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{{short description|Argentine playwright, theatre director and actor}}
'''Lillian Garrett-Groag''' ([[birthdate]] unknown) is an [[United States|American]] [[playwright]], [[theatre director]], and [[actor]]. Her plays include ''[[The Ladies of the Camellias]]'', ''[[The Magic Fire]]'', and ''[[The White Rose (play)|The White Rose]]'' <ref name="doollee.com Groag">http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsG/groag-lillian.html</ref>
{{Infobox person
| name = Lillian Groag
| image =
| caption =
| birth_name = Liliana C. Groag<ref name=Name>{{cite book |title='64 Forester |year=1964 |publisher=Lake Forest College |location=Lake Forest, Illinois |page=235}}</ref><ref name=Marriages>{{cite book |title=California Marriage Records 1970-79 |year=1980 |publisher=State of California |page=11,897}}</ref>
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1945|6|24}}
| birth_place = [[Buenos Aires, Argentina]]
| death_date =
| death_place =
| resting_place =
| occupation = Writer, director, playwright, actress
| yearsactive = 1973–present
| spouse = {{Marriage|Perry W. Bullington|1972|1976|end=divorced}}<ref name=Marriages/><br>{{Marriage|[[Frank Bonner]]|1977|1980|end=divorced}}<ref name=Marriages/>
}}


'''Lillian Groag''' (born '''Liliana C. Groag''') is an [[Americans|Argentine-American]] [[playwright]], [[theater director]], and [[actress]]. Her plays include ''The Ladies of the Camellias'', ''The Magic Fire'', and ''[[The White Rose (play)|The White Rose]]''.<ref name="doollee.com Groag">[http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsG/groag-lillian.html Lillian Groag – complete guide to the Playwright and Plays<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
==Biography==


==Early life and career==
==Theatre Career==


Lillian Groag was born in [[Buenos Aires]], [[Argentina]], to a Viennese father and an Italian mother.<ref name="Philly">{{cite news|url=http://articles.philly.com/2002-12-03/news/25359607_1_argentina-uruguay-lillian-groag|title=A family's life in the shadow of Perón In "The Magic Fire," Lillian Groag lets her past be her playwriting guide. Revisiting family pain in the shadow of Perón|last=Keating|first=Douglas J.|date=December 3, 2002|accessdate=April 15, 2013|publisher=[[Philadelphia Media Network|philly.com]]}}</ref><ref name="LATimes">{{cite news |first=Nancy |last=Churnin |title=For the Theater's Garrett-Groag, Life Is All Work and All Plays |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-09-18-ca-2384-story.html |newspaper=[[LA Times]] |date=September 18, 1991 |accessdate=February 15, 2021}}</ref><ref name="SFC">{{cite news |first=Robert |last=Hurwitt |title=Lillian Groag directs 'War Music' for ACT |publisher=[[San Francisco Chronicle]] |date=March 22, 2009 }}</ref> Her father had fled to Argentina in 1938 when Austria joined Nazi Germany. When Lillian was only 7 years old her family fled from Argentina to [[Montevideo, Uruguay]], but this time they were fleeing from the [[Juan Domingo Perón]] dictatorship. Her father would die 7 years later in Uruguay. Lillian was schooled in Catholic boarding schools in both Argentina and Uruguay her entire life<ref name="LATimes"/> until she came to [[Lake Forest College]] in [[Chicago]], United States, and the University of Dijon in France. She would later go on to earn masters and doctoral degrees in Romance Languages and Literature from [[Northwestern University]].<ref name="Philly"/>
In 1993, Groag acted as part of an ensemble cast in [[The Kentucky Cycle]] at the [[John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts|Kennedy Center]] in [[Washington, D.C.]]. For this performance she received a [[Helen Hayes Awards Non-Resident Acting#Outstanding Supporting Performer in a Non-Resident Production|Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Performer]] in 1994.


