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TIM
JEROME — NMTN President/Founder
Mr. Jerome has had a long career performing on and off Broadway
and on the big screen. He currently portrays Professor Porter
(Jane's father) in Disney's Tarzan. Just prior to that
he played one of the two theatre managers in Broadway's longest
running musical, Phantom of the Opera. As an actor, Tim
has concentrated on developing characters in new musicals. He
appeared in the original Broadway casts of Grand Hotel,
The Moony Shapiro Songbook, Arthur Miller's Creation
of the World and Other Business, and The Rothschilds
and was nominated for the Drama Desk and Tony Awards for his performance
in Me and My Girl. He was featured in Baz Luhrmann's
production of La Boheme in the roles of Alcindoro and
Benoit. Also on Broadway, Tim performed leading roles in Beauty
and the Beast, Cats, The Magic Show, Lost
in Yonkers, and Man of La Mancha. He also participated
in the pre-Broadway development of Ragtime, The Red
Shoes, The Baker's Wife, Assassins, and
a host of readings, workshops and showcase presentations of well-known
and unknown works of contemporary theatre. Regionally, he has
appeared at the North Shore Music Theatre (Beverly, MA), Goodspeed
Musicals (Chester, CT), the George Street Playhouse (New Brunswick,
NJ), Phoenix Theatre (Purchase, NY), The McCarter Theatre (Princeton,
NJ) and was a member of the Arena Stage (Washington, D.C.) acting
company originating roles in Tom Lehrer's Tomfoolery,
Tintypes, A 1940s Radio Hour and David Hare's
Plenty. Tim's film credits include: Streets of New
York, Thirteen Days, (Tim Robbins') Cradle will
Rock, (Woody Allen's) Husbands and Wives, Everyone
Says I Love You, Celebrity and Deconstructing
Harry, A Price Above Rubies, Compromising Positions,
(Costa Gavras') Betrayed, Billy Bathgate and
Spiderman 2. On television, Tim has had featured roles
in Law and Order, Third Watch and others. He
also has had a long career in radio and audio as an actor, director
and producer: Tim starred in over a dozen episodes of Joe Frank's
award-winning radio satire series. He produced the long-running
WBAI-Pacifica drama series The Radio, and has appeared
on SciFi.com's Seeing Ear Theatre presentations and in
several audio dramas for WNYC's The Next Big Thing. He
has won Earphone and Audie Awards for his books on tape. Tim is
the Founding President of National Music Theater Network, Inc.
In 1983, he designed its core programs. NMTN evaluates and promotes
new musicals and is responsible for launching several successful
programs featuring new works, notably The Songbook Series (monthly
at the Donnell Library for 13 years); The New York Musical Theatre
Festival (first presented in 2004 and winner of the 2004 Jujamcyn
Award); and BroadwayUSA! (a program of regional festivals of new
musicals). Tim has served on the boards of directors of two performing
unions: Screen Actors Guild (9 years) and The American Guild of
Musical Artists (as 1st Vice President). He lives in New York,
and attended Cornell University, Ithaca College (BFA) and Manhattan
School of Music (Master of Music). His hobbies are sailing and
woodworking and he has a daughter attending SUNY New Paltz. |
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ISAAC
ROBERT HURWITZ- Executive Director/Producer of NYMF,
with a varied background as a producer, director, dramaturge,
and musician, Isaac Robert Hurwitz has developed new work in
venues throughout the United States. Before Founding the New
York Musical Theatre Festival with Kris Stewart in 2004, Isaac
headed the Ensemble Studio’s musical theatre development program.
The Rusty Magee Music Project, which he helped establish. He
returned to EST in 2005 to produce the world premier of Luminescence
Dating, a new play by Carey Perloff. For three seasons, Isaac
served as Music Associate for City Center’s acclaimed Encores!
Series, assisting music director Rob Fisher for fifteen concert
productions and overseeing restoration of A Connecticut Yankee,
Bloomer Girl, Golden Boy and House of Flowers, among others.
