Emmy Award winning comedy writer coming to UB for a series of theatre workshops

UB alumnus Alan Zweibel will be working with students as part of Arts Collaboratory program

Release Date: February 12, 2020

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Photo of Bronwyn Keenan.
“He wants to challenge the students and bring out the creative power of collaboration, just as his friendships with Gilda, Billy Crystal, Larry David, Martin Short and dozens of others inspired him. ”
Bronwyn Keenan, director
University at Buffalo Arts Collaboratory
Portrait of Alan Zweibel.

Zweibel

BUFFALO, N.Y. – Alan Zweibel, a five-time Emmy award winning original writer for “Saturday Night Live” and University at Buffalo alumnus (BA ’72), will inaugurate the UB College of Arts and Sciences’ Visiting Professor in the Arts endowment with a three-part workshop at UB.

The workshop will conclude with an artist brunch and student performances inspired by “Bunny Bunny,” Zweibel’s memoir that he later adapted for the New York stage about his friendship with original SNL cast member Gilda Radner.

The performances will take place May 3 from noon to 3 p.m. in the Black Box Theater of UB’s Center for the Arts and are open to the public.

Zweibel’s decades-long career has “earned [him] a place in the pantheon of American pop culture,” according to the New York Times.

“The reason I’m coming back to UB is because when I was a student I would’ve loved if someone like me came to teach what the world of professional writing was really like,” said Zweibel. “That, plus it’s been quite awhile since I experienced a Buffalo winter and really miss freezing my butt off.”

Zweibel’s creative output is a wide orbit of diverse mediums and disciplines that include television, books of all genres, film and theater, as well as writing, producing and acting. And his workshops — happening Feb. 21-23, March 27-29 and May 1 and 2 — will use “Bunny Bunny” to encourage students to approach his original text in a manner as varied as his career in order to draw out the limitless possibilities of creative expression.

“What Alan did to transform the original conception of ‘Bunny Bunny,’ taking the memoir’s text and using it as the basis for a stage performance, is similar to what he’s asking students to do,” said Bronwyn Keenan, director of UB’s Arts Collaboratory, an innovative strategic initiative that fosters collaboration and experimentation across the university and Buffalo.

“Fourteen UB students will be drawing upon his memoir as a springboard for collaboration. The process is open to creative interpretation, with Alan’s mentorship guiding the way.”

Keenan says the workshops are a collaborative exercise and the students will seek multidisciplinary expertise outside of the classroom and workshops, linking with other students working in various art forms to create something original.

“He wants to challenge the students and bring out the creative power of collaboration, just as his friendships with Gilda, Billy Crystal, Larry David, Martin Short and dozens of others inspired him,” said Keenan. “It’s important to understand that.”

Some of that work is already underway in a class taught by Maria Horne, an associate professor of theater and dance at UB. It’s Horne’s class that will host the workshops and provide the foundation for the students’ interpretive work in May.

Zweibel has already prepared video preludes for classroom screenings, including a compilation of Radner’s work on SNL (Zweibel helped create the iconic Roseann Roseannadanna character) and the documentary, “Love Gilda,” which he executive produced with his wife Robin.

He’ll also stay in touch with students after their May performance, continuing the spirit of his workshops through the rest of their education at UB and early career steps.

“This is a fantastic opportunity for our students to research the groundbreaking SNL tradition with Alan, an expert in his field who is both a UB and SNL alumnus,” said Horne. “I sincerely appreciate Alan’s generosity and his desire to come back and give back, and I’m delighted to be working with him to make it happen."

In addition to his Emmy Awards and the Tony he shares with Billy Crystal for the Broadway play “700 Sundays,” Zweibel’s iconic work is further distinguished by two Writers Guild of America Awards; a Television Critics of America Award; a Thurber Prize for American Humor for his novel “The Other Shulman”; and a Writers Guild of America East, Lifetime Achievement Award.

Zweibel is currently preparing his play “Bunny Bunny” for a return to the New York stage, has written a cultural memoir titled “Laugh Lines – My Life Helping Funny People Be Funnier” – that will be published in April, and a new movie he wrote with Billy Crystal titled “Here Today” that stars Billy and Tiffany Haddish and will be in theaters next fall.

Major support for the Arts Collaboratory is provided by M&T Bank.

Media Contact Information

Bert Gambini
News Content Manager
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Tel: 716-645-5334
gambini@buffalo.edu