While attending both Lake Forest College and Northwestern she appeared in many plays. It was during her performance while at Northwestern in the play, "A Lion in Winter" that she was spotted by a Hollywood talent agent who persuaded her to move to [[Los Angeles]] to pursue an acting career in TV and movies.<ref name="LATimes"/> She went on to have guest appearances on several TV shows before shifting her focus more to the theater and plays as well as writing.
In 1997, Groag's play ''The Magic Fire'' premiered at the [[Oregon Shakespeare Festival]]. She received a Kennedy Center ''Fund for New American Plays'' (FNAP) to support this.<ref name="Kennedy Center 1996">http://www.kennedy-center.org/programs/theater/fnap/garrett.html</ref>


==Works==
==Theater career==


Miss Groag has acted, directed and written for many regional theatres in the country, Broadway and Off, as well as opera houses. Her plays have also had long runs in Germany, Italy, Mexico and Japan.{{Citation needed|date=May 2008}}
===Plays===


In 1993, Groag acted as part of an ensemble cast in [[The Kentucky Cycle]] at the [[John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts|Kennedy Center]] in [[Washington, D.C.]], and on Broadway at the Royale theatre. For this performance she received a [[Helen Hayes Awards Non-Resident Acting#Outstanding Supporting Performer in a Non-Resident Production|Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Performer]] in 1994.
''[[The Ladies of the Camellias]]'' is a [[farce]] about an imagined meeting in Paris, 1897, between the famous theater divas [[Sarah Bernhardt]] and [[Eleonora Duse]]. They are each to start in separate productions of ''The Lady of the Camellias'' on successive nights.<ref name="Groag 1996">{{cite book

In 1997, Groag's play ''The Magic Fire'' premiered at the [[Oregon Shakespeare Festival]]. She received a Kennedy Center ''Fund for New American Plays'' (FNAP) to support this.<ref name="Kennedy Center 1996">[http://www.kennedy-center.org/programs/theater/fnap/garrett.html 1996 FNAP Grant Recipient-Lillian Garrett-Groag<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

== Works ==

=== Plays ===

''The Ladies of the Camellias'' is a [[farce]] about an imagined meeting in Paris, 1897, between the famous theater divas [[Sarah Bernhardt]] and [[Eleonora Duse]]. They are each to start in separate productions of ''The Lady of the Camellias'' on successive nights.<ref name="doollee.com Groag" /><ref name="Groag 1996">{{cite book
| last = Groag
| last = Groag
| first =Lillian
| first =Lillian
| authorlink = Lillian Garrett-Groag
| author-link = Lillian Groag
| title =The Ladies of the Camellias
| title =The Ladies of the Camellias
| publisher =Dramatist's Play Service
| publisher =Dramatist's Play Service
| date =[[March 30]], [[1996]]
| date =March 30, 1996
| pages =84
| pages =84
| id = ISBN 0822215012
| isbn = 0-8222-1501-2
}}</ref>
}}</ref><ref name="doollee.com Groag" />


''[[The Magic Fire]]'' is a play about an immigrant family in [[Buenos Aires]] during the 1950s regime of [[Juan Perón]]. They take refuge from the fascist politics of Argentina in art and opera. Eventually, events force them to confront the politics and their moral obligations<ref name="Groag 2005">{{cite book
''The Magic Fire'' is a play about an immigrant family in [[Buenos Aires]] during the 1950s regime of [[Juan Perón]]. They take refuge from the fascist politics of Argentina in art and opera. Eventually, events force them to confront the politics and their moral obligations.<ref name="doollee.com Groag" /><ref name="Groag 2005">{{cite book
| last = Groag
| last = Groag
| first =Lillian
| first =Lillian
| authorlink = Lillian Garrett-Groag
| author-link = Lillian Groag
| title =The Magic Fire
| title =The Magic Fire
| publisher =Dramatist's Play Service
| publisher =Dramatist's Play Service
| date =[[December 30]], [[2005]]
| date =December 30, 2005
| pages =85
| pages =85
| id = ISBN 0822220504
| isbn = 0-8222-2050-4
}}</ref><ref name="doollee.com Groag" />. Premiered in 1997 at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Performed (among other times) in 2006 at the [[Shaw Festival#2006|Shaw Festival]].
}}</ref> Premiered in 1997 at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Performed (among other times) in 2006 at the [[Shaw Festival#2006|Shaw Festival]].


