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents' Anyone Can Whistle, which expanded the narrator's role and tightened the cult musical's satirical exploration of mental health and consumerism for a limited run starring Bernadette Peters; his version of Rodgers and Hart's The Boys from Syracuse (1997), which sharpened the Shakespearean farce's twin-confusion antics; and Irving Berlin's Face the Music (2007), revitalizing the 1932 satire on Depression-era showbiz. After this extensive tenure, Ives stepped back from Encores! around 2010, having influenced the series' revival format.[19][25][77]Screenplays
David Ives has extended his distinctive wit and linguistic precision from the stage to screenwriting, adapting his own works and contributing original scripts to film and television. His screenplay for the 2013 film Venus in Fur, directed by Roman Polanski, adapts his 2010 play of the same name, exploring power dynamics in a tense audition between a director and an actress. The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival and received critical acclaim for its taut dialogue and performances by Emmanuelle Seigner and Mathieu Amalric.[78] In television, Ives wrote the teleplay for the 1998 TV movie The Hunted, a thriller about an insurance investigator (played by Mädchen Amick) pursuing fraudulent claims in the Canadian wilderness, blending suspense with character-driven humor. Ives contributed to PBS's anthology series Great Performances with two notable scripts. For the 1997 special "Ira Gershwin at 100: A Celebration at Carnegie Hall," he crafted the narrative framework for the concert tribute, hosted by Michael York and Angie Dickinson, featuring performances of Gershwin standards by artists including Patti LuPone and Maureen McGovern to honor the lyricist's centennial.[79] In 2006, Ives provided the concert adaptation for "'South Pacific' in Concert from Carnegie Hall," a star-studded revival of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical starring Reba McEntire and Brian Stokes Mitchell, which aired as part of the series and highlighted the score's enduring themes of love and prejudice. Additionally, Ives penned the episode "The Sunset Also Rises" for the AMC series Remember WENN in 1998, the fourth-season finale of the period drama set in a 1940s Pittsburgh radio station, where characters navigate personal revelations amid wartime tensions.[26] These screen credits reflect Ives's versatility in translating his verbal ingenuity to visual formats, often emphasizing ensemble dynamics and sharp repartee.Narrative fiction
David Ives, best known for his work in theater, has also ventured into prose narrative fiction, primarily targeting young adult audiences with humorous, satirical stories that explore themes of absurdity, identity, and youthful adventure. His novels often feature whimsical premises infused with linguistic play, drawing on his background in dramatic writing to create engaging, voice-driven narratives. These works, published in the early 2000s, were issued by major children's imprints and received positive attention for their inventive storytelling.[80] Ives's young adult novels include Monsieur Eek (2001), published by HarperCollins, which follows the misadventures of a chimpanzee mistaken for a French nobleman in a fictional 1609 town, blending historical satire with themes of mistaken identity and community prejudice. The story, aimed at readers aged 9–12, highlights absurdity through the chimp's attempts to navigate human society alongside a young girl and the town fool.[81] In Scrib (2005), also from HarperCollins, a 16-year-old boy flees his stifling life in 1863 St. Louis to become a traveling letter-writer in the American West, encountering danger and forging unlikely friendships while grappling with freedom and self-invention.[82] The novel emphasizes themes of youthful rebellion and the transformative power of storytelling.[83] Ives's third YA novel, Voss: How I Come to America and Am Hero, Mostly (2008), published by G.P. Putnam's Sons, is epistolary, chronicling a 15-year-old stowaway from the fictional Slobovia who smuggles himself to America in a crate, recounting his satirical exploits in letters to a friend; it satirizes immigration, heroism, and cultural clashes through the protagonist's comically exaggerated voice.[84] These novels collectively showcase Ives's skill in crafting absurd, youth-centered tales that mirror the linguistic wit of his plays.[80] Beyond novels, Ives has published short fiction and humor pieces in prestigious outlets such as The New Yorker, Spy Magazine, New York Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, and The Hudson Review, often appearing in anthologies that highlight emerging voices in literary humor.[30] These stories typically explore everyday absurdities and human quirks, aligning with the thematic concerns of his longer prose works. In a departure from traditional prose, Ives's The Phobia Clinic (circa 2010, with a full verse edition self-published in 2024) is a philosophical horror novelette written in terza rima, presenting a poetic narrative that delves into the nature of fears and the human psyche through a clinic where phobias are confronted and dissected.[32] Described by the author as a personal "folly" developed over two decades, it blends verse form with speculative elements to examine existential dread and creative obsession.[33] Available as a PDF on Ives's official website, it represents his most recent foray into experimental narrative fiction.[85]Short play collections
David Ives has garnered acclaim for his one-act plays, which blend linguistic ingenuity, absurdity, and philosophical inquiry, often collected in anthologies that highlight his concise dramatic form. The collection All in the Timing: Six One-Act Comedies was published in 1994 by Vintage Books, compiling six comedic shorts originally written between 1987 and 1993. These plays exemplify Ives' early style of verbal dexterity and existential humor, performed frequently in Off-Broadway evenings.[86]| Play Title | Year Written |
|---|---|
| Sure Thing | 1988 |
| Words, Words, Words | 1987 |
| The Universal Language | 1990 |
| English Made Simple | 1989 |
| Philip Glass Buys a Loaf of Bread | 1989 |
| Foreplay, or The Art of the Fugue | 1990 |
- Time Flies
- Degas, C'est Moi
- Dr. Fritz, or The Forces of Light
- Babel's in Arms
- Soap Opera
- The Philadelphia
- Enigma Variations
- The Mystery at Twicknam Vicarage
- A Spanish Prisoner
- Arabesque[91]