He was assistant director for the Encores! Production of Pardon
My English in 2004 and currently serves as a member of the series’
advisory committee. Isaac received the Westin Award in Musical
Theatre from Brown University, his alma mater, where he headed
to producing organizations and developed several new musicals
including Stephen Karam’s award-winning Emma. As a director,
Isaac has worked with Trinity Reparatory Theatre’s New Play
Festival, the Kennedy Center, Ensemble Studio Theatre, Chashama,
HERE, Raw Impressions, Dixon Place, Makor, and the Ensemble
Studio Theater, where he was Director in Residence in 2003-2004.
Isaac has also directed and produced concerts throughout the
Northeast, including The Wit and Wisdom of Ira Gershwin, a tribute
created by Dave Ives, Rob Fisher and Sheldon Harnick, at the
92nd Street Y’s lyrics and Lyricists series, T. For his production
of Assassins, Isaac was one of ten student directors nationwide
recognized by the Kennedy Center-American College Theater Festival
in 2000. He is an alumnus of the Lincoln Center Directors Lab
and the Commercial Theatre Institute, and a member of the Society
of Stage Directors and Choreographers. |
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PATRICIA
BIRCH — BroadwayUSA! Guest Artistic Director - 1999 &
2005
In a career that crosses all media, Patricia Birch has earned
two Emmy Awards, four Tony nominations, as well as Drama Desk,
Outer Critics Circle, Billboard, MTV, awards as well as a Directors
Guild nomination for her choreography and direction. Ms. Birch
did the choreography for Parade, directed by Harold Prince,
written by Alfred Uhry and Jason Brown premiering at Lincoln Center
and was nominated for several Tony Awards. She has created the
musical staging for more than a dozen original Broadway and Off
Broadway shows including: You're a Good Man Charlie Brown,,
The Me Nobody Knows, Grease, A Little Night
Music, Candide, Over Here, Diamond
Studs, The Happy End, Pacific Overtures,
They're Playing Our Song, Gilda Radner - Live from
New York, Zoot Suit, Rosa...direction as
well for Celebrating Music at BAM, the televised all
star concert production of On the Town, with Michael
Tilson Thomas, the Melissa Manchester musical, I Sent a Letter
to My Love, Sendak and King's Really Rosie, Raggedy
Anne, Elvis, The Snow Queen (a new musical
by Adrian Mitchell and Richard Peaslee, which premiered regionally,
and played in London, winter 1998), and Band in Berlin,
a multi-media theatre docu-musical about the Comedian Harmonists,
March 1998 at The American Music Theatre Festival, now readying
for NYC. Opera projects include Salome, The Mikado,
Candide, Street Scene for New York City Opera,
and direction of The Mass and The Balcony for
The Opera Company of Boston, as well as the Lukas Foss Jumping
Frog of Calaveras County. Ms. Birch's film credits include
choreography for all musical sequences for Grease, direction
as well for Grease 2. Musical sequences for Big,
Working Girl, Sleeping with the Enemy, Stella,
Awakenigs, Bill Bathgate, Roseland,
The Wild Party, Cowboy Way, and First Wives
Club. For television: Direction for Natalie Cole - Unforgettable
with Love, Celebrating Gershwin (Emmy Awards for
both), Dance in America, 20th Anniversaty of Great
Performances, a mini-musical by Cy Coleman with M. Broderick,
etc. and Natalie Cole's Untraditional Traditional Christmas
featuring Elmo (Directors Guild nomination). The Electric
Company (staff). Ms. Birch spent six years staging numbers
for Gilda Radner, Steve Martin and others on Saturday Night
Live; as well as music videos for Cyndi Lauper, Rolling Stones,
Oak Ridge Boys, Carly Simon, and the NBC Olympics. Ms. Birch was
a leading soloist with the Martha Graham Co. as well as one of
its directors, and played "Anybody's" in Broadway's West Side
Story, and danced as well in revivals for Agnes De Mille.
