
Acting · 73 years old
Fort Sheridan, Illinois, USA
Samuel Shepard Rogers III (November 5, 1943 – July 27, 2017) was an American playwright, actor, director, screenwriter, and author whose career spanned half a century. He wrote 58 plays as well as several books of short stories, essays, and memoirs. He won 10 Obie Awards for writing and directing, the most by any writer or director. Shepard received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1979 for his play Buried Child. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for portraying pilot Chuck Yeager in the 1983 film The Right Stuff. He received the PEN/Laura Pels Theater Award as a master American dramatist in 2009. New York magazine described Shepard as "the greatest American playwright of his generation." Shepard's plays are known for their bleak, poetic, surrealist elements, black comedy, and rootless characters living on the outskirts of American society. His style evolved from the absurdism of his early off-off-Broadway work to the realism of later plays like Buried Child and Curse of the Starving Class.

Ruffian
Frank Whiteley

Renaldo and Clara
Rodeo

Dash and Lilly
Dashiell Hammett

The Notebook
Frank Calhoun

Days of Heaven
The Farmer

The Right Stuff
Chuck Yeager

Black Hawk Down
MG William F. Garrison

Brothers
Hank Cahill

Purgatory
Sheriff Forrest / Wild Bill Hickock

Steel Magnolias
Spud Jones

Felon
Gordon

Bloodline
Robert Rayburn

Klondike
Father Judge

The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
Frank James

Mud
Tom

Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese
The Writer

Frances
Harry York

Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction
Self

California Typewriter
Self

August: Osage County
Beverly Weston