''[[The White Rose (play)]]'' is a play about resistance by [[Germany|German]] university students to [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler's]] [[Nazi Germany]], pivoting around a young student Sophie and a police inspector Mohr.<ref name="Groag 1998">{{cite book
''[[The White Rose (play)|The White Rose]]'' is a play about resistance by [[Germany|German]] university students to [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler's]] [[Nazi Germany]], pivoting around a young student Sophie and a police inspector Mohr.<ref name="doollee.com Groag" /><ref name="Groag 1998">{{cite book
| last =Garrett-Groag
| last =Garrett-Groag
| first =Lillian
| first =Lillian
| authorlink = Lillian Garrett-Groag
| author-link = Lillian Garrett-Groag
| title =The White Rose
| title =The White Rose
| publisher =Dramatist's Play Service
| publisher =Dramatist's Play Service
|date=January 1998
| year=1998 |month = January
| id = ISBN 0822213524
| isbn = 0-8222-1352-4
}}</ref>
}}</ref><ref name="doollee.com Groag" />


''Midons'', a play about the Troubadours in Provence and the "invention of love". A [[Monty Python]]-type farce with serious undertones. Produced by The [[People's Light and Theatre Company]] in [[Philadelphia]].{{Citation needed|date=May 2008}}
''[[Blood Wedding]]'', translated and adapted by Garrett-Groag from a Spanish play by [[Federico García Lorca]], is a play about a cycle of murder and revenge in an imagined setting in rural Spain.<ref name="Garcia Lorca 2002">{{cite book

''Menocchio'', a play about the famous real-life trial of miller [[Domenico Scandella]] in the [[Friuli]] region in 1600. Scandella propounded about evolution, socialism and doubted the existence of God. A comedy. Produced by the [[Berkeley Repertory Theatre]].
<ref>{{cite web
|url=https://www.berkeleyrep.org/season/0203/menocchio.asp
|title=Menocchio
|date=2002
|publisher=Berkeley Repertory Theatre
|accessdate=March 19, 2018
}}</ref>

''[[Blood Wedding (play)|Blood Wedding]]'', translated and adapted by Garrett-Groag from a Spanish play by [[Federico García Lorca]], is a play about a cycle of murder and revenge in an imagined setting in rural Spain.<ref name="doollee.com Groag" /><ref name="Garcia Lorca 2002">{{cite book
| last =García Lorca
| last =García Lorca
| first =Federico
| first =Federico
| authorlink=Federico García Lorca
| author-link=Federico García Lorca
| coauthors = Lillian Garrett-Groag
|author2=Lillian Garrett-Groag
| title =Blood Wedding
| title =Blood Wedding
| publisher =Dramatist's Play Service
| publisher =Dramatist's Play Service
|date=February 2002
| year=2002 |month = February
| id = ISBN 082221816X
| isbn = 0-8222-1816-X
}}</ref>
}}</ref><ref name="doollee.com Groag" />


''[[War Music (poem)|War Music]]'' (2009), based on [[Christopher Logue]]'s modernist rewrite of [[Homer]]'s [[Iliad]].<ref>{{cite news|publisher=San Francisco Chronicle|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/03/22/PKGL16D3K8.DTL&type=performance|title=Lillian Groag directs 'War Music' for ACT|author=Robert Hurwitt|date=2009-03-22}}</ref>
===Translations and Adaptations===


=== Translations and Adaptations ===
''A Flaw in the Ointment'' by Georges Feydeau. Peformed in 1993-94 by the [[Seattle_Rep_Production_history#1993-94|Seattle Rep]].
''The Triumph of Love'' by Pierre Marivaux. Adapted from a new translation by Frederick Kluck. Performed in 2007 by California Shakespeare Theater and San Jose Rep.


* ''A Flaw in the Ointment'' by Georges Feydeau. Performed in 1993-94 by the [[Seattle Rep Production history#1993-94|Seattle Rep]].
===Productions directed===
* ''The Triumph of Love'' by Pierre Marivaux. Adapted from a new translation by Frederick Kluck. Performed in 2007 by California Shakespeare Theater and San Jose Rep.
* Blood Wedding - Garcia Lorca - Guthrie Theater
* Liliom - Molnar - Missouri Rep


=== Productions directed ===
==Awards==
1993: "Tosca" (Puccini), Virginia Opera
1995: "La Boheme", Virginia Opera

"SIMÓN BOLÍVAR" – World Premiere – January 1995 Virginia Opera.

