Oppenheimer Award
The Oppenheimer Award was named after the late playwright and Newsday drama critic George Oppenheimer. It was awarded annually to the best New York debut production by an American playwright for a non-musical play. The selection committee has included playwrights Edward Albee, Wendy Wasserstein, James Lapine, and Richard Greenberg. The award carries a $5,000 cash prize. The first award of $1,000, to the play Getting Out by Marsha Norman, was made in 1979, two years after Oppenheimer's death. It was discontinued in 2007.Winners
- 1979 Getting Out, Marsha Norman
- 1981 ‘Crimes of the Heart’, Beth Henley
- 1983 "To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday", Michael Brady
- 1985 "The Bloodletters" by Richard Greenberg
- 1988 "Mr. Universe" by Jim Grimsley
- 1989 "The Film Society" Jon Robin Baitz
- 1990 "Tales of the Lost Formicans", Constance Congdon
- 1991 "La Bête" by David Hirson
- 1992 "Marvin's Room", Scott McPherson
- 1993 "Joined at the Head" by Catherine Butterfield
- 1994 "Pterodactyls" by Nicky Silver. "Why We Have a Body" by Claire Chafee
- 1996 "Insurrection: Holding History", Robert O'Hara
- 1997 "The Grey Zone", Tim Blake Nelson
- 1999 "Wit" by Margaret Edson
- 2002 "Brutal Imagination" by Cornelius Eady
- 2003 " Corner Wars" by Tim Dowlin
- 2004 “The Flu Season” by Will Eno
- 2005 "Everything Will Be Different: A Brief History of Helen of Troy", Mark Schultz
- 2006 "The Sugar Bean Sisters", Nathan Sanders
- 2007 "Heddatron", Elizabeth Meriwether