Wulp's first play, The Saintliness of Margery Kempe, won a Rockefeller Grant and was produced at the Poets' Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts on February 19, 1957.[4] Wulp also won an Obie Award for his direction of the 1961 stage play Red Eye of Love by playwright Arnold Weinstein. A musical adaptation of the play, with lyrics and libretto by Wulp and Weinstein, and music by Sam Davis, first premiered on Wulp's hometown island of North Haven, Maine[5] before opening at the O'Neill Center in 2007.[6] On September 4, 2014 Red Eye of Love the Musical opened Off-Broadway at the Amas Musical Theater in New York City.[7]
Born and raised in New Rochelle, New York,[9] Wulp studied scenic design at the Yale School of Drama.[3] In the 1970s, he ran the Nantucket Stage Company on Nantucket.[10]
In 1992, Wulp left New York and moved to the island of Vinalhaven, Maine. While there he taught at a community school on the adjacent island of North Haven; for which he later became a theater director. In 1999 he created the musical Islands with singer-songwriter Cidny Bullens. It later went on to play at the New Victory Theater in New York City in 2001.[3]
Dello Stritto, Frank (2000). Vampire Over London: Bela Lugosi in Britain. Cult Movies Pr. ISBN0970426909.
Heidenry, John (1995). Theirs Was The Kingdom: Lila and DeWitt Wallace & the Story of the Reader's Digest. W. W. Norton and Company, Inc. ISBN0393312275.