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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Moss_HartMoss Hart - Wikipedia

    Hart continued to write plays after parting with Kaufman, such as Christopher Blake (1946) and Light Up the Sky (1948), as well as the book for the musical Lady In The Dark (1941), with songs by Kurt Weill and Ira Gershwin. However, he became best known during this period as a director.

  2. Sep 28, 2014 · This season's revival of George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart 's Pulitzer Prize-winning play YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU opens on Broadway tonight, and in honor of the playwriting pair's long list of...

  3. Mar 7, 2014 · The poster shows a solitary adolescent boy of a bygone era standing across the street from a Broadway theater, the Music Box, staring at its dazzling façade as if he were a burglar plotting to ...

  4. May 4, 2001 · Moss Hart blitzed Depression-era Broadway with smash-hit comedies, capturing a 1937 Pulitzer Prize for You Can’t Take It With You.

  5. Sep 6, 1992 · The photo shows Moss Hart grinning, looking like a man who knows his play was a hit. Which it was: Hart’s “Light Up the Sky” had opened on Broadway in late 1948, and at the time of the...

  6. www.wikiwand.com › en › articlesMoss Hart - Wikiwand

    By far his biggest hit was the musical My Fair Lady (1956), adapted from George Bernard Shaw 's Pygmalion, with book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner and music by Frederick Loewe. The show ran over six years and won a Tony Award for Best Musical. Hart picked up the Tony for Best Director.

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  8. Moss Hart (born Oct. 24, 1904, New York City—died Dec. 20, 1961, Palm Springs, Calif., U.S.) was one of the most successful U.S. playwrights of the 20th century. At 17 Hart obtained a job as office boy for the theatrical producer Augustus Pitou. He wrote his first play at 18, but it was a flop.