Robert Schenkkan (born March 19, 1953, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, U.S.) is an American actor and writer who was best known for his historical plays, which notably included The Kentucky Cycle, a series of short plays that won a Pulitzer Prize in 1992.
Schenkkan grew up in Austin, Texas, in a family with a passionate appreciation for the arts. His father, a professor in the department of radio, television, and film at the University of Texas at Austin, became a strong advocate for public broadcasting and worked with U.S. Pres. Lyndon B. Johnson on the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967.
After Schenkkan earned a B.A. in drama (1975) from the University of Texas and an M.F.A. in theatre arts (1977) from Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, he launched his acting career. Through the 1990s he appeared in theatrical productions as well as in TV movies and programs, including Star Trek: The Next Generation and the daytime soap opera Santa Barbara. He also had a role as a school guidance counselor in the 1990 film Pump Up the Volume. At that point he began to focus primarily on writing and got his big break with The Kentucky Cycle, a series of nine short plays that spanned 1775–1975 and chronicled three American families: African American, Euro-American, and Native American; the play won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, prior to a short Tony Award-nominated run on Broadway the following year.
Schenkkan’s subsequent plays included The Marriage of Miss Hollywood and King Neptune (2002), By the Waters of Babylon (2005), and Lewis and Clark Reach the Euphrates (2006). He also wrote three full-length plays for children (The Dream Thief, The Devil and Daniel Webster, and A Single Shard), numerous one-act plays, and two musicals (The Twelve and A Night at the Alhambra Café).
In 2012 Schenkkan debuted a play about the life of Johnson. All the Way, which opened at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, provided a detailed portrayal of Johnson’s first months in office—following the assassination of Pres. John F. Kennedy—and his unwavering fight to push Kennedy’s Civil Rights Act through the U.S. Congress. In 2014 the play moved to Broadway with Bryan Cranston starring as Johnson. All the Way captured the 2014 Tony Award for best play as well as the Drama Desk Award, the Drama League Award, the Outer Critics Circle Award, and the Drama Critics’ Circle Award. The Seattle Repertory Theater commissioned a sequel, The Great Society, which portrayed Johnson in the later years (1965–68) of his presidency, in the midst of the Vietnam War and his own domestic War on Poverty. It premiered at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in 2014 and made its Broadway debut five years later.
Schenkkan also wrote for the big screen and television. His TV credits included the movie Crazy Horse (1996) and the HBO miniseries Pacific (2010), the latter of which earned him two Emmy Award nominations. Schenkkan later adapted All the Way for television in 2016 with Cranston reprising the role of Johnson. Schenkkan’s film work included The Quiet American (2002) and Hacksaw Ridge (2016).