Eileen Bluestone Sherman is an American writer. Throughout the course of her career, she has been a playwright, lyricist, young adult novelist, television writer, theater and music producer, and professor of dramatic literature. [1] Bluestone Sherman is best known for the children's book The Odd Potato, the young adult novel Monday in Odessa, and the musical Perfect Picture. Bluestone Sherman is also the co-founder and co-producer of the Indie Collaborative, a group of independent musicians across genres who perform together, share their work, and explore new collaborations. [2]
Bluestone Sherman and her sister, Gail C. Bluestone, make up the musical theater songwriting duo known as “The Bluestone Sisters", for whom Eileen is the lyricist and Gail composes. [3] Their creative partnership began in 1982 when they wrote a musical for Hallmark's Coterie Theatre in Kansas City, Missouri. [2] Tony and Emmy winner Lillias White has been called the Bluestone Sisters' "muse," performing their single "One More Day," [4] appearing on their albums Perfect Picture and The Odd Potato, [5] [6] and featuring their song "A Little Imagination" in her first solo studio album, Get Yourself Some Happy, released in 2021. [7]
The Bluestone Sisters' musical, The Happiest Day in Heaven, played at the Shofar Festival at the Jewish Museum on Sunday, September 13, 1998. [8]
The Sisters' jazz single, "We Talk Without Words," was recorded by Christian and Melissa Hoff and released in 2022. [9]
The Bluestone Sisters musical Perfect Picture is based on the life of Norman Rockwell and debuted (under the title Rockwell) at the Southern Vermont Art Center in Manchester, VT in 1992. [10] The musical returned to the same venue in 2018 featuring the talents of performers Lillias White, Scarlett Strallen, Sara Esty, Danny Gardner, and Jeremy Benton. [11] [12] It was directed and choreographed by Randy Skinner, musically directed by Timothy Graphenreed, and produced by Joshua Sherman. [13] The performance, in conjunction with Manchester and "Arlington's 4 Freedoms Festival," was listed on The New York Times list of 15 summer theater festivals to see in 2018. [14]
A studio album titled Perfect Picture…But Was All This Real? [15] was produced by Bluestone Sherman's family production company, 6-10 PRODUCTIONS, in 2013, featuring the talents of Broadway stars Debbie Gravitte, Ron Holgate, Judy Kaye, Mark Jacoby, Beth Leavel, Andrea McArdle, Emily Skinner, Randy Skinner, Bob Stillman, Tom Wopat, Lillias White, and Karen Ziemba. [5]
Bluestone Sherman wrote a children's book called The Odd Potato in 1984 based on a story from her family's history. [16] [17] A concert musical based on the tale was developed by the Bluestone Sisters and performed at Symphony Space in 2003, directed and choreographed by Randy Skinner. [16] A subsequent studio album (The Odd Potato: The Broadway Album) was produced two years later in 2005 and featured performances by 20 Tony Award winners including Jim Dale, Dan Fogler, Sutton Foster, Boyd Gaines, Debbie Gravitte, Judd Hirsch, Ron Holgate, Cady Huffman, Judy Kaye, Dick Latessa, Hal Linden, Priscilla Lopez, John Mahoney, Donna McKechnie, Michele Pawk, Maryann Plunkett, Hal Prince, Elaine Stritch, Lillias White and Scott Wise. [6] [18]
Bluestone Sherman won a Chicago/Midwest Emmy for The Odd Potato television special. [19]
Monday in Odessa, a novel about a young Russian Jewish girl living in the Soviet Union, was published by the Jewish Publication Society in 1986. [20] The book won the National Jewish Book Award for Children's Literature in 1987 [21] and is featured in the University of Nebraska Kearney library's Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People list. [22]
Bluestone Sherman's book, Independence Avenue, [23] celebrates Kansas City history and was honored by the Kansas City Public Library Board of Trustees by featuring the title in their "Community Bookshelf," a unique facade for downtown city parking. [24]
In the summer of 2020, Bluestone Sherman released the audiobook for her young adult novel, The Violin Players. [25] The book is set in the 1990s and tells the story of a non-observant Jewish teen who learns to stand up against antisemitic bullies at her new high school. [26]
Bluestone Sherman became a theater professor at Baker University's School of Professional and Graduate Studies in 1997 and remains an adjunct instructor today. [1] In 2012, the University awarded her with the title of Outstanding Professor of the Year of the Graduate Division. [27]
In 2015, Bluestone Sherman co-founded the Indie Collaborative alongside Americana Roots musician Grant Maloy Smith. The Indie Collaborative offers free membership to independent musicians and industry professionals and provides a community to work together and support one another. Bluestone Sherman has produced private showcases and public concerts with the group at venues including the Drama League, Carnegie Hall, and Lincoln Center. [2] [28] Notable members include lyricist Mike Greenly, English blues guitarist Trevor Sewell, Stomp veteran Keith "Wildchild" Middleton, and Grammy Award winners Wouter Kellerman, Ricky Kej, Herschel Garfein, and Kabir Sehgal. [29] [30] [31] [32]
Bluestone Sherman's young adult novel Monday in Odessa won the 1987 National Jewish Book Award for Children’s Literature. [21]
In 1990, Bluestone Sherman was one of five winning entrants of the Children Programming Single Program category at the Chicago/Midwest Emmy Awards for producing The Odd Potato. [19]
Bluestone Sherman married her husband, who works in medicine, five days after graduating from college. She reports being the "primary breadwinner" for the first three years of her marriage and credits this time as the start of her lifelong love of working in many different fields. [1]
Bluestone Sherman has two children, a son and a daughter. Her daughter Jenny's experiences with antisemitism during her high school years was the inspiration for Bluestone Sherman's The Violin Players. [26]
Bluestone Sherman formed her family's production company, 6-10 PRODUCTIONS with her two children in 2003. [5]
George Simon Kaufman was an American playwright, theater director and producer, humorist, and drama critic. In addition to comedies and political satire, he wrote several musicals for the Marx Brothers and others. He won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for the musical Of Thee I Sing in 1932, and won again in 1937 for the play You Can't Take It with You. He also won the Tony Award for Best Director in 1951 for the musical Guys and Dolls.