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WALTER
BOBBIE — BroadwayUSA! Guest Artistic Director - 2000
Mr. Bobbie directed the new Broadway musical Footloose
with a Tony-nominated score by Tom Snow and Dean Pitchford. With
original screenwriter Dean Pitchford he also co-authored the book,
which received a Tony nomination as well. He received Broadway's
Tony, Drama Desk and Outer Critics' Circle awards as Best Director
for Chicago. Its success spawned two American tours,
as well as productions in London, Australia, Vienna, Sweden and
Holland. Mr. Bobbie was the artistic director of City Center's
acclaimed Encore's! Great American Musicals In Concert. After
directing its premiere of Fiorello, he produced Call
Me Madam, Out of this World, DuBarry was a Lady
and One Touch of Venus with stars Tyne Daly, Peter Gallagher,
Andrea Martin, Patti LuPone, Robert Morse and Faith Prince. Encores!
received a 1996 New York Drama Critics Award for "Special Achievement."
His production of Chicago moved to Broadway with its
original Encores! stars Ann Reinking, Bebe Neuwirth, James Naughton
and Joel Grey. Mr. Bobbie also directed For Whom the Southern
Belle Tolls at Ensemble Studio Theater, Durang Durang
at Manhattan Theater Club, Nude Nude Totally Nude at
the New York Shakespeare Festival, and he conceived and directed
Rodgers and Hammerstein's A Grand Night for Singing at
Rainbow & Stars and the Roundabout Theater, where it received
two Tony nominations including Best Musical. Mr. Bobbie is also
an actor whose appearances on Broadway and Off-Broadway include
Guys and Dolls (Drama Desk nomination), Assassins,Getting
Married, Anything Goes, Cafe Crown, Driving
Miss Daisy, Up from Paradise, I Love My Wife,
A History of the American Film, the original Grease,
Dames at Sea, and the star-studded GMHC benefit Anyone
Can Whistle at Carnegie Hall. Recent films appearances include
The First Wives Club, Stephen King's Thinner
and HBO's Edie and Pen, as well as television appearances
on Hill St. Blues, LA Law, The Equalizer,
Law & Order, NYPD Blue, New York News
and daytime's Loving, where he portrayed both brothers
Denny and Wally Anderson. Mr. Bobbie is also a frequent guest
on National Public Radio with Garrison Keillor's "A Prairie Home
Companion." Mr. Bobbie is a graduate of the University of Scranton
with a Master's degree in Theater from The Catholic University
of America. |
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MARTIN
CHARNIN — BroadwayUSA! Guest Artistic Director - 2001
Mr. Charnin originated the role of Big Deal in the Broadway production
of West Side Story in 1957. His award winning Broadway
production of Annie (the 11th longest running musical
in history) celebrated its twentienth anniversary in 1997 with
a return to Broadway. Mr. Charnin has been the director, lyricist,
composer, librettist, producer or a combination of the aforementioned
for over 75 other theatrical productions, including Annie
Warbucks, the rock opera version of Joan of Arc, Mata
Hari, Loose Lips, Galileo, Sid Caesar & Company, Carnal Knowledge,
In Persons with Eli Walach and Anne Jackson, The Flowering
Peach, Winchell, Cafe Crown, Laughing Matters, The First, I Remember
Mama, Ballad for a Firing Squad, La Strada, Upstairs at O'Neal's,
Two by Two (with Richard Rodgers), and The National Lampoon
Show. He has received four Tony nominations, two Tony Awards,
six Grammy Awards, three Emmy Awards, three Gold and two Platinum
Records and most recently another Grammy Award for Jay-Z's rap
album Hard Knock Life which went triple platinum in 1999.
