- Marcy Heisler
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Marcy Heisler (born 1967) is a musical theater writer and performer. As a performer, she has performed at Carnegie Hall, Birdland, and numerous other venues throughout the United States and Canada. Heisler was nominated for the 2009 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Lyrics for Dear Edwina.
Contents
Biography
Heisler was born in Deerfield, Illinois. She attended Northwestern University and graduated from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts Dramatic Writing Program.[1]
Career
Heisler met composer Zina Goldrich at a musical theater workshop in 1992,[2] and they have been working together since 1993.
Working with composer Goldrich, Heisler created the musical Adventures in Love — book by Shari Simpson and Charlie Shanian — which premiered in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 2000.[2] Later that year, the two women were chosen to be among the first 12 participants in a program from Musical Theater Works designed to support new musical theater talent while they developed new works for the organization to produce, with participants receiving $20,000 and medical insurance for up to three years during the development process.[3]
Heisler wrote book and lyrics, with Goldrich composing, for a musical adaptation of Junie B. Jones, the popular character created by author Barbara Park, produced by TheatreWorks USA, which premiered at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in July 2004. It received a 2005 Lucille Lortel Award nomination for Outstanding Musical.[4] An expanded version of the musical was staged in November 2005 at the Lucille Lortel theater; both the original and expanded productions received favorable reviews in The New York Times.[5][6] It was revived from March 2008 to May 2008 at the Lortel Theatre.
The musical Dear Edwina, with book and lyrics by Heisler and music by Goldrich, was produced Off-Broadway at the Daryl Roth Theatre in November 2008 and returned for a limited engagement on December 11, 2009.[7]
Heisler also works with Disney Theatricals and wrote new versions of 101 Dalmatians, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, and The Jungle Book. She has written material for such Disney projects as Johnny and the Sprites (Disney Television), Pooh’s Learning Adventures (Disney Toon Studios), and The D Show (Disney Interactive).[8][1] [9]
- Songs and recordings
Among the many contemporary standards by Goldrich and Heisler is "Taylor the Latte Boy", which became a song associated with Kristin Chenoweth — who sang "Taylor the Latte Boy" on The Rosie O'Donnell Show and The Late Late Show as well as the radio program A Prairie Home Companion — but which has been performed by many other singers including Susan Egan, Maggie Francisco, Linda Foster, Marty Thomas, John Tartaglia, and Alan Cumming. The comedy song tells the story of the singer's flirtation with a barista at Starbucks and was inspired by Heisler's and Goldrich's meeting a barista named Taylor in real life while mildly intoxicated.[10] Heisler has worked occasionally with other composers, as when she teamed with John Kavanaugh to write "Joseph's Lullaby," which was recorded by Michael Crawford in 1998 for On Eagle's Wings, his album of inspirational music.[11]
Their recording, Marcy & Zina: The Album was released on the Yellowsound Label (YSL 566493) in December 2009.[12]
The duo performs the "Marcy and Zina Show" in venues around the US, for example at the Kennedy Center and Baylor University in 2009. The show is a "showcase for their stage compositions".[13]
- Awards and honors
The writing partners were voted "Best Knocking on Broadway's Door Songwriting Team" in the Village Voice Best of NYC edition, won the 2000 Backstage Bistro award for "Songwriters of the Year,"[14] and were the 2002 recipients of ASCAP's Richard Rodgers New Horizons Theatre Award.[15]
Heisler and Goldrich also have received four MAC Awards, two for Song of the Year and two for Special Material, for their works "The Alto's Lament",[16] "Welcome The Rain," "The Music Of Your Life," and "The Morning After (Leave)."[10] They were nominated in 1998 for their song "Out of Love."[17] The writing team received the 2009 Fred Ebb Award. [18]
References
- ^ a b Heisler listing kennedy-center.org, accessed February 22, 2009
- ^ a b Dominic Papatola. "Theater: Getting a musical onstage is biggest adventure of all," St. Paul Pioneer Press (MN), April 7, 2000, page 1E.
- ^ Barry Singer. "Theater: An ample offer of help, with strings attached," The New York Times, August 27, 2000, Arts & Leisure section, p4.
- ^ Heisler & Goldrich's Junie B. Jones Returns to NY, Nov. 9-Dec. 3, Broadway World News Desk, October 4, 2005
- ^ Lawrence Van Gelder. Theater in Review: Adventures of a First Grader With Music as Sassy as She (review), The New York Times, July 27, 2004
- ^ Lawrence Van Gelder. Irrepressible, Bespectacled Girl Tackles First Grade (review), The New York Times, November 12, 2005
- ^ Gans, Andrew."Goldrich and Heisler's Dear Edwina to Play DR2 Theatre; CD Due in November", playbill.com, September 11, 2008
- ^ Biography mtishows.com, accessed January 31, 2010
- ^ Internet Movie Database listing imdb.com, accessed January 31, 2010
- ^ a b The story of Taylor
- ^ Deborah Evans Price (Billboard). "Crawford plays the choirboy again," Rocky Mountain News (CO), February 3, 1998, page 11D.
- ^ Suskin, Steven.ON THE RECORD: Off-Broadway's The People vs. Mona and "Marcy & Zina: The Album" playbill.com, December 27, 2009
- ^ Hoover, Carl."Songwriter says 'Marcy and Zina Show' the result of impatience"Tribune-Herald, wacotrib.com, February 12, 2009
- ^ Eleanor Charles. "The guide," The New York Times, April 23, 2000, page 7.
- ^ Bio at MTI Shows
- ^ Bill Ervolino. "Recognizing the cream of cabaret's crop," The Record (New Jersey), April 3, 1997, page Y12.
- ^ Bill Ervolino. "Cabaret's honor roll — handing out the MAC awards," The Record, April 2, 1999, page 25.
- ^ Hetrick, Adam."Heisler and Goldrich Are 2009 Fred Ebb Award Winners" playbill.com, November 5, 2009
External links
- Goldrich and Heisler official web site
- Off-Broadway Database listing, Marcy Heisler
- Internet Broadway Database listing
Categories: Songwriters from Illinois | American musical theatre lyricists | American dramatists and playwrights | Living people | 1967 births | People from Deerfield, Illinois
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