My Sister Eileen is a series of autobiographical short stories by Ruth McKenney, originally published in The New Yorker, which eventually inspired many other works: her 1938 book My Sister Eileen, a play, a musical, a radio play, two motion pictures, and a CBS television series in the 1960–1961 season.
Jennifer Westfeldt is an American actress, screenwriter, and producer. She is best known for co-writing, co-producing, and starring in the 2002 indie film Kissing Jessica Stein, for which she received an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best First Screenplay and a Golden Satellite Award for Best Actress - Comedy or Musical. She is also known for writing, producing, starring in, and making her directorial debut in the 2012 indie film, Friends with Kids, which was included on New York Magazine's Top Ten Movies of 2012 list, as well as NPR's Top 12 of 2012.
Richard Morton Sherman is an American songwriter who specialized in musical films with his brother Robert B. Sherman. According to the official Walt Disney Company website and independent fact checkers, "the Sherman Brothers were responsible for more motion picture musical song scores than any other songwriting team in film history."
James Gray is an American film director and screenwriter. Since his feature debut Little Odessa in 1994, he has made seven other features including We Own the Night (2007), Two Lovers (2008), The Immigrant (2013), The Lost City of Z (2016), Ad Astra (2019), and Armageddon Time (2022). Five of his films have competed for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.
Barbara Barrie is an American actress and author.
Addison Timlin is an American actress. She played Jami Lerner in The Town That Dreaded Sundown (2014), Colleen Lunsford in Little Sister (2016) and Sasha Bingham in Showtime's Californication.
Lillias White is an American actress and singer. She is particularly known for her performances in Broadway musicals. In 1989 she won an Obie Award for her performance in the Off-Broadway musical Romance in Hard Times. In 1997 she won the Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical and Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical for portraying Sonja in Cy Coleman's The Life. She was nominated for a Tony Award again in 2010 for her work as Funmilayo in Fela Kuti's Fela!.
Amen Corner is a musical with a book by Philip Rose and Peter Udell, lyrics by Udell, music by Garry Sherman, orchestration by Garry Sherman & Dunn Pearson and dance arrangements by Dunn Pearson & George Butcher, based on the 1954 play of the same title by James Baldwin. The score consists of mostly gospel-inspired music.
David Pomeranz is an American singer, composer, lyricist, and writer for musical theater. He is also an ambassador for Operation Smile, a foundation dedicated to cleft lip and palate and a member of the Church of Scientology.
Paula Stone was an American theater and motion pictures actress from New York City.
Greta Celeste Gerwig is an American actress, writer, and director. Initially known for working on mumblecore films, she has since expanded from acting in and co-writing independent films to directing major studio films. Gerwig was included in the annual Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world in 2018.
Thomas Kail is an American theatre and television director, known for directing the Off-Broadway and Broadway productions of Lin-Manuel Miranda's musicals In the Heights and Hamilton, garnering the 2016 Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical for the latter. Kail was awarded the Kennedy Center Honor in 2018. He has also directed the television series Fosse/Verdon (2019), for which he was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards.
Nola Chilton was an American-born Israeli theater director and acting teacher. She was a pioneer of socially engaged theater in Israel. In 2013, Chilton was awarded the Israel Prize for theater.
Grant Maloy Smith is an American singer, songwriter, musician, and former businessman from Jacksonville, Florida.
Bedknobs and Broomsticks is a stage musical based on the 1971 Walt Disney film and the stories by Mary Norton. It features the original songs by Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman, new songs and additional music and lyrics by Neil Bartram and book by Brian Hill.
Alana Mychal Haim is an American musician and actress. She is a member of the pop rock band Haim, along with her two older sisters Este and Danielle, where she performs piano, guitar and vocals. In 2020, the band received a nomination for Grammy Award for Album of the Year for their third album, Women in Music Pt. III.
Everything Everywhere All at Once is a 2022 American absurdist comedy-drama film written and directed by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, who produced it with Anthony and Joe Russo and Jonathan Wang. The film incorporates elements from several genres and film media, including surreal comedy, science fiction, fantasy, martial arts films, immigrant narrative, and animation. Michelle Yeoh stars as Evelyn Quan Wang, a Chinese-American immigrant who, while audited by the IRS, discovers that she must connect with parallel universe versions of herself to prevent a powerful being from destroying the multiverse. The film features Stephanie Hsu, Ke Huy Quan, Jamie Lee Curtis, and James Hong.
Odessa Zion Segall Adlon, also known as Odessa A'zion, is an American actress. On television, she is known for her roles in the CBS series Fam (2019) and the Netflix series Grand Army (2020). Her films include Hellraiser (2022), The Inhabitant (2022) and Sitting in Bars with Cake (2023).
Mars Storm Rucker is an American actor, singer, dancer, choreographer, writer, collaborative artist and musician. They are best known for being the first out nonbinary and genderqueer person on Broadway. They made their Broadway debut in 2019 as Alline Bullock, Tina Turner's sister in the musical Tina, nominated for 12 Tony Awards. The role also made them the first out non-binary person to originate a role on Broadway.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)