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 Alumni

The School of Drama's excellence in training is best exemplified by the accomplishments of its alumni. The vast majority of the School's former students have appeared in numerous Broadway, off-Broadway and regional theatre productions, in films, and in television series and shows.

Michael Abbott, Jr.
Dana Powers Acheson
Mando Alvarado
Matthew Ashford
Blythe Auffarth
Lynn Baber
Diedrich Bader
Gary Beach
Corey Behnke
Erica Bradshaw
Matthew Coyle
Cassandra Creech
T. Scott Cunningham
Wes Day
Aubrey Deeker
Catherine Dent
Quincy Dunn-Baker
Ruth A. Eglsaer
Jennifer Ehle
Richard “Dikki” Ellis
Bill English
Jennifer Ferrin
K. Todd Freeman
Tre Garrett

Avery Glymph
Igor Goldin
Rhoda Griffis
Tim Guinee
Jonathan Hadley
Lucas Hall
Peter Hedges
Stephen Henderson
Tom Hulce
Marc Damon Johnson
Rebecca Naomi Jones
Preston Lane
John Langs
Michael Lluberes
Angus MacLachlan
Corey Madden
Terrence Mann
Joe Mantello
Devania McFadden
Marilyn McIntyre
Joshua Park
Mary-Louise Parker
Chris Parnell

Christy Pusz
Missi Pyle
Joyce Reehling
Ashley Robinson
J.T. Rogers
Reynaldo Rosales
Ted Schneider
Klea Scott
Ben Sheaffer
Daniel Sherman
Lorca Simons
Jeremy Skidmore
Jada Pinkett Smith
Scott Sowers
Rick Stear
Lisa Tharps
Jeffries Thaiss
Lauren Ward
Kevin Wheatley
Jeremy Webb
Celia Weston

 

Michael Abbott, Jr.

Michael Abbott, Jr.
Michael has appeared Off Broadway in productions of; "Othello", "Taming of the Shrew", and "Pudd'nhead Wilson"(Lucille Lortel). His regional theatre credits include; "Bat Boy:The Musical"(Portland Center Stage), "Dearly Departed"(Tennessee Repertory Theatre), and the World Premiere production of "BROTHER WOLF"(Traid Stage), among others. He has appeared in numerous workshop productions (including "The Duke & The Duchess" starring two-time Academy Award Nominee, Sylvia Miles), is a member of John Houseman's acclaimed 'Acting Company', and has appeared nationally as Elvis Presley (including The Kennedy Center and the HBO & BRAVO Networks). Michael will appear as Cleaman Hayes in the independent feature film, "SHOTGUN STORIES", written and directed by Jeff Nichols and produced by David Gordon Green. The film stars Michael Shannon and will premiere in early 2007.

Dana Powers Acheson

Dana Powers Acheson
Dana Powers Acheson recently played Margot Frank in the Paper Mill Playhouse's production of "The Diary of Anne Frank." She reprised the role of Nora Morton in "Brighton Beach Memoirs" at The Fulton Opera House, which she played previously at The Geva Theatre Center. She was also part of "An Enemy of the People" directed by Gerald Freedman and starring Mandy Patinkin at The Williamstown Theater Festival. Other of her credits include an off-Broadway run of "New Boy"; an American premiere at The Samuel Beckett Theater; and Sarah in "Substance of Fire" at The Lincoln Center Institute, co-starring NCSA alumnus Todd Loyd and directed by alumnus Charles Sargent. She played Juliet in the Seattle Shakespeare Company production of "Romeo and Juliet" which featured NCSA alumna Erica Bradshaw as the nurse and NCSA alumnus Ian Merrigan as Benvolio. The production was directed by NCSA alumnus John Langs. Acheson also has been part of several play readings (including one with NCSA alumnus Danny Hoch at The Public), and has worked with playwrights such as David Rimmer.

Mando Alvarado

Mando Alvarado
Writer and actor from Pharr, Texas. His one man show, “We’re ‘Mericans,” an adaptation of Sandra Cisneros’ book “Woman Hollering Creek,” has been performed at the Kennedy Center, District of Columbia Arts Center, and Theater Alliance. His 10-minute play, “The Lion and the Mouse: a Radio Show,” is being performed by LEAP throughout schools in Manhattan, the Bronx, and Brooklyn as part of its Aesop Fables for Youth series. His play “Throat” was selected to be developed at The Field ArtWard Bound Residency Program; also received a staged workshop production by The Roundhouse Theatre at the Kennedy Center’s Page to Stage Festival in Washington, D.C.. A member of the KITCHEN at the Roundhouse Theatre. Recently performed his new one-man show “Los Mojados” at the Nuyorican Poet’s Café. Currently in development on a screenplay, “7 Tales of Desperation,” which is scheduled for production in fall 2007. Actor: “Law and Order: Criminal Intent,” “Law and Order: SVU,” AMW, the short film NOBLE CHROME PIRATES and the feature film THE CHOKING MAN. On stage: "Our Lady of 121st" at Woolly Mammoth, "Jesus Hopped the A Train" at the RoundHouse Theater, and "Painted Alice" at Theater Alliance, as well as numerous regional theaters in Texas, North Carolina, and Washington, D.C.

Matthew Ashford

Matthew Ashford
Member of L.A.'s Interact Theatre Company, where he received the Artistic Director Achievement Award for Lead Actor for portrayal of Wolf/Prince in the musical "Into the Woods." Other work at Interact includes lead roles in "Counsellor-at-Law," "110 in the Shade," "Arsenic and Old Lace" and "The Nerd." Also performed in Ensemble Studio Theatre West's "Cherry Orchard" and "Member of the Wedding" with Esther Rolle. Off-Broadway, appeared in the musical "Surrender," "Hazard County Wonder" and "Nice People." Contract roles on daytime dramas "General Hospital," "Days of Our Lives" (as Jack Deveraux), "Search for Tomorrow" and "One Life to Live." Primetime television work includes guest star roles in "Friends," "Dharma & Greg," "Providence," "Tom Clancy's Net Force," "Charmed," "Pacific Blue," "Burke's Law," and "Quantum Leap." Film roles include BONFIRE OF THE VANITIES, SPECIES and BILLY'S HOLLYWOOD SCREEN KISS, which was viewed at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival. Appeared in Stephen Sondheim's and Hugh Wheeler's "A Little Night Music."

Blythe Auffarth

Blythe Auffarth
Off-Broadway: A Bad Friend (Jerry Zaks, Lincoln Center Theatre), Hollywood Arms (Harold Prince, Roundabout), Summer (Leonard Foglia, The York Theatre Co.) and Cottage Terpsechorea (Playwright’s Horizons). Regional: Speed the Plow (Randall Arney, Geffen Playhouse), Jane Eyre (Robert Johanson, Paper Mill Playhouse), Yes, Please and Thank You (Daniel Fish, O’Neill Playwright’s Conference), The Diary of Anne Frank, The Miracle Worker and Annie. Blythe recently finished filming the lead in Jack Ketchum’s The Girl Next Door and has now begun filming the ensemble drama American Primitive. She also appeared in the film Keeping the Faith, directed by Edward Norton, as Young Anna. She has guest starred alongside Amy Irving on Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, Brooke Shields on Law and Order: Criminal Intent andAdam Ferrara on The King of Queens. Other guest stars include Veronica Mars, Always There, Law and Order, Sex and the City, and The Suite Life. Blythe was the host for Nickelodeon’s the Big Help, the narrator at Carnegie Hall for Benjamin Britten’s “The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra”, and has performed in numerous commercials and voiceovers. Recently she attended the North Carolina School of the Arts. Proud member of AEA, SAG and AFTRA.

Lynn Baber

Lynn Baber
Lynn has worked professionally as Director, Costume Designer, Teacher, Administrator, Sketch Writer, Improv Comedienne, Producer, and Actress in Chicago. She is the Artistic Administrator at Northlight Theatre in the Chicago area where her duties include Casting, Internships, and assisting the Artistic Director. For the past eight years she has served as the Theatre Arts Director of the National High School Institute (the Cherub program) at Northwestern University; and as Director of the Musical Theatre extension program. In her 25 years on the faculty of the Cherub program, she has taught Acting, Voice & Movement, Improvisation, Tap, Children’s Theatre, Text Analysis and Performance Theory; and has directed ten productions (including Execution of Justice, The Investigation, Baby with the Bathwater, Marat/Sade, Too Much Light…, and The Beggar’s Opera). She was the Co-Founder/Artistic Director of the Econo-Art Theatre Company (1983-90) , along with NCSA alum Marc Silvia (Drama, ’82). At Econo-Art she was seen in an array of world-premieres and obscure plays, including The Underpants, Durang’s Titanic, The Radio Play, Beautiful Dreamer and the highly acclaimed The Age of Pie, by Peter Hedges (Drama, ‘85).  She played Starveling in the Chicago Shakespeare Theatre’s wildly successful Midsummer Night’s Dream directed by Joe Dowling. Elsewhere around Chicago, Lynn has performed at the Goodman Theatre, Marriott Theatre in Lincolnshire, Pegasus, National Jewish Theatre, Drury Lane Oakbrook, Body Politic, Practical (years of improvisational and sketch comedy), Cloud 42, and Stormfield. She is cited on page 257 of Richard Christiansen’s book A Theater of Our Own: A History and a Memoir of 1,001 Nights in Chicago. She can also be seen in a variety of regional television commercials—most recently in Scrubbing Bubbles Automatic Shower Cleaner.

