As Head of New York University's Graduate Acting Program for 25 years, Zelda Fichandler also trained a younger generation of gifted actors. Marcia Gay Harden, Rainn Wilson, Mahershala Ali, and other developing actors who became "artist-citizens" under her guidance, talk about the ways in which she transformed their lives.
Theater practitioners who have lived during Zelda Fichandler's time will find this book a fascinating and entertaining read--as will all theater lovers, especially those in Washington, DC. And through this vivid and compelling oral history, students and aspiring artists will come to grasp how the theatrical past can shed essential light on the theater of today and tomorrow.
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--Howard Shalwitz, Artistic Director Emeritus, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company
"Zelda curated an environment for growth and self-reflection, and I'm deeply grateful for that. She inspired you on your journey to find your life tools."
--Mahershala Ali, Academy Award-winning actor
"To Repair the World deftly weaves together interviews with Zelda Fichandler's own writing to provide an invigorating, nuanced, and timely look at the birth of a movement that changed the way Americans think about theater."
--Carey Perloff, former Artistic Director, American Conservatory Theater
'Robinson's bracingly frank book is full of this kind of complication and texture: praise tempered by criticism, and vice versa. Robinson's book even winds up in meta-contemplation of The Long Revolution itself-a collection that was in the works before Zelda's death but was only completed earlier this year.'
Rob Weinert-Kendt (he/him), editor-in-chief of American Theatre.
Full review is available here
''Robinson's book is a biography written in oral-history form. It traces Zelda's life and career through the reflections of her friends and colleagues, interspersed with Robinson's own writing and excerpts from Zelda's speeches and letters that give context to others' memories.''
Lucy Gram, SDC Journal
Full article is available here
''Mary B. Robinson chronicles this remarkable person in her recently published oral history biography, To Repair the World: Zelda Fichandler and the Transformation of American Theater. In 17 sections, 16 of which focus squarely on Zelda and her relationship with theater at Arena Stage and later at the New York University graduate acting program, Robinson has orchestrated hundreds of short oral accounts to create an intricate collage of the many facets of this theatrical legend. She does not spare us the warts or the controversies either because even those traits, which some experienced negatively, shaped the dynamism that is Zelda Fichandler.''
Robert Michael Oliver, DC Theater Arts
Full review is available here.








