Alex Harvey | |
---|---|
Born | |
Education | BA in directing and ethnomusicology |
Alma mater | Northwestern University |
Occupation |
|
Years active | 2003–present |
Alex Harvey is an American filmmaker, theater director, writer, producer, and musician based in Cortlandt, New York. He has directed several films, including Walden: Life in the Woods which screened at numerous festivals in 2017 and 2018 and was released on digital platforms in October 2019. He has also directed numerous regional theater productions including Underneath the Lintel and I Am My Own Wife . Harvey also played mandolin in GEICO's nationwide "Happier than" ad campaign.
Alex Harvey was born and raised in Denver, Colorado. [1] He attended Graland Country Day School there as a child and East High School as a teenager. [2] He ultimately graduated high school from Colorado Academy [1] in 1999. [3] Growing up, he acted in numerous high school [1] and community theater productions. [2] After high school, he attended Northwestern University, earning degrees in directing and ethnomusicology. [1] He also directed stage productions while at Northwestern. [4]
One of Harvey's first professional stage credits after graduating from Northwestern was as the director of General Desdemona, which was staged during the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in August 2004. [5] Harvey later relocated to New York City. In 2007, he directed a production of I Am My Own Wife which was staged in both Des Moines, Iowa (at the Civic Center of Greater Des Moines) [6] and Houston, Texas (at the Stages Repertory Theatre). [7] This would lead to him directing several other plays in the Houston area in 2008, including Underneath the Lintel (Alley Theatre) [8] and Mr. Marmalade (Stages). [9]
In 2009, when Harvey was the artist-in-residence at the University of California, Berkeley's Arts Research Center, he co-wrote an operatic adaptation of Michael Pollan's 2001 book, The Botany of Desire . He worked with both Pollan and fellow artist-in-residence John Gromada to devise the musical. [10] A reading of the adaptation was performed at Berkeley in April 2009. [11] In March 2010, Harvey directed the students of the American Conservatory Theater's MFA program in a production of O Lovely Glowworm, or Scenes of Great Beauty at San Francisco's Zeum Theater. [12]
In January 2011, [13] Harvey returned to the Stages Repertory Theater in Houston where he directed a production of Oh, the Humanity. [14] Later that year, he co-directed (with Melissa Kievman and Brian Mertes) a production of Balm in Gilead , which was staged for one night in an empty warehouse in Industry City in Brooklyn's Sunset Park neighborhood. [15]
In August 2013, Harvey directed Waiting for Waiting for Godot which was staged during the New York International Fringe Festival. [16] It went on to be honored with the Overall Excellence Award by the festival [17] and was given a brief extended run of three nights the following month. [18] Throughout this time, [1] Harvey taught at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, [2] directing and writing productions for graduate students including stagings of an adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire [19] and an adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's Peer Gynt called Peer@Me. [20]
Beginning in 2012, Harvey started appearing in a variety of GEICO insurance ads for the nationwide "Happier than" campaign in which he played the mandolin. [1] He would later appear as the featured mandolin and tenor guitar player on the Michael Cerveris & Loose Cattle album, North of Houston (2014), [21] and other subsequent recordings. [22]
In 2016, Harvey began filming for Walden: Life in the Woods supported in part by an incentive grant from the Colorado Economic Development Commission. [23] Walden is loosely based on the Henry David Thoreau book of the same name. Harvey had been devising the film with a group of other Colorado natives as far back as 2009. [2] Demián Bichir and T.J. Miller were added to the cast in August 2016. [24] The film was shot and set entirely in Colorado and had its premiere at the Denver Film Festival in November 2017. [2] It went on to appear at numerous film festivals in 2017 and 2018 including the Whistler Film Festival, [25] RiverRun International Film Festival, [26] and Oaxaca FilmFest. [27] It received a wide release on various digital platforms in October 2019. [28]
Harvey also co-directed [29] (with director Brian Mertes) the film, I Am a Seagull, [30] a hybrid narrative film and documentary [31] that follows the Lake Lucille Chekhov Project as it stages its annual production of Anton Chekhov's The Seagull . It premiered in March 2018 in New York City. [30] Harvey also directed a black-and-white silent film called, The Unsilent Picture, which stars Bill Irwin. It was screened throughout October 2018 in a tent theater at the Philipsburg Manor in Sleepy Hollow, New York, and each showing was accompanied by a live soundtrack. [32]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | Walden: Life in the Woods | Director | Wide release in October 2019 |
2018 | I Am a Seagull | Co-director, creative producer | |
The Unsilent Picture | Director | Silent film | |
Year | Title | Role | Dates | Venue | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | General Desdemona | Director | August 9–27, 2004 | Rocket@DeMarco Roxy Art House | Edinburgh Festival Fringe |
2006 | The Bird and Mr. Banks | Director | ? - May 13, 2006 | Live Bait Theatre (Chicago) | World Premiere play by Keith Huff |
2007 | I Am My Own Wife | Director | March 23 – April 7, 2007 | Civic Center of Greater Des Moines | Regional; StageWest Theatre Company |
April 13 – May 10, 2007 | Stages Repertory Theatre (Houston) | Regional | |||
2008 | Underneath the Lintel | Director | March 21 – April 20, 2008 | Alley Theatre (Houston) | Regional |
Mr. Marmalade | Director | May 16 – June 1, 2008 | Stages Repertory Theatre | Regional | |
2009 | The Botany of Desire | Co-writer | April 24, 2009 | Wheeler Auditorium (University of California, Berkeley) | Reading of a musical adaptation |
2010 | O Lovely Glowworm, or Scenes of Great Beauty | Director | March 4–20, 2010 | Zeum Theatre (San Francisco) | American Conservatory Theater MFA program |
2011 | Oh, the Humanity | Director | January 26 – February 20, 2011 | Stages Repertory Theatre | Regional |
Balm in Gilead | Co-director | June 5, 2011 | Warehouse in Industry City, Sunset Park, Brooklyn | ||
2013 | Waiting for Waiting for Godot | Director | August 21–25, 2013 | The Kraine Theater | New York International Fringe Festival |
September 14–16, 2013 | The Players Theatre | ||||
Uta Thyra Hagen was a German-American actress and theatre practitioner. She originated the role of Martha in the 1962 Broadway premiere of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? by Edward Albee, who called her "a profoundly truthful actress". Because Hagen was on the Hollywood blacklist, in part because of her association with Paul Robeson, her film opportunities dwindled and she focused her career on New York theatre.