1998: ''Scapin, the Cheat'', (Molière), California Shakespeare Theater.

2000: ''The Taming of the Shrew'', California Shakespeare Theater.

2003: ''Arms and the Man'' (Shaw), California Shakespeare Theater.

2005: ''The Tempest'', California Shakespeare Theater.

2007: ''The Triumph of Love'' (Marivaux), California Shakespeare Theater and San Jose Rep.

The Rivals - A.C.T. in San Francisco

A Flaw in the Ointment - Seattle Rep

Menocchio - Berkeley Rep

Napoli Milionaria and The Magic Fire - Milwaukee Rep

Midons and The Imaginary Invalid - People's Light and Theatre Company, Philadelphia

Enter the Guardsman and The Triumph of Love - San Jose Rep

Death and the Maiden - Center Stage, Baltimore

School for Scandal and Merry Wives of Windsor - at Oregon Shakespeare Festival

Smash - [[Asolo Repertory Theatre]]

Liliom - Missouri Rep
OPERA - Virginia Opera, Glimmerglass Opera, New York City Opera, Boston Lyric, Cincinnati, Chicago Opera Theatre, San Jose Opera, Florida Grand Opera.

Representation: Beth Blickers, Abrams Artists Agency - New York / Robert Slotover - Allied Artists, U.K.
2010: "Cosi Fan Tutte", Virginia Opera
2013: "Marriage of Figaro" Virginia Opera

== Awards ==
* 1994: [[Helen Hayes Awards Non-Resident Acting#Outstanding Supporting Performer in a Non-Resident Production|Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Performer]]
* 1994: [[Helen Hayes Awards Non-Resident Acting#Outstanding Supporting Performer in a Non-Resident Production|Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Performer]]
* 1996: Kennedy Center's Fund for New American Plays (FNAP) grant, for ''The Magic Fire'' at Oregon Shakespeare Festival.
* 1996: Kennedy Center's Fund for New American Plays (FNAP) grant, for ''The Magic Fire'' at Oregon Shakespeare Festival.
* AT&T American Plays - "The White Rose"
* TCG - Playwright in Residence grant, Center Stage, Baltimore. "Menocchio".


==Trivia==
== See also ==
OPERA PRODUCTIONS at:

New York City Opera,
Glimmerglass Opera,
Virginia Opera,
Florida Grand Opera,
Chicago Opera Theatre,
Opera San Jose,
Boston Lyric Opera.
Opera Omaha


==References==
==References==
<references/>
Include a [[bibliography]] listed in [[The MLA style manual|MLA]] format.


==See also==
== External links ==
* [http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsG/groag-lillian.html Doollee.com playwright entry for Lillian Groag]
* {{IBDB name|75938}}
* [http://www.alliedartists.co.uk/artist_page.php?tid=32&aid=35 Agent's biography of Lillian Groag]


==External links==
== Notes ==
Representation:
* [http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsG/groag-lillian.html doollee.com playwright entry for Lillian Groag]
* [http://www.ibdb.com/person.asp?id=75938 Internet Broadway Database entry for Lillian Garrett-Groag]
* [http://www.alliedartists.co.uk/artist_page.php?tid=32&aid=35 Agent's biography of Lillian Garrett-Groag]


Beth Blickers - Abrams Artists Agency New York/
==Notes==
Robert Slotover - Allied Artists U.K.
<references/>


{{Authority control}}
{{theat-stub}}
{{US-actor-stub}}


[[Category:American theatre directors|Garrett-Groag, Lillian]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Garrett-Groag, Lillian}}
[[Category:American dramatists and playwrights|Garrett-Groag, Lillian]]
[[Category:American theatre directors]]
[[Category:American actors|Garrett-Groag, Lillian]]
[[Category:American women theatre directors]]
[[Category:Living people|Garrett-Groag, Lillian]]
[[Category:American women dramatists and playwrights]]
[[Category:Argentine theatre directors]]
[[Category:Argentine women theatre directors]]
[[Category:Argentine women dramatists and playwrights]]
[[Category:American stage actresses]]
[[Category:20th-century American actresses]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Place of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Lake Forest College alumni]]
[[Category:Northwestern University alumni]]
[[Category:Argentine people of Austrian descent]]
[[Category:Argentine people of Italian descent]]
[[Category:Argentine emigrants to the United States]]
[[Category:American people of Austrian descent]]
[[Category:American writers of Italian descent]]
[[Category:American television actresses]]
[[Category:Actresses from Buenos Aires]]
[[Category:1945 births]]
[[Category:21st-century American women]]

