The Library of Congress > LCCN Permalink

View this record in:  MARCXML | LC Authorities & Vocabularies | VIAF (Virtual International Authority File)External Link

Luce, William

LC control no.n 85181972
Descriptive conventionsrda
LC classificationPS3562.U254
Personal name headingLuce, William
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Associated countryUnited States
LocatedCalifornia
Depoe Bay (Or.)
Arizona
Birth date1931-10-16
Death date2019-12-09
Place of birthPortland (Or.)
Place of deathGreen Valley (Ariz.)
Field of activityAmerican drama
Television authorship
American poetry
Music
AffiliationNorman Luboff Choir
Ray Charles Singers
Profession or occupationDramatists
Television writers
Librettists
Poets
Musicians
Found inHis Zelda, c1985: t.p. (William Luce)
LC data base 8/19/85 (hdg.: Luce, William)
His Spring song, 1963: t.p. (William Aubert Luce)
Cont. authors, New rev. v.11 (Luce, William (Aubert), b. Oct. 16, 1931, Portland, Ore.)
Internet Broadway Database, July 10, 2009 (William Luce; b. 1941, Portland, Or.; playwright) viewed Dec. 11, 2019 (born Oct 16, 1931; died Dec 09, 2019)
Wikipedia, October 7, 2019 (William Luce; writer for stage and television; librettist; born in Portland, Oregon, October 16, 1931)
   <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Luce>
Washington post WWW site, viewed Dec. 11, 2019 (in obituary dated Dec. 11, 2019: William Luce, a playwright best known for exploring the lives of historical figures in single-character dramas, most notably in the acclaimed plays "The Belle of Amherst," about poet Emily Dickinson, and "Barrymore," about actor John Barrymore, died Dec. 9 in Green Valley, Ariz. He was 88. Mr. Luce, who began his career as a musician and singer, had never attempted a play before director Charles Nelson Reilly asked him to write about Dickinson. Then in his 40s, Mr. Luce had published only a few poems and song lyrics. William Aubert Luce was born Oct. 16, 1931, in Portland, Ore. Mr. Luce was a musical prodigy on piano. He accompanied his mother on her Christian Science healing missions and was a church organist in Oregon and Southern California, where he settled in the early 1950s, before eventually leaving the faith. Mr. Luce wrote songs and became a member of the Norman Luboff Choir and Ray Charles Singers--not the same Ray Charles as the popular soul singer--and often appeared on television. After his Broadway success with "The Belle of Amherst," Mr. Luce wrote several scripts for TV movies. He also wrote librettos for several oratorios and an opera, "Gabriel's Daughter," by Henry Mollicone. For many years, Mr. Luce lived near Mariposa, Calif., then later in the Oregon coastal town of Depoe Bay before moving to Arizona)
Invalid LCCNno2009109227