2004–2009: Early works J. T. Rogers' play
Madagascar is set in a hotel room overlooking the Spanish Steps in Rome. It is about a mysterious disappearance that haunts the life of the play's three characters. It was commissioned by and had its world premiere at the Salt Lake Acting Company in November 2004. The play received the
American Theatre Critics Association's 2004
M. Elizabeth Osborn Award and the 2005 Pinter Review Prize for Drama, which included its first publication by the
University of Tampa Press and a related public dramatic reading. It was also a finalist for the ATCA's Steinberg New Play Award and performed at the Summer Play Festival in
New York City in July 2005. The play had its Australian premiere at the Melbourne Theatre Company in February 2010, directed by Sam Strong. The play had its European debut at London's
Theatre 503 in May 2010, directed by Tom Littler and featuring Sorcha Cusack, Barry Stanton and Miranda Foster. His play
The Overwhelming, in which an American family who arrive in Kigali,
Rwanda, in early 1994, must confront life-and-death realities of the
Rwandan genocide, had its world premiere at the Cottesloe Theatre,
Royal National Theatre, London, in association with
Out of Joint, in May 2006. It then toured throughout the
UK and was performed on BBC radio. Its American premiere was at the Roundabout Theatre in September 2007. He received the Otis Guernsey New Voices Playwriting Award at the 2007
William Inge Theatre Festival in Independence, Kansas.
The Overwhelming has since been done throughout the world, and it was selected as a Top 10 Play of the Year by
Time Magazine,
Time Out New York and the
Chicago TribuneIt was also nominated for Best Play of the Year by London's South Bank Show and Boston's Elliot Norton Awards. In 2009, Rogers was the sole American playwright along with 11 British authors to create
The Great Game: Afghanistan for the Tricycle Theatre, London. The cycle of plays was a sensation, garnering an Olivier nomination for all involved. His
White People, which had its world première at the
Philadelphia Theatre Company and then received the L.A. Drama Critics Circle and
John Barrymore Award nominations for "Best Play of the Year". The revised play was produced by Starry Night Entertainment
Off-Broadway in 2009, and has been seen at the English Theatre of Berlin. The play was seen in repertory with
Madagascar at the Road Theatre in
Los Angeles in 2010. His
Seeing the Elephant was nominated for the
Joseph Kesselring Prize for "Best New American Play", and his play
Murmuring in a Dead Tongue was produced by Epic Rep, in New York City, where he is a company member, in its 2003–2004 season. In 2008, it was mounted as part of the inaugural DC Theater Alliance.
2010–2019: Bloods and Gifts and Oslo Rogers wrote the full-length play
Blood and Gifts, which debuted at the
Lyttelton Theatre,
Royal National Theatre, London, in September 2010, starring
Lloyd Owen with direction by Howard Davies. The play premiered in the US
Off-Broadway in October 2011 at the
Lincoln Center Newhouse Theater, directed by Bartlett Sher.
Charles Isherwood, in his review in
The New York Times, wrote that the play was "superb", with a "first rate production...the characters...really seem to be living in this turbulent history..." The reviewer for
The Guardian, Michael Billington, criticised the writer's "advantage of hindsight which lends much of the action a self-conscious irony" but otherwise praised him for a "complex, demanding play." The play was nominated for the 2012
Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Play and Outstanding Lead Actor,
Jefferson Mays and the 2012 Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding New Off-Broadway Play and Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play, Jefferson Mays. Rogers' 2016
political drama Oslo became his most successful work to date, including a highly acclaimed
Broadway run.
Oslo premiered Off-Broadway at the
Lincoln Center Newhouse Theatre to nearly universal acclaim.
Oslo transferred to the
Lincoln Center Beaumont Theatre, a Broadway house, where it opened on April 13, 2017. Of the larger Broadway production, Ben Brantley of the
New York Times wrote that "J. T. Rogers's
Oslo, an against-the-odds story of international peacemaking, is undeniably a big play, as expansive and ambitious as any in recent Broadway history. So it is particularly gratifying to announce that it has been allowed to stretch to its full height in the thrilling production that opened on Thursday night, directed with a master's hand by
Bartlett Sher." The Broadway production won seven awards for Best New Play, including the 2017
Tony Award for
Best Play. After Broadway,
Oslo transferred to London for a September 2017 run at the
Royal National Theatre, followed by a three-month transfer to the
Harold Pinter Theatre in London's West End. [50] The London production was nominated for the 2017 Best Play by the Evening Standard Theater Awards and the 2018 Best New Play by the Laurence Olivier Awards. In 2018, Oslo opened in Tel Aviv, Israel, in South Korea by the
National Theater Company of Korea, and later in Norway and Germany. The
New National Theater in Japan ran the production in 2021. Rogers wrote the screenplay for a
2021 filmed version of his Tony Award-winning play
Oslo. The film starred
Ruth Wilson and
Andrew Scott and was directed by Tony-winner
Bartlett Sher, who helmed the Broadway play.
Steven Spielberg and
Marc Platt served as executive producers alongside Rogers, Sher, and Cambra Overend.
2020–present Rogers wrote the television drama
Tokyo Vice, based on the non-fiction book by
Jake Adelstein. The eight-part series was produced for
HBO Max and stars
Ansel Elgort, playing Adelstein, an American journalist who embeds himself into the Tokyo Vice police squad to reveal corruption. The first episode was directed by
Michael Mann.
Rachel Keller, and
Ella Rumpf. It chronicles Jake's daily descent into the underbelly of Tokyo, where nothing and no one is what or who they seem. The eight-episode first season aired in 2022. Tokyo Vice was renewed for a second season, scheduled to return to
Max in 2024. Rogers is currently writing a TV series for
Netflix. In 2024 he reunited with director
Bartlett Sher for his latest play
Corruption about the 2011
News International phone hacking scandal based on the 2021 novel
Dial M for Murdoch. The play started previous in February 2024 at the
Mitzi E. Newhouse Theatre at
Lincoln Center. The production stars
Toby Stephens,
Dylan Baker and
Saffron Burrows. == Style and recognition ==