Hairspray writer Mark O'Donnell dies at 58
CBC News
Posted: Aug 7, 2012 2:34 PM ET
Last Updated: Aug 7, 2012 4:51 PM ET
Related
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
Thomas Meehan, left, and Mark O'Donnell show off their Tony awards for best book of a Musical for Hairspray on June 8, 2003. O'Donnell died Monday at age 58. (Mary Altaffer/Associated Press)Mark O'Donnell, the playwright, librettist and comedian who co-wrote Broadway shows Hairspray and Cry-Baby, collapsed and died suddenly on Monday, according to his agent. He was 58.
An autopsy was scheduled to be performed Tuesday to determine cause of death after he was found in the lobby of his Manhattan apartment.
"Mark was a kind soul, a hysterical mind and the real hero of Hairspray. His passing is shocking, our great loss, but heaven's gain," said Hairspray co-songwriter Marc Shaiman in response to his death.
With Thomas Meehan, O'Donnell co-wrote the book for Hairspray, the story of a plump Baltimore teenager who forges a place for herself on a TV dance show and fights for integration of her black friends. They won a Tony Award for best book for the show, which comes across as a parody of 1950s dance movies.
"The structure I had in mind was: Girl does Mash Potato, girl charms Baltimore, girl integrates nation," O'Donnell told The Associated Press in 2002. "My script was like a great Mad magazine article."
Hairspray began life as a John Waters movie before producer Margo Lion chose O’Donnell to write it for the stage. A second movie was created in 2005 after the musical proved to be an enormous popular success on Broadway. It opened in 2002, and it played for nearly seven years.
O’Donnell and Meehan also adapted another Waters work, Cry-Baby, which debuted at La Jolla Playhouse before moving on to Broadway. The show was short-lived, but earned them another Tony nomination.
O'Donnell was born in Cleveland, Ohio, one of a family of 10. He was the identical twin of TV writer, Steve O'Donnell, who was head writer on The David Letterman Show before joining the Jimmy Kimmel Live! show in 2003.
The brothers attended Harvard University together, where Mark was drawn to the Harvard Lampoon and Hasty Pudding Theatricals.
In addition to his stage work, O'Donnell was a comedy writer and short story writer for the New Yorker and The Atlantic. He published the novels Getting Over Homer, a pun-laden story set in the early years of the AIDs epidemic and Let Nothing You Dismay.
His other plays include That's It, Folks! Fables for Friends, The Nice and the Nasty, Strangers on Earth, Vertigo Park and the musical Tots in Tinsel town.
"He was a huge talent, and a warm, witty and wonderful man who marched to his own drummer," said Jack Tantleff, O'Donnell's agent at the Paradigm agency.
With file from The Associated PressShare Tools
Horror tale Haunting Melissa targets app audiences by Jessica Wong May. 16, 2013 4:40 PM If you're seeking the weather, the news or a pic of what your buddy had for lunch, there are apps for that. What about an original, Hollywood-calibre ghost story from a producer of The Ring and Mulholland Drive? Now, there's an app for that, too. Haunting Melissa ventures into the burgeoning realm of digital storytelling as a traditional ghost story with a modern twist -- namely a tale that unfolds through an iOS app.
Top News Headlines
- Dellen Millard's farm near location of unknown remains
- Police searching the farm of Dellen Millard, the 27-year-old charged with first-degree murder after the remains of Ancaster, Ont., man Tim Bosma were discovered, have found other remains near the property, but it's unclear if they are human or animal. more »
- Can the Senate fire a senator?
- An expert on parliamentary rules says the Senate has the power to turf a senator from the chamber, as long as a majority approves the expulsion, and as long as there is cause. more »
- Nahlah Ayed: Vote-wary Iranians mull Ahmadinejad's successor
- Iranians go to the polls in less than four weeks to choose a new president. The reform movement is still smarting from its bitter defeat four years ago, but the jockeying for power is no less intense, Nahlah Ayed reports. more »
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Nigel Wright has resigned as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's chief of staff, following revelations he wrote a $90,000 cheque to repay living expenses claimed by Senator Mike Duffy. more »
Must Watch
Latest Arts & Entertainment News Headlines
- Denmark's Emmelie de Forest wins Eurovision
- Denmark's Emmelie de Forest has won this year's Eurovision Song Contest with her ethno-inspired flute and drum tune Only Teardrops. more »
- John Lennon guitar snags $408,000 at auction
- A custom-made electric guitar played by the late John Lennon and George Harrison of the Beatles sold at a New York auction on Saturday for $408,000 US, said officials with the company behind the event more »
- Book seller Sarah McNally: Hipster writes her own business rule book
- Canadian Sarah McNally is taking her own unique approach to the book-selling game in New York City, and its success is evident in her Manhattan McNally-Jackson Bookstore, writes David Gutnick. more »
- Mohawk Girls series tells stories of once 'voiceless' women
- The director behind a TV series being shot in Kahnawake says she wants to show Canadians what it means to be a Mohawk woman. more »
Q Blog
Pete Townshend on The Who's "Tommy" May. 17, 2013 4:15 PM
CBC Books
Juvenile inmates benefiting from Russian literature May. 17, 2013 3:32 PM A juvenile correctional facility in Virginia has seen the behavioural benefits of encouraging their inmates to read the works of classic Russian writers like Tolstoy and Dostoevsky.
- Remains found on murder suspect Millard's Ontario farm
- Petition looks to rename Victoria Day
- Vancouver man attacked, killed in Costa Rica
- Jeep driver apologizes after stunt kills Edmonton woman
- Missing Toronto woman's parents unfazed by Millard link
- Central Newfoundland digs out from freak snowfall
- Rob Ford should resign if allegations true, councillors say
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Canadian on EI shut out amid foreign worker influx