Latest revision as of 21:42, 19 April 2023

Lillian Groag
Born
Liliana C. Groag[1][2]

(1945-06-24) June 24, 1945 (age 78)
Occupation(s)Writer, director, playwright, actress
Years active1973–present
Spouse(s)
Perry W. Bullington
(m. 1972; div. 1976)
[2]
(m. 1977; div. 1980)
[2]

Lillian Groag (born Liliana C. Groag) is an Argentine-American playwright, theater director, and actress. Her plays include The Ladies of the Camellias, The Magic Fire, and The White Rose.[3]

Early life and career[edit]

Lillian Groag was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, to a Viennese father and an Italian mother.[4][5][6] Her father had fled to Argentina in 1938 when Austria joined Nazi Germany. When Lillian was only 7 years old her family fled from Argentina to Montevideo, Uruguay, but this time they were fleeing from the Juan Domingo Perón dictatorship. Her father would die 7 years later in Uruguay. Lillian was schooled in Catholic boarding schools in both Argentina and Uruguay her entire life[5] until she came to Lake Forest College in Chicago, United States, and the University of Dijon in France. She would later go on to earn masters and doctoral degrees in Romance Languages and Literature from Northwestern University.[4]

While attending both Lake Forest College and Northwestern she appeared in many plays. It was during her performance while at Northwestern in the play, "A Lion in Winter" that she was spotted by a Hollywood talent agent who persuaded her to move to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career in TV and movies.[5] She went on to have guest appearances on several TV shows before shifting her focus more to the theater and plays as well as writing.

Theater career[edit]

Miss Groag has acted, directed and written for many regional theatres in the country, Broadway and Off, as well as opera houses. Her plays have also had long runs in Germany, Italy, Mexico and Japan.[citation needed]

In 1993, Groag acted as part of an ensemble cast in The Kentucky Cycle at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., and on Broadway at the Royale theatre. For this performance she received a Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Performer in 1994.

In 1997, Groag's play The Magic Fire premiered at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. She received a Kennedy Center Fund for New American Plays (FNAP) to support this.[7]

Works[edit]

Plays[edit]

The Ladies of the Camellias is a farce about an imagined meeting in Paris, 1897, between the famous theater divas Sarah Bernhardt and Eleonora Duse. They are each to start in separate productions of The Lady of the Camellias on successive nights.[3][8]

The Magic Fire is a play about an immigrant family in Buenos Aires during the 1950s regime of Juan Perón. They take refuge from the fascist politics of Argentina in art and opera. Eventually, events force them to confront the politics and their moral obligations.[3][9] Premiered in 1997 at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Performed (among other times) in 2006 at the Shaw Festival.

The White Rose is a play about resistance by German university students to Hitler's Nazi Germany, pivoting around a young student Sophie and a police inspector Mohr.[3][10]

Midons, a play about the Troubadours in Provence and the "invention of love". A Monty Python-type farce with serious undertones. Produced by The People's Light and Theatre Company in Philadelphia.[citation needed]

Menocchio, a play about the famous real-life trial of miller Domenico Scandella in the Friuli region in 1600. Scandella propounded about evolution, socialism and doubted the existence of God. A comedy. Produced by the Berkeley Repertory Theatre. [11]

Blood Wedding, translated and adapted by Garrett-Groag from a Spanish play by Federico García Lorca, is a play about a cycle of murder and revenge in an imagined setting in rural Spain.[3][12]

War Music (2009), based on Christopher Logue's modernist rewrite of Homer's Iliad.[13]

Translations and Adaptations[edit]

  • A Flaw in the Ointment by Georges Feydeau. Performed in 1993-94 by the Seattle Rep.
  • The Triumph of Love by Pierre Marivaux. Adapted from a new translation by Frederick Kluck. Performed in 2007 by California Shakespeare Theater and San Jose Rep.
  • Blood Wedding - Garcia Lorca - Guthrie Theater
  • Liliom - Molnar - Missouri Rep

Productions directed[edit]

1993: "Tosca" (Puccini), Virginia Opera 1995: "La Boheme", Virginia Opera

"SIMÓN BOLÍVAR" – World Premiere – January 1995 Virginia Opera.

