Aurin Squire is an award-winning playwright, journalist, and multimedia artist. Squire won the Helen Merrill Prize for Emerging Playwrights as well as Seattle Public Theatre's Emerald Prize for new American plays. He graduated from The Juilliard School after a two-year fellowship in the the Lila Acheson American Playwriting Program. Squire has had fellowships at The Dramatists Guild of America, National Black Theatre, Royal Court Theatre, and Brooklyn Arts Exchange. After graduating from Northwestern University, he worked as a reporter for publications like ESPN, The Miami Herald, and Chicago Tribune. His dark comedy "To Whom It May Concern" won New York LGBT theatre awards for best play, best playwright, and best actor before being optioned and remounted off-broadway to critical acclaim...
Aurin Squire is an award-winning playwright, journalist, and multimedia artist. Squire won the Helen Merrill Prize for Emerging Playwrights as well as Seattle Public Theatre's Emerald Prize for new American plays. He graduated from The Juilliard School after a two-year fellowship in the the Lila Acheson American Playwriting Program. Squire has had fellowships at The Dramatists Guild of America, National Black Theatre, Royal Court Theatre, and Brooklyn Arts Exchange. After graduating from Northwestern University, he worked as a reporter for publications like ESPN, The Miami Herald, and Chicago Tribune. His dark comedy "To Whom It May Concern" won New York LGBT theatre awards for best play, best playwright, and best actor before being optioned and remounted off-broadway to critical acclaim at the Arclight Theatre. As a documentary writer, Squire received a year-long commission to live in New Mexico, interviewing Jewish Latinos. He worked with an ensemble to create A Light in My Soul, a docudrama produced around New Mexico about Jewish families who fled from the Spanish Inquisition and settled in the American southwest. Squire also wrote "Dreams of Freedom," the multimedia installation video about Jewish immigrants in the 20th century for the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia. "Dreams" won 3 national museum awards and is in the permanent exhibit at NMAJH. His drama "Freefalling" was produced at Barrington Stage Company and won the Fiat Lux Award ("Let There Be Light") from the Catholic Church’s Theatre Conference. Squire won the grand prize in the InspiraTO Theatre’s International Play Festival in Toronto (largest theatre festival in Canada) for "Freefalling" and the play was published in Dramatists Play Service’s Outstanding Short Plays Volume 2. "Article 119-1," his drama about a gay rights activist in Belarus, was produced in Florence, Italy, Norway, Vancouver, and Los Angeles in March 2014. Squire’s comedy "African Americana" received its world premiere at London’s Theatre 503. He has been a guest artist and lecturer at Gettysburg College, Malloy College, and New School University. His plays have been produced at venues like Abingdon Theatre, ArcLight Theatre, Ars Nova, Barrington Stage Company, Brooklyn Arts Exchange (BAX), Cherry Lane, Lincoln Center Lab, National Hispanic Cultural Center. Squire works as a video writer/producer for media organizations like Learn Liberty. He has also worked as a journalist at publications like The New Republic, Talking Points Memo, and Take Part. Squire has worked as a writer/producer for "Evil," "BrainDead," the legal drama "The Good Fight" and the family drama "This is Us."He lives in New York City.