Robert Wilson‘s monumental production Mary Said What She Said played at NYU Skirball in Spring 2025.
Robert Wilson (October 4, 1941 – July 31, 2025) was a visionary force in experimental theater and opera, beginning in the late 1960s and continuing to the weeks before his death. His productions were often grand in scale, creating magical stage images from light and space, directing performers in a disciplined score of movement that reflected his aesthetic. He collaborated widely with figures as varied as Tom Waits, Lady Gaga, William Burroughs, Lucinda Childs, Willem Dafoe, and Jessye Norman. Originally from Waco, he relocated to New York to study architecture and work with children diagnosed as brain-damaged. In 1968, he started a group of called the Byrd Hoffman School of Byrds, whose members participated in his early epic works, often produced at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. He gained renown for Einstein on the Beach, his collaboration with Philip Glass, and became a prolific director and designer, often more appreciated in Europe than the United States.
From the Archives
Prep School: Mary Said What She Said
Readings, videos, interviews and more.
Richard Schechner on Robert Wilson
Wilson is first and foremost an architect of performance.
Susanne Wofford on Mary Stuart
Mary enacted a fine and dignified role, seeing her death in the context of an imitation of Christ.