1998: Scapin, the Cheat, (Molière), California Shakespeare Theater.

2000: The Taming of the Shrew, California Shakespeare Theater.

2003: Arms and the Man (Shaw), California Shakespeare Theater.

2005: The Tempest, California Shakespeare Theater.

2007: The Triumph of Love (Marivaux), California Shakespeare Theater and San Jose Rep.

The Rivals - A.C.T. in San Francisco

A Flaw in the Ointment - Seattle Rep

Menocchio - Berkeley Rep

Napoli Milionaria and The Magic Fire - Milwaukee Rep

Midons and The Imaginary Invalid - People's Light and Theatre Company, Philadelphia

Enter the Guardsman and The Triumph of Love - San Jose Rep

Death and the Maiden - Center Stage, Baltimore

School for Scandal and Merry Wives of Windsor - at Oregon Shakespeare Festival

Smash - Asolo Repertory Theatre

Liliom - Missouri Rep OPERA - Virginia Opera, Glimmerglass Opera, New York City Opera, Boston Lyric, Cincinnati, Chicago Opera Theatre, San Jose Opera, Florida Grand Opera.

Representation: Beth Blickers, Abrams Artists Agency - New York / Robert Slotover - Allied Artists, U.K. 2010: "Cosi Fan Tutte", Virginia Opera 2013: "Marriage of Figaro" Virginia Opera

Awards[edit]

  • 1994: Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Supporting Performer
  • 1996: Kennedy Center's Fund for New American Plays (FNAP) grant, for The Magic Fire at Oregon Shakespeare Festival.
  • AT&T American Plays - "The White Rose"
  • TCG - Playwright in Residence grant, Center Stage, Baltimore. "Menocchio".

See also[edit]

OPERA PRODUCTIONS at:

New York City Opera, Glimmerglass Opera, Virginia Opera, Florida Grand Opera, Chicago Opera Theatre, Opera San Jose, Boston Lyric Opera. Opera Omaha

References[edit]

  1. ^ '64 Forester. Lake Forest, Illinois: Lake Forest College. 1964. p. 235.
  2. ^ a b c California Marriage Records 1970-79. State of California. 1980. p. 11,897.
  3. ^ a b c d e Lillian Groag – complete guide to the Playwright and Plays
  4. ^ a b Keating, Douglas J. (December 3, 2002). "A family's life in the shadow of Perón In "The Magic Fire," Lillian Groag lets her past be her playwriting guide. Revisiting family pain in the shadow of Perón". philly.com. Retrieved April 15, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c Churnin, Nancy (September 18, 1991). "For the Theater's Garrett-Groag, Life Is All Work and All Plays". LA Times. Retrieved February 15, 2021.
  6. ^ Hurwitt, Robert (March 22, 2009). "Lillian Groag directs 'War Music' for ACT". San Francisco Chronicle.
  7. ^ 1996 FNAP Grant Recipient-Lillian Garrett-Groag
  8. ^ Groag, Lillian (March 30, 1996). The Ladies of the Camellias. Dramatist's Play Service. p. 84. ISBN 0-8222-1501-2.
  9. ^ Groag, Lillian (December 30, 2005). The Magic Fire. Dramatist's Play Service. p. 85. ISBN 0-8222-2050-4.
  10. ^ Garrett-Groag, Lillian (January 1998). The White Rose. Dramatist's Play Service. ISBN 0-8222-1352-4.
  11. ^ "Menocchio". Berkeley Repertory Theatre. 2002. Retrieved March 19, 2018.
  12. ^ García Lorca, Federico; Lillian Garrett-Groag (February 2002). Blood Wedding. Dramatist's Play Service. ISBN 0-8222-1816-X.
  13. ^ Robert Hurwitt (2009-03-22). "Lillian Groag directs 'War Music' for ACT". San Francisco Chronicle.

External links[edit]

Notes[edit]

Representation:

Beth Blickers - Abrams Artists Agency New York/ Robert Slotover - Allied Artists U.K.