Diedrich Bader

Diedrich Bader
Best known for role as Oswald on the hit television series, "The Drew Carey Show." Film credits include MISS CONGENIALITY 2: ARMED AND FABULOUS, NAPOLEON DYNAMITE, EUROTRIP, Gamma in KIM POSSIBLE, Officer Cheets in THE COUNTRY BEARS, Saber Tooth Tiger in ICE AGE, My-ik in EVIL ALIEN CONQUERORS, dual role as Jethro and Jethrine in THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES, DINOTOPIA, and THE ASSASSINATION FILE. Television credits include guest appearances on "Still Standing," "Grim and Evil," "Cheers," "The Fresh Prince of Bel Air," "Quantum Leap," "Star Trek: The Next Generation" and the voice of Adonis in Disney's animated TV series "Hercules." He recently starred in National Lampoon's CATTLE CALL and is currently filming COOK-OFF!

Gary Beach

Gary Beach
Thenardier in the Broadway revival of “Les Miserables.” Received the 2001 Tony, Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle awards for his role as Roger DeBris in Broadway's "The Producers." Other Broadway appearances include "Beauty and the Beast" (Tony and Ovation award nominations), "La Cage Aux Folles," "Sweet Adeline (Encores!)," "Doonesbury," "The Moony Shapiro Songbook," "Annie," "Something's Afoot," and "1776." National tours include "Les Miserables," "Legends!" "Lend Me a Tenor," "Closer Than Ever," and "Of Thee I Sing" (Helen Hayes nomination). On TV, appeared on "Will and Grace," "Queer as Folk," "Kate and Allie," "Cheers," "Sisters," "Murder, She Wrote," "Letterman," "Jamie Foxx," "The Wayans Brothers," "Dolly Parton," "Saved By the Bell," and "Arliss." Film credits include THE PRODUCERS, DEFENDING YOUR LIFE, SPACE WORKS, and MAN OF THE CENTURY. Recordings include "Beauty and the Beast," "Doonesbury," "Symphonic Les Miserables," and "Sondheim at the Movies." Gary Beach is King Arthur in the national tour of “Spamalot.”

Corey Behnke

Corey Behnke
Has appeared off-Broadway as Joshua in "Corpus Christi" (world premiere) by Terrence McNally at Manhattan Theatre Club, directed by Joe Mantello; Antipholus of Syracuse in "Comedy of Errors" (American premiere) and Priest in "O Pioneers!" with The Acting Company; Jimmy De Felice in "War" (world premiere) at the Ensemble Theatre Company; and Sid in "Waiting For Lefty" for Incite Theatre. Regional theatre includes Tim in "Balm in Gilead" at The Magic Theatre; Biondello in "Taming of the Shrew" at The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis; Bartley in "The Cripple of Inishmaan" at The Pioneer Theatre; Verges in "Much Ado About Nothing" at The Long Wharf Theatre, directed by the late Derek Anson Jones; and Gustave in "Thieves Carnival" at Two River Theatre Company. He is a founding member of Incite Theatre Company. He also starred as Andrija in "Family Stories" by Biljana Srbljanovic at the Market Theater.

Erica Bradshaw

Erica Bradshaw
Associate director of the Apprentice & Intern Company at Actors Theatre of Louisville for three seasons, 2002-05. Played Phebe in the mainstage show, “As You Like It.” World premiere of Arthur Miller’s “Mr. Peter’s Connections” at Signature Theatre, off-Broadway. Played the nurse in the Seattle Shakespeare Company production of “Romeo and Juliet” which featured NCSA alumna Dana Powers Acheson as Juliet and NCSA alumnus Ian Merrigan as Benvolio, and was directed by NCSA alumnus John Langs. Member of the original cast of “The Exonerated,” written by Jessica Blank/Erik Jensen, at The Actor's Gang. Directed “Buses” by Denise Nicholas at University of Kentucky. Co-starred on CBS's “The District” season finale, titled “Payback.” Recently appeared in “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” with NCSA alumnus Paul David Story. Can be seen in “Syringa Tree” at Delaware Theatre Company.

Matthew Coyle

Matthew Coyle
Made his feature film debut in Twentieth Century Fox’s SOMEONE LIKE YOU, starring Ashley Judd, Greg Kinnear and fellow NCSA alumna Catherine Dent. Theatre credits include a world premiere translation of Moliere’s “The Misanthrope,” playing Acaste, at Portland Stage, and an extended run of “Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde” at Caldwell Theatre. Has been seen in more than a dozen national commercials, most notably as the fumbling skateboarder in the “Don’t Be That Guy” campaign for Fox Sports. Has recorded numerous voice-overs and has been featured in international print campaigns shot by acclaimed photographers Robert Whitman and Howard Berman. Currently collaborating on a new musical with fellow NCSA alumna Erica Bradshaw.

Cassandra Creech

Cassandra Creech
Starring role as Denise on CBS’s “As the World Turns.” Other television credits include recurring role on "Third Watch," "CSI: Miami," “Another World,” “Sins of the City,” “New York Undercover” and made for TV movie “Disappearing Acts.” Studied with acclaimed director Lloyd Richards.

T. Scott Cunningham

T. Scott Cunningham
Performed in Tony Award-winning "Love! Valour! Compassion!" and "Design for Living" on Broadway. Off-Broadway credits include "As Bees in Honey Drown" with the Drama Dept. Theater Company, where he is a founding member. Has appeared at theatres such as Manhattan Theatre Club, Playwrights Horizons and the Vineyard Theatre in plays such as Nicky Silver's "Fit to be Tied" and "Pterodactyls." Regional theatre credits include lead in "Hamlet" at the Utah Shakespearean Festival, "Angels in America" at the Alliance Theatre, "A Fair Country" with Seattle Repertory Theatre and "An Enemy of the People," directed by Gerald Freedman, at Williamstown Theatre Festival. Primetime television credits include "Frasier," "Cybill," "Law & Order," "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" and "Central Park West." Recurring role in daytime's "As the World Turns." Film appearances include OUR VERY OWN, Crispin in PEOPLE I KNOW and Ryan in SERENDIPITY.

Wes Day

Wes Day
Currently a member of the off Broadway “Blue Man Group.”

Aubrey Deeker

Aubrey Deeker
Dumaine in “Love’s Labour’s Lost” at The Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C., directed by Michael Kahn; also, in-residence at The Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon in August 2006. Spring of 2007: Raskolnikov in “Crime and Punishment” at Round House Theatre, followed by Bruce in “Blue/Orange” at Theater Alliance. Regional credits include the title role in “The Cripple of Inishmaan” at The Studio Theatre; “Lorenzaccio” at The Shakespeare Theatre; Armand in the American premiere of Neil Bartlett’s “Camille” and “Tabletop” at Round House Theatre; “The Clandestine Marriage” at The Folger Theatre; “Homebody/Kabul” co-produced by Woolly Mammoth/Theatre J; “One Flea Spare” at the Kennedy Center; “The Grapes of Wrath” at Ford’s Theatre; “Hamlet” at Rep-Stage; “Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me” at Everyman Theatre; the world premiere of Snu Wilson’s “Lovesong of the Electric Bear” with Potomac Theatre Project; “Mary’s Wedding,” “Slaughter City,” and “Tales from Ovid” at Theater Alliance; “The Other End of the Leash” with Olney Theatre Center/Playwright’s Forum, directed by Tony Award-winning actor Michael Rupert; and “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” at NCSA’s Summer Performing Arts Festival at Manteo. New York credits include “Bernice” and “The Pullman Car Hiawatha” at the 2001 Lincoln Center Director’s Lab. Numerous workshops and staged-readings, including world-premiere works by Naomi Izuka, Joyce-Carol Oats, Ken Ludwig, and David Grimm.

Catherine Dent

Catherine Dent
Dani on the FX series "The Shield." Notable television guest appearances include “The Lone Gunmen,” “The Sopranos,” “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,” “Chicago Hope,” “Frasier” and “One Life to Live.” Film credits include 21 GRAMS, Steven Spielberg’s TV miniseries TAKEN, THE REPLICANT, THE MAJESTIC, SOMEONE LIKE YOU, DANGEROUS PROPOSITION, JADED and NOBODY’S FOOL. Recent theatre credits include “The Country” at La Jolla Playhouse.

Quincy Dunn-Baker

Quincy Dunn-Baker
Appeared off-Broadway in "Mr. Marmalade" (New York premiere) opposite Michael C. Hall (“Six Feet Under”) and Pablo Schreiber (“The Wire”), directed by Michael Greif, at the Roundabout Theater Company. Regional credits include Stanley Kowalski in "A Streetcar Named Desire," directed by Preston Lane, at Triad Stage, and "The Faithful," directed by the New Group's Ian Morgan, at the Cherry Orchard Theater. TV credits include "As The World Turns."

Ruth A. Eglsaer

Ruth A. Eglsaer
Ruth A. Eglsaer Regional credits include Isabella in “Measure for Measure,” Julie in “After Ashley,” Belle in “A Christmas Carol,” and Celimene in “The Misanthrope,” all at the Denver Center Theatre Company. Other roles include Ann Whitefield in “Man and Superman” at Kansas City Rep, as well as Rosalind in “As You Like It,” Ann in “All My Sons,” and Debbie in “The Real Thing” at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival. In New York she understudied the part of Abby in “Fiction” at the Roundabout Theatre Company, and played Emilia /Mopsa in “The Winter’s Tale” with New York Classical Theatre.

