Robert Chapman, an English professor who wrote a stage adaptation of Herman Melville's Billy Budd but found his truest calling in teaching and directing, died last month at the age of 81.
He served as director of the Loeb Drama Center from 1960 to 1980, and taught in the English department from 1950 until he retired in 1989.
Chapman had lived in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., since retiring from teaching and directing.
In 1951, he tried his hand as a playwright, and with Louis O. Coxe he wrote the stage version of Herman Melville's Billy Budd.
The play debuted on Broadway in 1951 and won accolades from The New York Times, which called it "extraordinarily skillful." It was made into a movie in 1962.
But Chapman was most proud of his teaching and directing, according to Jonathan C. Miller '72, his former student who is now general manager of the American Repertory Theater.
"He saw himself as a man who studied the theater rather than one who wrote theater," Miller said.
Chapman was a popular lecturer and, according to Miller, had many undergraduate friends.
Read more in News
Campus Parties Debate IssuesRecommended Articles
-
Grahame ChapmanGrahame Chapman, the star of Monty Python's "Life of Brian," last night attended a party in his honor at the
-
Cagers Lose to UConn, 80-52The University of Connecticut's talented basketball team turned Harvard's first home game Saturday night into a 40-minute non-stop nightmare for
-
Bringing in the SheavesW HEN ROBERT CHAPMAN directed his freshman seminar candidates to read 25 lines of script in their interviews last September,
-
Loeb Politics: Personalities Cloud IssuesWhen the Loeb went into operation, nearly all of its doors were kept locked. And keys were hard to come
-
Chapman Play Opens Saturday in New YorkRobert H. Chapman, instructor in English, leaves for New York this afternoon for the opening of his play. "Billy Budd."
-
FALSE CHARGES.We are indebted to "Life" for calling attention in its current number to an article by Mr. John J. Chapman