The Seagull is a play by Russian dramatist Anton Chekhov, written in 1895 and first produced in 1896. The Seagull is generally considered to be the first of his four major plays. It dramatises the romantic and artistic conflicts between four characters: the famous middlebrow story writer Boris Trigorin, the ingenue Nina, the fading actress Irina Arkadina, and her son the symbolist playwright Konstantin Treplev.
Richard Schechner is University Professor Emeritus at the Tisch School of the Arts, New York University, and editor of TDR: The Drama Review.
Atlantic Theater Company is an Off-Broadway non-profit theater, whose mission is to produce great plays "simply and truthfully utilizing an artistic ensemble." The company was founded in 1985 by David Mamet, William H. Macy, and 30 of their acting students from New York University, inspired by the historical examples of the Group Theatre and Stanislavski. Atlantic believes that the story of a play and the intent of its playwright are at the core of the creative process.
Larry Pine is an American actor.
John Conklin is an international theater designer, dramaturg and teaches in the Department of Design for Stage and Film at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.
Bill Bowers is an American mime artist and actor based in New York City. As an actor, mime and educator, Bill has performed throughout the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia. He is a Movement for Actors Instructor at NYU Tisch School for the Arts and also teaches at the William Esper Studio and the Stella Adler Studio in NYC.
Lucian Pintilie was a Romanian theatre, film, and opera director, as well as screenwriter. His career in theatre, opera, film and television has gained him international recognition.
Kevin Cahoon is an American actor, theatre director, and singer-songwriter.
Tom Donaghy is an American playwright who works in television and film.
Michael Mayer is an American theatre director, filmmaker, and playwright. He won the Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical in 2007 for directing Spring Awakening.
Enda Walsh is an Irish playwright.
Jason Thomas Butler Harner is an American actor.
Zoe Swicord Kazan is an American actress, playwright, and screenwriter. Kazan made her acting debut in Swordswallowers and Thin Men (2003) and later appeared in films such as The Savages (2007), Revolutionary Road (2008), and It's Complicated (2009). She starred in Happy. Thank You. More. Please. (2010), Meek's Cutoff (2010), Ruby Sparks (2012), and What If (2013). In 2014, she appeared in the HBO miniseries Olive Kitteridge, for which she received an Emmy nomination. She portrayed Emily Gardner in the film The Big Sick (2017), and in 2018, she appeared in the Coen brothers film The Ballad of Buster Scruggs in the episode "The Gal Who Got Rattled".
William Missouri Downs is an American comedy writer, playwright, screenwriter, stage director, and author
Whit Hertford is an American theatre director, writer, and actor.
Satish Vasant Alekar is a Marathi playwright, actor, and theatre director. A founder member of the Theatre Academy of Pune, and most known for his plays Mahanirvan (1974), Mahapoor (1975), Atirekee (1990), Pidhijat (2003), Mickey ani Memsahib (1973), and Begum Barve (1979), all of which he also directed for the Academy. Today, along with Mahesh Elkunchwar and Vijay Tendulkar he is one of the most influential and progressive playwrights not just in modern Marathi theatre, but also larger modern Indian theatre.
Juliet Rylance is an English actress and producer, known for her roles in The Knick and McMafia.
Aleksey Burago is a Russian-American theater director, founder and Artistic Director of The Russian Arts Theater and Studio (TRATS) in New York City.
Mia Barron is an American actor. She won an Obie for her performance in Hurricane Diane at New York Theatre Workshop. She also won an Obie and a Drama Desk Award for her work in the Off Broadway production of The Wolves. She Co-Created, along with director Lars Jan, a Theatrical adaptation of Joan Didion's The White Album, which premiered in New York to sold out houses at BAM's Harvey Theatre as part of the Next Wave Festival.She is known for her extensive New York City theater credits, alongside her television and independent film work, most recently Half Empty Half Full, which received a New York Film Award nomination for Best Ensemble. She is also known as the voice of Molotov Cocktease and Sally Impossible on the Cartoon Network’s long-running comic science-fiction series, The Venture Bros.