Jennifer Ehle

Jennifer Ehle
Tony Award for Leading Actress in a Play in Tom Stoppard’s “The Real Thing.” Appeared in Noel Coward's "Design for Living" at The Roundabout Theatre. Film credits include POSSESSION, SUNSHINE, ADVENTURES OF YOUNG INDIANA JONES: ADVENTURES IN THE SECRET SERVICE and PARADISE ROAD. Won BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a TV Series for role as Elizabeth Bennet in BBC adaptation of “Pride and Prejudice.” In London theatre, role as Varya in “Summerfolk” at The National Theatre.


Richard ”Dikki” Ellis

Richard ”Dikki” Ellis
Richard ”Dikki” Ellis has been associated with the North Carolina School of the Arts since 1973, when he attended summer school as a scholarship student. He graduated in 1978 with a B.F.A. in drama. He went on to study at the Circus Dimitri School in Switzerland and has been clowning ever since. Ellis moved to New York in 1980 and began his professional career with the New York City Ballet and George Balanchine in "The Spellbound Child" for PBS. Soon after he went on tour with the "Slim Goodbody Show" as a health crusader. He has been associated with such groups as the "No Elephant Circus," "If Every Fool Inc." under the direction of John Towsen, and Macy*s Thanksgiving Day Parade as clown consultant for more than 10 years. Ellis was featured in the 1988 "East Meets West" and 1998 "Happy On" shows of The Big Apple Circus under the direction of Paul Binder and Michael Christensen in New York City. He was first called in as a horseback rider and soon found his way to "Dikki" the flying clown, as seen on CBS' "Great Circuses of the World." Ellis participated in a pilot program, called the "Big Apple Circus Clown Care Unit," in which clowns dress as doctors and visit children in hospitals on a regular basis. Life Magazine did a well-known story on the program in its August 1990 issue. Ellis has been performing as "Dr. Trikki" for 20 year, making bedside rounds in the New York City area. As co-creator of his own theatre company, "The Hanlon-Lees Action Theater," Ellis developed and performed on horseback with its "First American Joust Troupe" show. The company has been featured in movies, commercials, television and live at Renaissance Fairs throughout the country for the past 21 years. Ellis continues to return to NCSA as a clown/movement instructor and serves as artistic director and co-creator, in conjunction with Brenner's Children's Hospital, of a program called A.R.C.H., “Artists Reaching Children in the Hospital,” which is celebrating its 10th anniversary in 2006. Other of his artist-in-residencies include New York University, University of Texas in Austin, Wake Forest University, and the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts.

Bill English

Bill English
Bill has the lead role in the ABC television pilot THE CAVEMEN, based on the popular Geico TV commercials. Variety reported in March that: "CAVEMEN will revolve around three pre-historic men who must battle prejudice as they attempt to live as normal thirtysomethings in modern Atlanta." Broadway debut last season in "Twentieth Century" starring Alec Baldwin and Anne Heche and directed by Tony Award-winner Walter Bobbie. Recent credits: "The Shaggs" at NYMF, directed by NCSA alumnus John Langs; "Many 'Cides," Prospect Theatre Company; "The Full Monty"; and "A Christmas Carol," North Shore Music Theatre; "The Times," Sonnet Rep; and readings of "Eugene's Home," "Middle of the Night" and "Streamers," all at the Roundabout Theatre Company. Feature film: THE BEACH PARTY AT THE THESHOLD OF HELL, written by NCSA classmate Kevin Wheatley. TV: “Johnson" the cruncher in a series of commercial spots for Raisin Bran Crunch.

Jennifer Ferrin

Jennifer Ferrin
Since graduating in 2003, Jennifer has worked mostly in television where her credits include As the World Turns (2 Daytime Emmy Nominations), Rescue Me, 3lbs opposite Stanley Tucci, and The Kill Point opposite John Leguizamo. While she has participated in many readings and workshops of plays and musicals over the years, the fall of 2007 will mark her professional theatre debut in the stage version of Hitchcock's 'The 39 Steps' at the Huntington Theatre Company in Boston. The play is set to move to Broadway in early 2008. Jennifer Ferrin is now in the Broadway production of “The 39 Steps.”

K. Todd Freeman

K. Todd Freeman
Tony nominee for Best Actor, Outer Critics Circle nominee for title role in Broadway production of "The Song of Jacob Zulu"; also received a Jefferson Award nomination at Chicago's Steppenwolf Theatre. Appeared on Broadway in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" opposite Gary Sinise. Won a Los Angeles Drama-Logue Award as Belize in "Angels in America." Appeared off-Broadway in "Uncle Tom's Cabin or Life Among the Lowly," "Spunk," "Ubu" and "West Memphis Mojo." Film credits include THE CIDER HOUSE RULES, GROSSE POINTE BLANK, A GENTLEMEN'S GAME, LIFE IN THE FAST LANE, HOUSE ARREST, JEFFREY, ENDOVIOLENCE, GRAND CANYON, RICOCHET, STREET HUNTER, SPLIT and KWANZA. TV credits include a recurring guest role on "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," "There's No Fish Food In Heaven," "Touched by an Angel," "Tracey Takes on New York," "Brooklyn Bridge," and guest roles on "NYPD Blue," "A Different World" and "The Trials of Rosie O'Neill." Resident company member of Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago and the Alley Theatre in Houston.

Tre Garrett

Tre Garrett
Currently a show director for Walt Disney Entertainment, Tre Garrett is a two-time recipient of the NAACP Act-So Gold Medal. He has received two National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts awards and the Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts Fellowship. As a director, Garrett was trained by legendary director Gerald Freedman and was a directing fellow of the 2003 Eugene O’Neill Playwright's Conference. He was also the 2005 S.S.D.C John Gielgud Directing Fellow. Garrett has assistant directed with artists such as Tony Award-winner Daniel Sullivan (“Julius Caesar” on Broadway starring Denzel Washington), Tony Award-winner Leonard Foglia (“On Golden Pond,” starring James Earl Jones and Leslie Uggams), producer/director/choreographer Debbie Allen (“Dancing In The Wings,” The Kennedy Center), Ricardo Kahn (“Color Me Dark,” a Kennedy Center national tour), Gerald Freedman (“Enemy of the People” and “Waiting for Godot”), Jennifer Nelson (“Two Trains Running”), Je'carius Johnson (“Friends and Lovers,” the national tour) and Charles Randolph Wright (“Cuttin' Up”). Garrett has directed “Draft Day” for the African Continuum Theatre; “Hambone,” which received three AACTA Onyx Awards; “Breathe,” the Young Playwrights Theatre tour; “About Lady”; “King Christina,” winner of the New Works of Merit Contest; an evening of short plays for the Working Theatre; New Edition's 2005 National Concert Tour; the second leg of the 2005 “Men Cry in the Dark” national stage tour; and “Ma Rainey's Black Bottom” for "August in February," a celebration of August Wilson's life and work. Garrett's play "Rain and Rivers," produced for New Horizons Theatre Company's 03-04 season, earned two AACTA Onyx Awards. His plays “Color and Light" and “That’s Got His Own" earned him two NAACP ACTSO awards and an NFAA Arts Award. His latest play, "Creole Fire," was chosen for the New South Youth Playwrights Festival in Atlanta, where he developed two new plays, “Loving Langston” and “A Month of Sundays,” both produced for Horizons Theatre's Young Playwrights Festival. He is an associate member of the Society of American Stage Directors and Choreographers.

Avery Glymph

Avery Glymph
Broadway roles include Romeo in "Romeo and Juliet" and "The Tempest" (with Patrick Stewart). Off-Broadway appearances include "McReele," Roundabout Theatre Company; "Three Seconds in the Key," New Georges; and "Hope is the Thing with Feathers" (with Cynthia Nixon), The Drama Dept. New York Shakespeare Festival roles have included Helenus in "Troilus and Cressida" and Schoolmaster in "Antony and Cleopatra" (with Vanessa Redgrave). Regional theatre includes "Angels in America," Buffalo Studio Arena/Syracuse Stage; the world premiere of "Lost Creek Township," Crossroads Theatre (Regional Tony Award Season); and "Fences," Cape Fear Regional Theatre. Film credits include HE GOT GAME (Spike Lee, director), THIRTEEN CONVERSATIONS ABOUT ONE THING (with Matthew McConaughey, John Turturro), and LAST BALL. TV appearances include "Law & Order," "Oz," "Becker" (with Leonard Nimoy), "Titus" (with Phyllis Diller), "The Beat," "Cosby," "The X-Files," and "Spin City" (recurring role).

Avery Glymph

Igor Goldin
Director in New York City and regionally. Spends much of his time developing and directing original musicals for the New York stage. Currently directing the new Joseph and David Zellnik WWII musical "YANK!" starring Bobby Steggert, Jeffry Denman and Nancy Anderson. He first directed "YANK!" in Philadelphia as a developmental workshop and then again for the 2005 New York Musical Theatre Festival with Music Director Rob Berman and Doug Kreeger in the lead role. "YANK!" went on to win the Outstanding New Musical of 2005 by Talkin’ Broadway and was first runner-up for the NYMF Audience Award. At the National Alliance of Musical Theatre (NAMT), Goldin directed Marshall Pailet and A.D. Penedo’s "The Chocolate Tree" with Music Director Ben Cohn that starred Tony Award-winner Cady Huffman and Tony nominee Christopher Sieber. Prior to this production he directed a developmental workshop of "The Chocolate Tree" at the New Jersey Rep. He then went on to direct Derek Gregor and Sam Carner’s new musical "Unlock'd," based on the Alexander Pope poem "The Rape of the Lock,"  first for the York Theatre Developmental Reading Series and then for the 2007 New York Musical Theatre Festival, where it went on to win the NYMF BEST IN FEST Award as well as the Outstanding New Musical of 2007 by Talkin’ Broadway. At New World Stages he directed the all-star concert "My First Time" starring Matthew Cavenaugh, Hunter Foster, Ann Harada, John Tartaglia and Mary Testa, to name a few. In 2006 he developed and directed the dance musical "Common Grounds" for which he received the NYMF 2006 Award for Excellence in Direction. Other off-Broadway credits include "A Ritual of Faith" and "The Snow Queen" with Music Director Barbara Anselmi. Regional credits include productions of Dan Acquisto and Sammy Buck’s "Like You Like It" (Theatre Under The Stars/SHSU joint production), "Violet," "The Spitfire Grill," "The Full Monty," and "The Complete History of America (abridged)." A three-time recipient of the OOBR Award for his work off-off Broadway, Goldin is also an ongoing director of musical theatre industry showcases at the American Musical and Dramatic Academy where he has conceived and directed dozens of original musical revues. He is a member of the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers.