He just returned from Australia where his brand new production
of Annie opened in Sydney to smash reviews. The millennium
will bring a new musical based on the Robert E. Sherwood classic,
Waterloo Bridge, which he is writing and directing,
Rainbow Corner (a musical he is collaborating on with Nathan
Silver, about British War Brides in 1944), and the first London
production of Two by Two. He has two children, Randy
and Sasha, and a black labrador Cole. His wife, Jade Hobson-Charnin,
is the fashion director of New York magazine. |
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GRACIELA
DANIELE — BroadwayUSA! Guest Artistic Director - Inaugural
Season - 1998
Ms. Daniele has choreographed/directed on Broadway, at Lincoln
Center, Public Theater and regional theatres, and earned nine
Tony nominations and six Drama Desk nominations. Ragtime,
for which she created the musical staging, opened to rave reviews
and earned 13 Tony Award nominations including one for Ms. Daniele
for Best Choreography. Other Broadway credits include: The
Goodbye Girl, Chronicle of a Death Foretold, Once
On This Island and Zorba with Anthony Quinn, The
Rink which starred Liza Minnelli and Chita Rivera, and The
Mystery of Edwin Drood. She choreographed the New York Shakespeare
Festival production of The Pirates of Penzance in New
York, Los Angeles and London, the motion picture of Pirates
and Woody Allen's last three films including Mighty Aprhodite
for which she won the 1996 Fosse Award. On leave from her position
as resident director of the Lincoln Center Theater, Gracie directed
and choreographed the new adaptation of Annie Get Your Gun,
starring Bernadette Peters, for Broadway. She also directed and
choreographed the Michael John LaChiusa musical Marie Chirstine
at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre at Lincoln Center. |
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KATHLEEN
MARSHALL — BroadwayUSA! Guest Artistic Director - 2005
Kathleen Marshall directed and choreographed the Broadway revival
of Wonderful Town (Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle
and Astaire Awards for choreography; Tony, Drama Desk and Outer
Critics Circle nominations for direction) and choreographed the
Broadway productions of Little Shop of Horrors, Follies
(Outer Critics Circle nomination), Seussical, Kiss
Me Kate (Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle and Astaire
nominations), Ring Around the Moon (Lincoln Center Theater),
1776 (Roundabout) and Swinging On a Star (Drama Desk
nomination). Ms. Marshall is Director in Residence for City Center
Encores!, where she was the Artistic Director for four seasons.
For Encores!, she directed and choreographed House of Flowers,
Carnival, Hair, Wonderful Town and
Babes in Arms. In the West End, she choreographed Kiss
Me Kate (Olivier nomination). For Second Stage Theatre, she
directed and choreographed Saturday Night, the New York
premiere of Stephen Sondheim's first musical. For ABC/Disney,
she choreographed Meredith Willson's The Music Man starring
Matthew Broderick (Emmy nomination). Other credits include Violet(Playwright's
Horizons), As Thousands Cheer (Drama Dept.) and Sunset
Boulevard (National Tour). She is on the Executive Board
of the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers. |
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JOHN
RANDO — BroadwayUSA! Guest Artistic Director - 2004
Broadway: Urinetown, Neil Simon's The Dinner Party,
also the Mark Taper Forum and the Kennedy Center. New York credits
include Do Re Mi and Strike Up The Band at City
Center Encores!; Mere Mortals at the John Houseman, Ancient
History, English Made Simple and An Empty Plate
in the Caf&ecaute; Du Grand Boeuf at Primary Stages.
The Venetian Twins, When Ladies Battle and Twelfth
Night at the Pearl Theatre Company, Things You Shouldn't
Say Past Midnight at the Promenade. His West Coast credits
include All In The Timing, The Comedy of Errors,
Sylvia and A Moon for the Misbegotten at the
Old Globe. For the Berkshire Theatre Festival he directed 31
Rue Du L'Amour, Mad Forest, An Empty Plate in
the Café Du Grand Boeuf, the world premiere of Visiting
Mr. Green and the world premiere of Lives of the Saints
by David Ives. He also directed the world premiere of A.R. Gurney's
The Guest Lecturer at George Street Playhouse. His other
regional credits include productions at Cleveland Playhouse, Studio
Arena in Buffalo, The Philadelphia Theatre Company, Playmakers
Rep in North Carolina, Syracuse Stage and the Portland Stage Company.
He was a Drama League directing fellow and holds an M.F.A. from
UCLA. |
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