Adrianne Lobel


Adrianne Lobel is an American scenic designer and producer for theatre, opera, and dance known for her "very daring and creative sets."

Life and career

Lobel was raised born and in Brooklyn and took classes at the art school at the Brooklyn Museum, then worked as a draftsman at film studios. She later attended the Yale Drama School, where she studied with set designer Ming Cho Lee.
Lobel has designed sets for Broadway, off-Broadway, and regional theater productions and has worked with the Yale Repertory Theatre, Arena Stage, and the Guthrie Theatre. She designed the sets for the 1987 Houston Grand Opera production of Nixon in China and the television broadcast the following year, as well as the 1991 PBS Great Performances: Dance in America staging of The Hard Nut by Mark Morris. Additionally, she designed the sets for the 2005 Metropolitan Opera adaptation of the Theodore Dreiser classic An American Tragedy directed by Francesca Zambello the 1988 Mark Morris Dance Group work "L'Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato." and 1991 Mark Morris Dance Group work "The Hard Nut".
Lobel's first producing credit, the musical A Year With Frog and Toad, was a family affair. It was based on books by her late father, children's author Arnold Lobel, and starred her then husband Mark Linn-Baker, with whom she was married from 1995 to 2009.

Awards and nominations

Lobel was nominated for the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Set Design for Passion and the Tony Award for Best Musical for A Year With Frog and Toad. She is the recipient of the 1984 Obie Award for Scenic Design for her contributions to All Night Long and The Vampires and the 1998 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Scenic Design for On the Town.

Other stage credits