Rhoda Griffis

Rhoda Griffis
Played Rikki Coleman (Juror #1) in RUNAWAY JURY with Dustin Hoffman, Gene Hackman and John Cusack. Other films include: ROAD TRIP, A STROKE OF GENIUS, SONGCATCHER, MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND EVIL, SOMETHING TO TALK ABOUT, COBB, CARRIE II, NEW BEST FRIEND, A GOOD BABY, THE CHESTER STORY, ON PROMISED LAND and LOVE FIELD. Television credits include “One Tree Hill,” “Dawson’s Creek,” “Matlock,” “In the Heat of the Night” and more than 30 television movies, including the award-winning miniseries FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON. More than 50 productions with regional theatres including Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, Alliance Theatre (“Angels in America Parts I & II,” “Proof,” “Dinner with Friends,” “Picasso at the Lapin Agile,” “Dark at the Top of the Stairs”), North Carolina Shakespeare Festival (seven seasons), Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Charlotte Repertory Theatre (“Eleemosynary,” “Tartuffe,” “Steel Magnolias”), Theatre-by-the-Sea, Theatrical Outfit. A founding member – with fellow NCSA alumni Jay Freer, Kim Shipley and Steve Bickley – of Actors Theatre of Atlanta (www.ata-theatre.org), where she has appeared in "Talley's Folly," "Collected Stories," "The Good Doctor," and "Two Rooms."

Tim Guinee

Tim Guinee
Feature film credits include SWEET LAND, JOHN CARPENTER'S VAMPIRES, BLADE, COURAGE UNDER FIRE, SUDDEN MANHATTAN, HOW TO MAKE AN AMERICAN QUILT, THE NIGHT WE NEVER MET, HEAVEN & EARTH, ONCE AROUND, THE DOORS, TAI-PAN, THE DUKE OF GROOVE (Academy Award-nominated Short Film,) A HOLE IN ONE, LADDER 49, PERSONAL VELOCITY, IMPOSTER, THE ROAD FROM COORAIN, and THE YOUNG GIRL AND THE MONSOON. Television credits include movies-of-the-week ELVIS, BRAVE NEW WORLD and MISSION OF THE SHARK; BBC's MOBY DICK; Showtime's LILY DALE; CBS/Hallmark Hall of Fame's BREATHING LESSONS; BBC miniseries COMICS; Wesley in the CBS miniseries QUEEN; HBO's "Vietnam War Stories"; plus guest roles in "CSI: New York," "CSI: Miami," "In Justice," "The West Wing," "Stargate SG-1," "Vinegar Hill," "Karen Sisco," "The Guardian," "Law & Order: Criminal Intent," "The Practice," "The Outer Limits," "Tarzan," "L.A. Law" and "Wiseguy." Starred in "Strange World" for ABC television. Theatre appearances include "suburbia" at Lincoln Center, "Displaced Persons" at Seattle Rep and New York's Workhouse Theatre, "Chelsea Walls" at Naked Angels, "Richard II" at New York Shakespeare Festival, and "Death of a Buick" at Manhattan Theatre Club.

Hadley

Jonathan Hadley
Presently appearing as Bob Crewe in the Broadway company of “Jersey Boys” and will open the Vegas company in the spring of 2008. Last seen on Broadway channeling Marvin Hamlisch and Michael Bennet in “A Class Act”and Off-Broadway in “Finian’s Rainbow” at New York’s acclaimed Irish Rep. Tours include “Into The Woods” (with Cleo Laine), “Joseph.. (with Donny Osmond), “Fiddler on the Roof” (with Theo Bikel) and “Forbidden Broadway.” Favorite regional credits include leading roles in “Dirty Blonde,” “Born Yesterday,” “Yiddle with a Fiddle” (Boston Herald Award), “Amadeus,” “Love’s Labour’s Lost,” “Call Me Madam” (starring Leslie Uggams),“The Secret Garden”and “Captains Courageous.”  TV: “Another World,” “Kidsworld” & “Sex and the City.” Hadley is a director and teaching artist with Camp Broadway, TADA!, the Yip Harburg Foundation’s “Rainbow Troupe” and BRAVO’s “On With the Show.” He directed “Much Ado About Nothing” and “Tartuffe” for New York’s Sonnet Rep Theatre. Hadley recently graduated from Brooklyn College with an MFA in directing.

Hadley

Lucas Hall
Off Broadway: “Edward the Second” (Red Bull Theater), “All's Well That Ends Well” (Theater For a New Audience), “The Hasty Heart” (Keen Company). Regional: “Hamlet,” “Measure for Measure,” “The Violet Hour” (The Old Globe); “Two Noble Kinsmen” (Chicago Shakespeare Theatre); “Romeo and Juliet” (New Repertory Theater); “The Tempest” (Pittsburgh Public Theater); “Cyrano,” “Henry IV parts 1 and 2” (The Shakespeare Theater, D.C.); “Henry V” (American Repertory Theatre). Film: THE LOVE LETTER, THE LATE SUMMER. TV: “As The World Turns,” “Guiding Light.” Hamlet in special production of “Hamlet” by the North Carolina Symphony, conducted by John Mauceri and directed by Gerald Freedman.

Peter Hedges

Peter Hedges
Author of numerous plays including “Baby Anger” (Playwrights Horizons), “Good As New” (Manhattan Class Company) and “Imagining Brad” (Circle Repertory Theatre), all of which have been published by Dramatists Play Service. Commissions include the Roundabout Theater/Nederlander Organization. His newest novel, “An Ocean in Iowa,” was published in April 1998 by Hyperion Press. His first novel, “What’s Eating Gilbert Grape,” has been translated into 10 languages; also wrote the screenplay for the acclaimed 1993 film of the same name which starred Johnny Depp and Leonardo DiCaprio, who was nominated for an Academy Award. Writer and director of PIECES OF APRIL starring Katie Holmes, Patricia Clarkson, Oliver Platt and Derek Luke. Screen adaptations include Jane Hamilton’s A MAP OF THE WORLD for the Kennedy-Marshall Company and Nick Hornby’s ABOUT A BOY for New Line Cinema, for which he received an Academy Award nomination. Directed DIARY OF A LOST BOY, filmed in New York, and is working on his third novel. Most recently, Hedges directed and co-wrote DAN IN REAL LIFE, which starred Steve Carell and Juliette Binoche.  Peter’s third novel, “The Heights,” will be published by Dutton in 2009.  He will also direct his adaptation of Jonathan Tropper’s EVERYTHING CHANGES for actor Tobey Maguire and Sony Pictures.

Stephen Henderson

Stephen Henderson
Cast member of August Wilson's "Jitney," which received a special Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Ensemble Performance and Obie Award for Excellence of Ensemble Performance. Played Stool Pigeon in August Wilson's "King Hedley II," nominated for the Tony Award for Best Play. Film credits include HE GOT GAME (Spike Lee, director), EVERYDAY PEOPLE and MARIE (with Sissy Spacek, Jeff Daniels).

Tom Hulce

Tom Hulce
Tony Award nominee for “A Few Good Men”; made Broadway debut in “Equus.” Other theatre roles include “The Normal Heart” at London’s Royal Court Theatre, “Nothing Sacred” at the Mark Taper Forum, “Eastern Standard” at Seattle Repertory Theatre and “Hamlet” at Shakespeare Theatre. Academy Award nominee for title role in AMADEUS; Golden Globe nominee for role as Dominick in DOMINICK AND EUGENE. Other feature film roles include Disney’s THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME, WINGS OF COURAGE, FRANKENSTEIN, FEARLESS, INNER CIRCLE, SLAMDANCE, PARENTHOOD and ANIMAL HOUSE. Emmy Award winner for THE HEIDI CHRONICLES on TNT; Emmy nominee for MURDER IN MISSISSIPPI. Also appeared in title role in THE RISE AND RISE OF DANIEL ROCKET for American Playhouse on PBS. Nominated for a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Director (Play) with Jane Jones for "The Cider House Rules: Part One, Here in St. Cloud." Tom Hulce is a producer of Broadway’s “Spring Awakening,” nominated for eleven 2007 Tony Awards, winning eight, including Best Musical.

Marc Damon Johnson

Marc Damon Johnson
Appeared in the Long Wharf Theatre revival of Charles Strouse's musical version of Clifford Odett's "Golden Boy." Other theatre credits include New York Shakespeare Festival, Great Lakes Theater Festival. Guest television appearances have included a featured role on HBO's "The Sopranos," "Deadline," "Third Watch," "100 Centre Street," "Law & Order," "Law & Order: Criminal Intent," and "Time of Your Life." Film credits include Woody Allen's SWEET AND LOWDOWN, ON THE ONE, IT RUNS IN THE FAMILY and Hallmark Hall of Fame's GRACE AND GLORIE.

