As
both writer and performer of The Syringa Tree,
Pamela Gien won the Obie for Best Play of 2001, the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding
Solo Performance, the Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Solo Performance,
a Drama League Honor, and nomination for the John Gassner Playwriting Award.
Before its New York run, the play had its world premiere at ACT in Seattle,
and Pamela has since performed it in London at the Royal National Theater, and
in Los Angeles. The production was filmed for Trio Arts Channel on television.
She is completing the screenplay and Random House has commissioned her to write
it as a novel. Pamela has also written her second screenplay for an upcoming
film, The Lily Field, to be produced by Matt Salinger. As a Company member
of the A.R.T., she appeared in fourteen productions; as Sonya in the premiere
of David Mamet's adaptation of Uncle
Vanya with Christopher Walken, Anabella in 'Tis Pity She's A Whore with
Derek Smith, Estrella in Life's A Dream with Cherry
Jones; as Gabriella in Sweet Table at the Richelieu, Marianna in
The Miser, and Angela in The King Stag
with Thomas Derrah, all directed by
Andrei Serban. She played Stella/Ann in The End
of the World with Symposium to Follow, directed by Richard Foreman, and
performed in two Pirandello productions directed by Robert
Brustein, and appeared in Gillette and The Day Room, both
directed by David Wheeler. Other theatre
credits include Lavinia in Titus Andronicus for The Public Theatre's
New York Shakespeare Festival, Alicia in Piano by Anna
Deavere Smith, and Hannah Jelkes in The Night of the Iguana at the
LATC, for which she won a Drama-Logue Award for Outstanding Achievement in the
Theatre. She has performed in the New Works Festival at The Mark Taper Forum,
The Humana Festival at Actors Theatre of Louisville, and at South Coast Repertory.
Her television appearances include guest-starring roles in Tales From the
Crypt, Reasonable Doubts, Hunter, Secret Lives, and Into Thin Air.
Her film credits include Men Seeking Women and The Last Supper.