About the “Mr. Abbott” Award
The “Mr. Abbott” Award, bestowed through SDCF by a committee of Directors and Choreographers to one of their peers, is named in honor of renowned director George Abbott and is presented to a director or choreographer in recognition of lifetime achievement.
To learn more about Mr. Abbott, please check out this video.
Eligibility
Directors and choreographers who have had impact over the course of career will be considered for this award for a body of work that has had influence on the field artistically. It is unlikely but not impossible for a non-SDC member to be selected.
Past Recipients
| 2025 | Christopher Ashley |
| 2020 | Joe Mantello |
| 2019 | The 60th Anniversary of SDC, Agnes de Mille and Victoria Traube |
| 2018 | Julie Taymor |
| 2017 | Kenny Leon |
| 2015 | James Lapine |
| 2013 | Jerry Mitchell |
| 2011 | George C. Wolfe |
| 2009 | Donald Saddler |
| 2007 | Daniel Sullivan |
| 2005 | Kathleen & Rob Marshall |
| 2003 | Lynne Meadow |
| 2002 | Jack O’Brien |
| 2001 | Susan Stroman |
| 2000 | Celebrate Cy! (Cy Feuer’s 90th Birthday) |
| 1999 | Twenty-One for the 21st: Vinnette Carroll, Zelda Fichandler, Peter Gennaro, Gillian Lynne, Marshall W. Mason, Andrei Serban |
| 1998 | Graciela Daniele |
| 1997 | Garson Kanin |
| 1996 | Lloyd Richards |
| 1995 | Gordon Davidson |
| 1994 | Jerry Zaks |
| 1993 | Trevor Nunn |
| 1992 | Arvin Brown |
| 1991 | Tommy Tune |
| 1990 | Gene Saks |
| 1989 | Michael Bennet |
| 1988 | Agnes de Mille |
| 1987 | Mike Nichols |
| 1986 | Bob Fosse |
| 1985 | Harold Prince |
About George Abbott
One of the most important and admired men in the entire history of Broadway – indeed, some have said that he WAS the history of Broadway –, George Abbott (b. Forestville, NY, 25 June 1887; d. Miami Beach, FL, 31 January 1995) was a theater director and producer, playwright, screenwriter, and film director and producer whose career spanned more than nine decades. He had a hand, one way or another, in the most historically and artistically significant New York productions of the twentieth century: Broadway (1926), Three Men on a Horse (1935), Brother Rat (1936), On Your Toes (1936), Room Service (1937), The Boys from Syracuse (1938), Too Many Girls (1939), Pal Joey (1940), On the Town (1944), High Button Shoes (1947), Where’s Charley? (1948), Call Me Madam (1950), Wonderful Town (1953), The Pajama Game (1954), Damn Yankees (1955), Once Upon a Mattress (1959), Fiorello! (1959), A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1961), Flora the Red Menace (1965), and 103 other shows, giving a boost to the early careers of (among others) Sylvia Field, Helen Hayes, Shirley Booth, Garson Kanin, Rodgers and Hart, Ray Bolger, Eddie Albert, Jose Ferrer, Eddie Bracken, Gene Kelly, Leonard Bernstein, Betty Comden and Adolph Green, Nancy Walker, Jerome Robbins, Allyn Ann McLerie, Harold Prince, Carol Haney, Bob Fosse, Carol Burnett, Jack Gilford, and Liza Minnelli. Abbott had 40 films to his credit as screenwriter, director, or producer, among them All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), The Fall Guy (1930), and the film adaptations of his Broadway hits; his featured screen actors included Jean Arthur, Lew Ayres, and Gene Tierney.