Rebecca Naomi Jones

Rebecca Naomi Jones
Rebecca Naomi Jones is returning to the Public Theater this fall for a pre-Broadway workshop of PASSING STRANGE. She recently participated in the Sundance Institute Theatre Lab, acting in a play called "Wig Out" by Tarell Alvin McCraney. Off-Broadway: PASSING STRANGE (Public Theater). Regional/Tours: PASSING STRANGE (Berkeley Repertory Theater. Bay Area Theater Critics Award: Best Ensemble in a Musical), CAROLINE, OR CHANGE (OBC Tour directed by George C. Wolfe, Ahmanson Theater and Curran Theater), LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS (1st National tour directed by Jerry Zaks), RENT (10th Anniversary World Tour Directed by Evan Ensign and US/Japan tour directed by Michael Greif). NYC Theatre: FALLEN ANGEL (NYC International Fringe Festival, The Village Theater. Award: Best Musical), HOW LOVE IS SPELT (Summer Play Festival, The Lion Theater at Theater Row). Recording: vocalist for music production company Deetown with songs in major motion pictures. Rebecca is also currently working on her own music. Rebecca Naomi Jones is in the Broadway production of “Passing Strange.” Training: BFA in Drama, North Carolina School of the Arts.

Preston Lane

Preston Lane
Preston Lane is artistic director and co-founder of Triad Stage in Greensboro, N.C. At Triad Stage he has directed more than 20 productions ranging from the theatre's 2002 grand opening production of "Suddenly Last Summer" to the current (fifth) season's "The Turn of the Screw," "A Streetcar Named Desire," and David Sedaris' "SantaLand Diaries." Other productions include "A Tuff Shuffle" (National Black Theatre Festival), "Overruled" (off-Broadway), "Love! Valour! Compassion!" (Stage One), and the world premieres of "If Only" and "Get It While You Can" (Summer Cabaret). Lane was formerly artistic associate at the Dallas Theater Center, where his productions included the U.S. premiere of "Inexpressible Island" (Dallas Observer's Best of Dallas Awards: Best Director, Best Production) and "The Night of the Iguana" (Dallas Morning News: 2002 Top Ten Theatre List). As a playwright, he is the recipient of a grant from the Fox Foundation to develop "Wondrous Love." Other of his adaptations include "Hedda Gabler," "Dracula," "Mirandolina," "Julie's Dance" and this season's "Brother Wolf" (Triad Stage), "A Christmas Carol" (Dallas Theater Center, Sonoma County Rep), and "Three Weeks After Marriage" and "Helen!" (Summer Cabaret). He has taught at the North Carolina School of the Arts, N.C. A&T State University, University of North Carolina-Greensboro, Southern Methodist University and the Professional Actors Workshop at the Dallas Theater Center. He is an alumnus of the Drama League of New York's Director's Project. A native of Boone, N.C., Lane received his B.F.A. from the North Carolina School of the Arts and his M.F.A. from the Yale School of Drama.

John Langs

John Langs
John Langs is a graduate of The Pacific Conservatory of the Performing Arts and holds a B.F.A in directing from the North Carolina School of the Arts.  For the past eight years he has worked as a professional director throughout the United States and internationally.  Mr. Langs served as artistic director for the Full Contact Shakespeare Company (Sacramento), Dimensions Theatre Project (Stockton), Golden Mean Theater Company (Los Angeles) and Maui Onstage (Hawaii).

From 1999-2002, Mr. Langs made his artistic home in Los Angeles with the Neurotic Young Urbanities, where he collaborated on many original works, including the award winning musical "Up the Week Without a Paddle".  For his direction of The Shaggs Philosophy of the World." Mr. Langs received the Backstage West Garland Award.  "The Shaggs" moved on to a Jeff-nominated production with the Lookingglass Theatre Company of Chicago, a workshop at the Manhattan Theatre Club and the NY Music Theater Festival.

Mr. Langs is currently associate artist at the Seattle Shakespeare Company where he recently directed "King Lear" and "Romeo & Juliet".  Recent productions also include: "A Man of No Importance" & "The Dead" for NCSA, "Brother Karamazou" for the Circle X Theater in Los Angeles, and Lusis Slotins "Sonata" for the Empty Space Theater in Seattle. 

Mr. Langs lives in Santa Monica with his wife and fellow NCSA graduate Klea Scott .

Michael Lluberes

Michael Lluberes
Recently adapted and directed off-Broadway: "The Geranium on the Window Sill Just Died," Urban Stages. Off-Broadway/national tours also include "Studs Terkel's American Dreams: Lost and Found" (world premiere); "Pudd'nhead Wilson" (world premiere); "As You Like It" and "The Taming of the Shrew," The Acting Company; and "Lettice and Lovage" (with Marian Seldes and Dana Ivey), Salon Series, The Culture Project. New York theatre includes "For the Love of Tiffany," 2003 New York International Fringe Festival; "Girl Crazy," Musicals Tonight; Manhattan Theatre Club; Upright Citizens Brigade. Regional theatre includes "The Food Chain," The Old Globe; "Twelfth Night," Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park; and "Twelfth Night," Repertory Theatre of St. Louis. TV includes "Chappelle's Show" and "Tough Crowd" with Colin Quinn (Comedy Central).


Angus MacLachlan

Angus MacLachlan
A graduate of the NCSA Visual Arts Program and School of Drama, Angus MacLachlan has acted with Charlotte Repertory Theatre, Manbites Dog Theatre and others. He has written and performed three one-man shows, including “Marginal Living,” which was filmed and shown on North Carolina Public Television. Among the plays he has written are “Divertimento,” which was produced at The Wonderhorse Theatre off-off Broadway; and “Bridge,” which won the 2000 New Works prize presented by Actor’s Theatre of Santa Rosa. “The Dead Eye Boy,” which was selected as the 2000 Lois and Richard Rosenthal New Play Prize Award Winner, premiered by Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park and was a finalist for the Steinberg New Play Prize. It later played at the Manhattan Class Company in New York, where it was nominated for two Drama Desk Awards, and was produced in London at the Hampstead Theatre. His play “The Radiant Abyss,” commissioned by Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company in Washington, D.C., premiered at the Kennedy Center and was produced by Profiles Theatre Company in Chicago. His honors and awards include a nomination by the Williamstown Theatre Festival for the Kesselring Prize and an N.C. Humanities Council Award. A short film he wrote, TATER TOMATER, directed by Phil Morrison, aired on “American Playhouse” and screened at the Sundance Film Festival. MacLachlan wrote the screenplay for the feature film JUNEBUG, from Sony Pictures Classics, directed by Phil Morrison and produced by Epoch Films, which was selected for the Dramatic Competition for the 2005 Sundance Film Festival, and won a Special Jury Citation for Acting for Amy Adams. It was also selected to be in the New Director/New Films Festival sponsored by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art, International Critics Week at 2005 Cannes, the LA Film Festival, and the Edinburgh Festival. MacLachlan was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for Best First Screenplay and Best Screenplay by the Washington Area Film Critics. The film was listed on more than 50 Top Ten lists for 2005 including Roger Ebert, The New York Times, LA Times, NPR, and was given a Special Mention for Excellence in Filmmaking by the National Board of Review.


Corey Madden

Corey Madden
Corey Madden‘s wide-ranging career in theatre encompasses work as a director, playwright, dramaturg, producer and teacher at the nation’s most prestigious arts institutions. Madden has been instrumental in leading the theatre to create one of the nation’s most ambitious and diverse new play development programs. At the Taper, Madden has worked closely with major artists of her generation including George C. Wolfe, Tony Kushner, David Gordon, Jeanine Tesori and Lisa Loomer. She is the producing director of the theatre’s innovative program for young and intergenerational audiences. World premieres in that program include Charlayne Woodard’s “Flight” and new musical based on the award-winning book, “The Very Persistent Gappers of Frip,” premiered at the Kennedy Center’s New Voices New Visions Festival in May 2004. Madden consults for J. Paul Getty Museum and the Riverside School of the Arts and serves on the board of the Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts. She has directed at the New York Shakespeare Festival, and has taught at and guest directed in the graduate programs of Cal Arts, UCLA and the University of Washington. She has recently completed her first full-length play, “Worth,” and is at work on a second, “Convention.” Currently she is directing "The Stones" at the Kirk Douglas Theatre.

Terrence Mann

Terrence Mann
Tony Award nominee for roles as the Beast in Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” and Javert in “Les Miserables.” Other Broadway roles include Rocky in “The Rocky Horror Show,” Chavelin in “The Scarlet Pimpernel,” Greg in “Getting Away With Murder,” Scrooge in “A Christmas Carol,” the original Rum Tum Tugger in “Cats,” Saul in “Rags,” Ringmaster in “Barnum” and Narrator in “Jerome Robbins’ ‘Broadway.’” Film credits include A CHORUS LINE, CRITTERS, BIG TOP PEE-WEE, Mel Brooks’ SOLARBABIES and MRS. SANTA CLAUS. Emmy Award nominee for guest role in daytime drama “As the World Turns.” Appeared as British Gen. John Burgoyne in “Liberty! The American Revolution” on PBS. Artistic director of The North Carolina Theatre in Raleigh and director of The Lost Colony in Manteo. Directed workshop performances of “Romeo & Juliet: The Musical” at The Norman Terris Theatre in Chester, Conn., and at the Ordway Music Theatre in St. Paul, Minn. Plays recurring role of Daniel Faulkner on daytime TV’s “One Life to Live.”

