

"After writing an article in 1976 about Papp's New York Shakespeare
Festival, Epstein became close to the impresario and was to become his
authorized biographer, but he changed his mind. This book was
researched after Papp's death in 1991 with the assistance of his widow,
Gail Merrifield. Epstein ( Children of the Holocaust ) has used her
personal access well to provide a thorough, candid portrait of the
hard-driving director/producer who made free Shakespeare in Central
Park an annual event and who built a theatrical empire at the Public
Theater, where he presented such groundbreaking works as Hair , for
colored girls who have considered suicide and A Chorus Line , as well
as Shakespearean productions that proved his contention that the Bard
could be played with a vigorous American accent. In chronicling Papp's
impoverished childhood (he was born in Brooklyn in 1921, the son of
Jewish immigrants), his early years with the Actors Lab in California,
his membership in the Communist Party, his four marriages and his
stormy relationships with his children and colleagues, Epstein vividly
evokes his charm and strong social conscience. She does not scant,
however, a core of coldness that led him to discard Shakespeare
Festival associates in whom he had lost interest or by whom he felt
threatened. Sympathetic but critical, her thoughtful biography is a
fitting tribute to the man who fought to bring theater to more diverse
audiences and to build it on "the bedrock of civic responsibility."
Publishers Weekly