Preston Jones (playwright)


Preston Jones was an American playwright best known for A Texas Trilogy, a set of three plays.

Biography

Jones was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He graduated from the University of New Mexico in 1960, with a degree in education. fter briefly working as an educator, he began studying drama at Baylor University under Paul Baker. Due to a conflict between Baker and Baylor's administration, Baker and Jones both moved to Trinity University in San Antonio, where Jones received a master's degree 1966.
Jones spent the majority of his adult life in the employment of the Dallas Theater Center, performing many different roles including actor, stage manager, and director. During his employment at DTC, he met his wife, actress, director, designer and DTC's assistant director, Mary Sue Jones, who had a major influence on his writing and career.
In 1972, Jones was given directorship of the Down Center Stage, through which he premiered his best-known work The Texas Trilogy. The first two shows from the Trilogy were included in the Playmarket 74 showcase, attended by Audrey Wood and Alan Schneider.
Following his discovery by Wood and Schneider, Jones became a subject of significant interest to the theatre community, and was compared to Tennessee Williams and Eugene O'Neill by critics. Jones continued to write, creating A Place on the Magdalena Flats, Santa Fe Sunshine, and Juneteenth before his death in 1979 from complications related to surgery on a bleeding ulcer.