Joe Mantello

Joe Mantello
Directing credits include “November,” “The Receptionist,” “The Ritz,” “Three Days of Rain,” “The Odd Couple,” “Glengarry Glen Ross” (Tony nomination), “Laugh Whore,” “Assassins” (Tony Award), “Wicked,” “Take Me Out” (Tony Award), “Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune,” “A Man of No Importance,” “Design for Living,” Terrence McNally and Jake Heggie's “Dead Man Walking” for the San Francisco Opera, “The Vagina Monologues,” “bash,” “Another American: Asking and Telling,” “Love! Valour! Compassion!” (Tony nomination), “Proposals,” “The Mineola Twins,” “Corpus Christi,” “Mizlansky/Zilinsky (or Schmucks),” “Blue Window,” “God's Heart,” “The Santaland Diaries,” “Snakebit,” “Three Hotels” and “Imagining Brad.” Mr. Mantello also directed the film Love! Valour! Compassion! As an actor he appeared in “Angels in America” (Tony nomination) and “The Baltimore Waltz.” Mr. Mantello is the recipient of Outer Critics Circle, Drama Desk, Lucille Lortel, Helen Hayes, Clarence Derwent, Obie and Joe A. Callaway awards. He is a member of Naked Angels and an associate artist at the Roundabout.

Davenia McFadden

Davenia McFadden
Played Sister Delise in "Revelations," a six-part limited series for NBC, and Carmen Jones in "The American Embassy" for Jersey Television and Fox. Television credits include recurring roles on "Seventh Heaven," "Monk," "Kingpin," and "Becker"; supporting leads in Lifetime movie-of-the-week TAKING BACK OUR TOWN and the CBS Hallmark Hall of Fame's ELLEN FOSTER; and guest starring roles in "CSI," "Malcolm in the Middle," "The Bernie Mac Show," "Judging Amy," "The Shield," "Ally McBeal," "The Division," "Strong Medicine," "ER," "Seinfeld," and "Touched by an Angel." Her challenge to talk show host Rosie O'Donnell resulted in numerous appearances on "The Rosie O'Donnell Show" and McFadden being crowned the "official" queen of trivia. Her film roles include AMERICAN GUN opposite Forrest Whitaker, DOUBLE JEOPARDY with Tommy Lee Jones and Ashley Judd, RANDOM HEARTS starring Harrison Ford and Kristin Scott Thomas, GLORIA, MY BEST FRIEND'S WEDDING, EDDIE and FRESH. Her portrayal of Brownie, the prison matriarch, in the HBO feature STRANGER INSIDE, which debuted at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival, earned her an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

Marilyn McIntyre

Marilyn McIntyre
Marilyn McIntyre has been a professional actress for over thirty years playing leading roles on and Off-Broadway and with several major regional theatre companies, as well as on television and film. She has garnered a number of awards for her theatre work in Los Angeles including two LA Drama Critics Circle Awards, a Theatre LA Ovation Award and two more nominations, three Back Stage West Garlands Awards and two Drama-Logue Awards, an LA Weekly Award and two more nominations and a VTL Artistic Director Award for Best Actress in a Lead Role for her performance of ‘Linda Loman’.

Marilyn works extensively in television and film, guest starring on series such as “Cold Case,” “LA Dragnet”, "Judging Amy", "Diagnosis Murder", "Profiler", "X-Files", "Chicago Hope" (Emmy Nomination), "Dark Skies" (playing ‘Dorothy Kilgallen’), "Matlock", "LA Law" (recurring role), et al; Movies-of-the-Week and mini-series; as well as a series regular on the primetime serial drama, “Watch Over Me”, on the new FOX network, MyNetworkTV and also on four daytime dramas including "Days Of Our Lives". Her film credits include Statistics, The Ring II, First Daughter directed by Forest Whitaker, What’s Bugging Seth, Façade, Breaking Dawn, Seven Girlfriends starring Tim Daly, Very Bad Things, written and directed by Peter Berg, and the live action short, George Lucas In Love among others. Most recently, Marilyn was a recurring guest star on “GH: Night Shift”, a weekly spin-off of “General Hospital”, and played a supporting role in an indie film, Divided We Stand.

On Broadway, Ms. McIntyre had leading roles in Scenes and Revelations directed by Sheldon Epps and Gemini by Albert Innaurato; Off Broadway with the New York Shakespeare Festival, Primary Stages and the Roundabout; and regionally with Arena Stage in Washington, D.C., Houston's Alley Theatre, Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia, Missouri Rep, Utah Shakespearean Festival, and California's own South Coast Repertory and Mark Taper Forum. As a member of LA's Matrix Theatre Company she has appeared in the award winning productions of Wendy MacLeod's The Water Children; Dangerous Corner, directed by Andrew J. Robinson (Garlands Award, Ensemble); and Caryl Churchill’s Mad Forest (LADCC Award, Ensemble). As a Founding Member of LA's Interact Theatre Company she acted in several productions including Death of a Salesman, playing ‘Linda Loman’ opposite Eddie Jones (ADA Award and LA Weekly nomination), A Little Night Music, playing ‘Desiree’ opposite John Rubinstein, The Cherry Orchard (LADCC Award for Outstanding Production & LA Weekly nomination), Richard Dresser’s Bait & Switch and Bed & Breakfast, Terri Wagener’s Marathons (Drama-Logue Award) and Elmer Rice's classic, Counsellor-At-Law, for which she received the LADCC, Ovation, and Drama-Logue Awards for her performance opposite John Rubinstein.

Ms. McIntyre received her BFA from the North Carolina School of the Arts and her MFA from Penn State University. In New York she studied with Michael Shurtleff and at the HB Studio, and was also a member of the NATAS (National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences) Actors Workshop. She has studied the disciplines of Suzuki physical training and Viewpoints in Los Angeles with Burning Wheel and with renowned director, Anne Bogart and members of the SITI Company. Marilyn has also studied with Uta Hagen (Master Class in LA) and is proud to be featured in the documentary/teaching video, “Uta Hagen’s Acting Class” (Part 2).

Currently, Ms. McIntyre teaches at The Howard Fine Acting Studio in Hollywood and with the SAG Conservatory at AFI. In the fall of 2007 she will be a guest instructor with the Old Globe / University of San Diego MFA Professional Actor Training Program. She is also a regular guest instructor in the graduate acting program at the University of Texas-Austin and the South Carolina Governors School for the Arts.

Joshua Park

Joshua Park
Recipient of a Theatre World Award for title role of the Broadway production of “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.”

Mary-Louise Parker

Mary-Louise Parker
Tony Award winner for best actress as Catherine in “Proof” (also received the Lucille Lortel and Drama Desk awards) and Tony nominee for role as Rita in “Prelude to a Kiss.” Winner of Obie Award and nominated for Outer Critics Circle Award for “How I Learned to Drive;” other off-Broadway roles include “Four Dogs and a Bone” and “The Art of Success” at the Manhattan Theatre Club. Regional theatre credits include “The Importance of Being Earnest” at Hartford Stage and “Up in Saratoga” at the Old Globe. Feature film credits include THE RED DRAGON, THE QUALITY OF MERCY, PIPE DREAM, THE PORTRAIT OF A LADY, THE CLIENT, BULLETS OVER BROADWAY, BOYS ON THE SIDE, MR. WONDERFUL, NAKED IN NEW YORK, GRAND CANYON, FRIED GREEN TOMATOES and LONGTIME COMPANION. Also appeared in Hallmark Hall of Fame telefilm A PLACE FOR ANNIE. Emmy Award nominee for her role as Amy Gardner in NBC’s “The West Wing.” Co-stars with Al Pacino and Meryl Streep in the HBO movie of Tony Kushner’s Pulitzer Prize-winning, two-part play, “Angels in America.” Mary-Louise Parker can currently be seen in the off-Broadway production of “Dead Man’s Cell Phone” at Playwrights Horizons Mainstage Theatre.

Chris Parnell

Chris Parnell
Featured player with "Saturday Night Live"; sketches and parodies include Tom Brokaw, Newt Gingrich, Eminem and Sen. John McCain. Has performed at the Berkshire Theatre Festival in Stockbridge, Mass., Alley Theatre in Houston and with the Los Angeles comedy group The Groundlings. Film credits include ANCHORMAN: THE LEGEND OF RON BURGUNDY, DOWN WITH LOVE and EVIL ALIEN CONQUERORS. Television credits include "Friends," "Ed," "The Jamie Foxx Show," and "Seinfeld." Upcoming film: TALLADEGA NIGHTS: THE BALLAD OF RICKY BOBBY. Upcoming television series: "Thick and Thin." Chris Parnell plays Vice Principal Bruce Terry on FOX TV’s “Miss/Guided.”


Christy Pusz

Christy Pusz
Broadway: “The Odd Couple” (Pigeon Sisters understudy); “Dinner at Eight” (Paula, Dora understudy); Baz Luhrmann’s “La Boheme” (acting chorus). Regional: “La Boheme” (the Ahmanson Theater); “The Salacious Uncle Baldrick” (2005 NTC Fringe Festival); “Midsummer Night’s Dream” (Roanoke Island Summer Festival); “An Ideal Husband” (SRT). TV: commercials and a spec pilot, “Zip Code,” for Morgold Productions.

Missi Pyle

Missi Pyle
Theatre credits include Elizabeth in “The Libertine” with John Malkovich at Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre; “900 Oneata” with Jon Cryer at New York’s Circle Repertory Theatre; “Wang Dang” at the Paradise Theatre in New York; Armandine in “There’s One in Every Marriage” at the Phoenix Theatre; and “Big River,” “Young Abe Lincoln” and “The Taming of the Shrew,” all at the Lincoln Amphitheatre. Film appearances include Mildred in Tim Burton’s BIG FISH, Ashley in BRINGING DOWN THE HOUSE, Vera in HOME ALONE 4, Alexandra in JOSIE AND THE PUSSYCATS, Thermian Laliari in GALAXY QUEST, Waitress in AS GOOD AS IT GETS and Kelsey in THE COTTONWOOD. Also appeared in the “Barry Manilow” episode of “Ally McBeal” and the final episode of “Mad About You.”

 

Joyce Reehling

Joyce Reehling
Feature film credits include A PRICE ABOVE RUBIES, which was nominated for a Special Grand Prize at the Deauville Film Festival; ROOMMATES, with Peter Falk; the award-winning LORENZO’S OIL; LONGTIME COMPANION; and THE RESCUE. Made-for-television films include GREGORY K and GENTLEMAN BANDIT. Notable TV guest roles include the hit NBC series “Ed,” “Law & Order,” “NYPD Blue,” “Kate and Allie” and “The Equalizer,” as well as several pilots and soap operas. As member of the prestigious Circle Repertory Company, was acclaimed for her role in RECKLESS and originated the role of June Talley in Lanford Wilson’s FIFTH OF JULY. Appearances on- and off-Broadway include “Prelude to a Kiss,” “Extremities” with Farrah Fawcett and “The Runner Stumbles” with William Hurt. Numerous commercials, including television voice-overs and radio spots. Active on the national board of the American Federation of Television and Radio Arts and the Screen Actors Guild.

Ashley Robinson

Ashley Robinson
Ashley Robinson, Class of 2004, is in the Ensemble of and understudy for Fiyero in "Wicked" in Chicago. He was most recently featured in David Bell's "The Good War" at the Maltz-Jupiter Theatre and a pilot for Showtime called "Hate."

J. T. Roger

J. T. Rogers
J.T. Rogers’ made his Broadway debut as a playwright to much critical acclaim this fall with his searing drama “The Overwhelming” at the Roundabout (Laura Pels Theatre). The play had its world premiere at the National Theatre of Great Britain last spring and toured the United Kingdom. His “Madagascar” received the 2005 Pinter Review Prize for Drama for best play in the English language and has just been published in hardback through the University of Tampa Press. The play also won the American Theatre Critics Association’s 2005 M. Elizabeth Osborne Award and was a finalist for the ATCA’s Steinberg New Play Award. It was seen last season off-Broadway as part of the Summer Play Festival. Rogers is the author of “White People” (nominated for best play of the year by the L.A. Drama Critics Circle, Barrymore Award of Philadelphia, and the Carbonell Award of South Florida), “Seeing the Elephant” (Kesselring Prize nominee for best new American play), and “Murmuring in a Dead Tongue,” which was presented last season in New York City by Epic Rep, where he is a company member. Regionally, his works have been given full productions at the Philadelphia Theatre Company, New Actors Union Theatre (Moscow), the Road Theatre (Los Angeles), New Theatre (Miami), the Adirondack Theatre Festival (New York), and many times at the Salt Lake Acting Company, where he was a 2004-2005 NEA/TCG playwright-in-residence. Rogers has been an artist-in-residence at the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center and the Edward Albee Foundation, and was the recipient of a 2004 Playwriting Fellowship from New York Foundation for the Arts. He lives in Brooklyn.

Reynaldo Rosales

Reynaldo Rosales
Reynaldo Rosales, a graduate of North Carolina School of the Arts, can be seen in NBC’s new medical drama “Inconceivable” as a fertility clinic technician. Rosales stars opposite Ming-Na, Jonathan Cake, Angie Harmon, Joelle Carter, Mary Catherine Garrison and David Noroña. Most recently, Rosales appeared in the title role of the much-acclaimed Steppenwolf Theater production, “One Arm,” based on a screenplay by Tennessee Williams and directed by Moises Kaufman. Rosales’ feature film credits include SHE HATE ME (from director Spike Lee) and FIDEL on Showtime, directed by David Atwood. On television, he has guest-starred in “The Closer,” “Numb3rs,” “Law & Order,” “Smallville,” “Charmed” and “CSI.” He also appeared in the pilots “Homeland Security” and “Sucker Free City.” Guest appearances in "The 4400", "Close to Home", "Medium", and the 20th Century Film "House" it will come out October 2007. He just finished a pilot called "Company Man" from the creators of "24".

Ted Schneider

Ted Schneider
Film and Television roles include BMW'S "Have you seen it" WebFilm directed by Stewart Hendler, Brian Mertes' short CLEAR OUT, National Lampoon's THE BEACH PARTY AT THE THRESHOLD OF HELL, and COMPANY K. His OFF BROADWAY and New York Theater roles include Oswald in the Lanford Wilson translation of "Ghosts," co-starring Amy Irving, for Classic Stage Company; Birdy Naomi Wallace's adaptation of "Birdy", for Women's Project and Productions, Justin in "Now That's What I Call a Storm", for EDGE Theater, directed by Carolyn Cantor, Sorbier in Sartre's "Men Without Shadows" for The Flea Theater; Guido in "Baccanalia," co-starring John Glover, for Bay Street Theater; Eddie in "The Geranium on the Window Sill Just Died" adapted and directed by NCSA ALUMNUS Michael Lluberes; and Konstantin in "The Seagull" in the first annual production for Theater at Lake Lucille.

Klea Scott

Klea Scott
Klea Scott continues to impress audiences with a diverse range of characters in features, television and theatre. She currently stars in the highly critically acclaimed series on the CBC: "Intelligence," created Chris Haddock. Scott portrays Inspector Mary Spalding, the off-center director of intelligence for the Vancouver Organized Crime Unit. Born in Ancon, Panama, Klea Scott was raised in Ottawa, Canada. She moved to the United States to study acting after years of dance training and an early career on the children's sketch comedy show, "You Cant Do That on Television” (Nickelodeon). After numerous New York City productions, from Williamstown to Shakespeare in the Park, to a guest spot on "The Cosby Show," she returned to conservatory training at the North Carolina School of the Arts. There she received her BFA and landed a series regular role on Steven Bochco's "Brooklyn South" in her senior year. Scott's move to Los Angeles has led to roles as a series regular in the critically acclaimed Chris Carter series “Millennium” and Michael Mann's series, "Robbery Homicide Division.” Other of her television appearances range from comedy ("Just Shoot Me") to drama ("ER," "Century City,” "Medical Investigation") to historical drama ("Sally Hemmings : An American Scandal." In feature films, she debuted in Steven Spielberg's MINORITY REPORT and most recently was seen in Michael Mann's COLLATERAL for Dreamworks/Sony. Her independent films include MANFAST and LULLABYE. Scott lives and works with theatre director John Langs, and returns to theatre at every opportunity. In 2003, she played in Des McAnuff's production of "Tartuffe" at the La Jolla Playhouse, and more recently in the West Coast premiere of Jon Robin Baitz's "Ten Unknowns" at the Mark Taper Forum. Scott had the time of her life playing Charity in Maui Onstage's 2004 production of "Sweet Charity."

Ben Sheaffer

Ben Sheaffer
On Broadway in “1776” and “The Sound of Music”; off -Broadway in “Corpus Christi.” Co-starred opposite Sally Ann Howes in Jerry Herman's musical “Dear World” at the Goodspeed Opera House in Chester, Conn., and in the Miranda Theatre Company's world premiere of “The Book of Wren.” Profiled as an “Up and Comer” in InTheatre magazine.

Daniel Sherman

Daniel Sherman
Recent productions include “Henry IV” with Kevin Kline and Ethan Hawke at Lincoln Center and the role of Thaddeus in Terrence McNally’s “Corpus Christi” at the Manhattan Theatre Club. Played Horatio in “Hamlet” at Shakespeare at the Beach in California. Starred in the Broadway and international touring companies of “The Full Monty.” Performed off-Broadway in role of Man No.1 in “The Mineola Twins” and “I’m a Seagull” from Chekhov's “The Seagull” at the Creative Acting Company in New York. Recurring role as a police officer on “All My Children.”

Lorca Simons

Lorca Simons
Appeared off-Broadway in "Collected Stories" opposite Uta Hagen at the Lucille Lortel Theatre; in "The Pain and Misery of The Third Reich" at CSC, and "Careless Love" at Soho Rep. Appeared in regional productions of "The Collected Works of Billy the Kid" (Dallas Theatre Center); "Three Tall Women" (The Intiman, Seattle); "A Midsummer Night's Dream" (Great Lakes Theater Festival); and "On The Verge" (Virginia Stage). Also appeared at the George Street Playhouse and at ACT in Seattle (as Nina in both "The Notebook of Trigorin" and "The Nina," and in "Variations.") Toured with the first national tour of "Three Tall Women." Film credits include 5UP, 2DOWN and THE ADVENTURES OF PLUTO NASH with Eddie Murphy and Randy Quaid. Has appeared on NBC's "Law & Order," "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit," "100 Centre Street" and "As the World Turns."

Jeremy Skidmore

Jeremy Skidmore
Jeremy Skidmore has directed or produced work in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, London, and Tai Pei. After graduating from NCSA in 2000, he became the first American to assistant direct at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in London and at the Subaru Theater Company in Tokyo. In 2001, Skidmore became the artistic director of the Theater Alliance in Washington, D.C. The most recent productions he has directed there include the Washington premieres of "Tales from Ovid" and "Slaughter City"; the American premiere of "The Dispute," translated by Neil Bartlett; and the world premiere of "Painted Alice." Other recent productions include "The Learned Ladies" for Catalyst Theater Company and "Speed-the-Plow" for the Los Angeles-based company, The Magellan Project, which was nominated by LA WEEKLY for "Best Revival of the Year." Next up, Skidmore will be co-directing the world premiere of the Malaysian shadow puppet play "After the Flood" for Rorschach Theatre.

Jada Pinkett Smith

Jada Pinkett Smith
Star of film and television, has more than 20 feature films in her credits. Most notable film appearances include Niobe in THE MATRIX RELOADED and THE MATRIX REVOLUTIONS, Spike Lee’s BAMBOOZLED, RETURN TO PARADISE, SET IT OFF and the award-winning MENACE II SOCIETY. She was nominated for Image Awards for Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture for BAMBOOZLED, Outstanding Lead Actress for SET IT OFF and Outstanding Lead Actress in a Television Movie for IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK (segment 1996). Her television work includes guest appearances on “A Different World,” “21 Jump Street” and “Ellen.” She is executive producer of UPN’s “All of Us.”

Rick Stear

Rick Stear
Feature film credits include WENT TO CONEY ISLAND ON A MISSION FROM GOD...BE BACK BY FIVE (with Jon Cryer), ZEROPHILIA, THE WARRIOR CLASS, ASTORIA (named Best Actor for lead role of Alex at the RiverRun Film Festival). Played Sebastian opposite Helen Hunt in "Twelfth Night" at Lincoln Center Theatre Company, also for PBS' TV movie. At Hartford Stage, played Edward in "Long Day's Journey Into Night," opposite Ellen Burstyn, and Tybalt in "Romeo and Juliet." Other of his stage credits include "A Madhouse in Goa" off-Broadway; Great Lakes Theater Festival; Alley Theatre in Houston; the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego; and "Indiscretions" at the Coconut Grove Playhouse. Guest television appearance on "Buffy the Vampire Slayer."

Scott Sowers

Scott Sowers
Currently appearing on Broadway in the Tony Nominated production of “Inherit the Wind” with Christopher Plummer and Brian Dennehy. He was recently seen in Mallory Catlett’s (NCSA ‘87), “Oh What War” at the HERE Arts Center of NY. He played Stanley in, "A Streetcar Named Desire", directed by
John Woodson (NCSA ‘74) at the Porthouse Theatre in Ohio (the day of Mr. Brando’s passing), and played Steve Hubbell in "Streetcar" on Broadway with John C. Reilly.
Playwrights worked with include: Romulus Linney (over two dozen productions), Donald Margulies, Edward Albee, Aaron Sorkin, Ellen MacLaughlin, Mark Finley (NCSA ‘87), Jason Craig and T. Cat Ford.
Other Broadway: BUS STOP with Mary Louise Parker (NCSA ‘86), A FEW GOOD MEN (Nat'l Tour, LA Dramalogue Award)
Regional and Internat’l Theaters: The National Theatre of Oslo, The WILMA Theatre, The Philadelphia Theatre Company, The Longwharf, Willaimstown Theatre Festival, Baltimore Center Stage, Actor’s Theatre of Louisville, Theatre for a New City, Ensemble Studio Theatre (member), TOSOS II, The Signature Theatre in N.Y.(Founded with James Houghton and Romulus Linney)
Film Directors:David Wain “The Ten”, M. Night Shyamalan “The Village”, Steven Soderbergh ”Erin Brockovich”, Tim Robbins ”Dead Man Walking”, “The Cradle Will Rock”, Barbara Schock(2000 Acadamy Award-Short Feature, “My Mother Dreams...”), Paul Thomas Anderson ”Magnolia”, Phil Johnston ”1,000 Words”, and Susan Batten”Night School”(NCSA‘87)
Television: 11 guest roles on the 'Law & Order' franchise,'Cracker' (series regular), ‘The Jury’, ‘6 degrees’, ‘The Black Donnelly’s’, 'A Season for Miracles', 'The Yearling' for Hallmark.

Lisa Tharps

Lisa Tharps
Titania and Hippolyta in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream at The Shakespeare Theatre. Appeared on Broadway in August Wilson’s “King Hedley II” and in the off-Broadway and national touring productions of the Pulitzer Prize-winning “Wit.” TV appearances include NBC's “Third Watch” and “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” and CBS’s “Presidio Med.” Other theatre credits include John Houseman’s The Acting Company.

Jeffries Thaiss

Jeffries Thaiss
Regional: “Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde,” “Ten Little Indians,” “A Flea in her Ear,” “The Gamester” (Repertory Theatre of St. Louis/Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park); “Macbeth,” “Richard II” (Shakespeare Theatre); “A Midsummer Night's Dream” (Seattle Repertory Theatre); “Holiday,” “She Loves Me,” “Candida,” “Monster,” “Anna Karenina,” “Piaf” (Olney Theatre Center); “A Life in the Theatre” (Syracuse Stage); “Deathtrap” (Cape Playhouse/Ogunquit Playhouse); “A Midsummer Night's Dream,” “A Christmas Carol” (Great Lakes Theater Festival); “Two by Two” (Riverside Theatre); “The Witch of Edmonton” (Brick Playhouse/Festival of Art and Ideas). New York: “A Midsummer Night's Dream” (Expanded Arts); numerous off-off-Broadway and comedy club credits with the JokeFun Boys.

Lauren Ward

Lauren Ward
Baroness Schrader in Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber’s London revival of “The Sound of Music,” directed by Jeremy Sams. Broadway roles include Young Sally in “Follies” and Martha Jefferson in revival of “1776.” Appeared as Maria/Marian in “The Heiress” and Heavenly Friend/Julie Jordan in “Carousel,” both at Lincoln Center. Off-Broadway roles include the lead in “Violet” (Drama Desk nomination for Best Actress in a Musical) and Jennie/Bridget in premiere of “Jack’s Holiday,” both directed by Susan Schulman at Playwrights Horizons; and Sondheim’s musical “Saturday Night” at the Second Stage Theater. Regional theatre credits include Laura in “The Glass Menagerie” and Celia in “As You Like It” at the Great Lakes Theater Festival; “The Royal Family” and “Tartuffe” with the Utah Shakespearean Festival; and Juliet in “Romeo and Juliet” at Rhode Island Shakespeare.

Kevin Wheatley

Kevin Wheatley
After starring in three network TV pilots, several films and many commercials, Kevin Wheatley set his sights on creating his own production company.  Under the new company name, "The International Danger Alliance", Kevin wrote a screenplay for a high concept post-apocalyptic political comedy entitled "The Beach Party at the Threshold of Hell".  As well as writing the script, Kevin also acted in the film alongside many other NCSA alumni and directed the film alongside NCSA alum Jonny Gillette.  The now completed film has been given a coveted distribution deal and will be opening theatrically in 30 cities on October 19th 2007.  As for the future, Kevin is developing a television series that will continue the film's story, tentatively titled "Life and Times in the Threshold of Hell".  Also, Kevin is developing another screenplay, "The Henchmen", with plans to begin production in New Orleans in 2008.

Jeremy Webb

Jeremy Webb
Appeared off-Broadway in: Paula Vogel's "The Baltimore Waltz" directed by Mark Brokaw at the Signature Theatre, "Tabletop" (Drama Desk Award), "Summer '69" and "Three O'Clock in Brooklyn." Workshops include: "Tom Jones," "Monica! The Musical" (MTC), "Dance of the Vampires" (John Caird, director), and "Royal Family of Broadway" (Jerry Zaks, director). Also appeared at The Old Globe, McCarter, Long Wharf, Milwaukee, Indiana, St. Louis Repertory, Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera, Westport Country Playhouse, Cape Playhouse, Ogunquit Playhouse, Maine State Music Theatre, Actors Co. of Pennsylvania, New York Stage and Film, Hartford Theatreworks, and North Shore Music Theatre. Did "Antony and Cleopatra" and "The Bakkhai" for Gerald Freedman at Great Lakes Theater Festival. Television appearances include: "Law and Order" (guest star), "Law and Order: Criminal Intent," "Law and Order: SVU," "Shattered City: The Halifax Explosion," "Blessed Stranger: After Flight 111," "Lex," "Pit Pony," and three seasons of "Guiding Light." Film includes: LOVE WALKED IN. Jeremy Webb played Francesco Andreini in Lincoln Center Theater's production of Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty's "The Glorious Ones," directed by Graciela Daniele, October 11, 2007 - January 6, 2008 at the Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater.

Celia Weston

Celia Weston
Tony and Drama Desk nominee and Outer Critics Circle Award for “The Last Night of Ballyhoo”; other Broadway credits include “True West,” “Summer and Smoke,” “Suddenly Last Summer,” “The Lady From Dubuque” with Irene Worth and “Loose Ends” with Kevin Kline. Off-Broadway credits include “Bargains,” “Far Off Sweet Forever” and “Please Hang Up and Dial Again.” Regional theatre credits include “Ghost on Fire,” “The Rose Tattoo,” “Angel Street” and “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.” Academy Award nominee for Best Supporting Actress for DEAD MAN WALKING (Tim Robbins, director); other film appearances include RUNAWAY JURY, HULK, HOW TO LOSE A GUY IN 10 DAYS, FLIRTING WITH DISASTER (David Russell), UNSTRUNG HEROES (Diane Keaton), HARD PROMISES (Lee Grant), LITTLE MAN TATE (Jodie Foster), A NEW LIFE (Alan Alda), THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY (Anthony Minghella) and SNOW FALLING ON CEDARS (Diane Keaton). Well-known for role as Jolene in CBS series “Alice”; other TV credits include pilots for NBC and FOX and “The Stronger” for NET.

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