Richard Frankel | |
---|---|
Born | Brooklyn, New York |
Alma mater | Brooklyn College |
Occupation(s) | Theatrical producer and general manager |
Known for | The Producers, Hairspray |
Spouse | Kathleen Clark |
Richard Frankel is an American theatrical producer and general manager who has been producing and managing on and off-Broadway since 1970. He has been working in partnership with Tom Viertel, Steve Baruch, and Marc Routh since 1985.
Richard Frankel was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1947. [1] His work in the theatre began at 16 in a Catskills hotel nightclub, and he worked for The Barry Farber Show on WOR AM in New York while a student at Brooklyn College. After serving for two years in the Peace Corps in Ethiopia, he worked as a stage manager and technician in New York and Europe, including at La Mama Experimental Theatre Club and the Public Theater in New York and the Mickery Theatre in Amsterdam. Upon returning to the United States in 1973, he worked off-Broadway and in regional theaters as a stage manager, administrator, press agent and marketing director, and in 1981 became Managing Director of Circle Repertory Company.
At Circle Rep he worked on dozens of world premieres of plays by playwrights including Lanford Wilson, Sam Shepard, David Mamet and Jules Feiffer with an acting company that included Jeff Daniels, Tanya Berezin, Judd Hirsch, Barnard Hughes, William Hurt, Richard Thomas and Fritz Weaver. Plays included Talley's Folley, 5th of July, Buried Child, Fool for Love and Balm in Gilead directed by John Malkovich in a co production with the Steppenwolf Theatre Company.
In 1985, he formed Richard Frankel Productions and together with partners Tom Viertel and Steve Baruch produced Penn & Teller's first off-Broadway show, which first brought them to national attention. [2] The show was critically acclaimed, and the new-formed producing partnership subsequently presented Penn & Teller on national tour and on Broadway.
In 1991 Marc Routh was added as a producing partner and they together produced a string of successful Off-Broadway shows including Driving Miss Daisy , Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune and Love Letters . In 1994 Richard Frankel Productions and Marc Routh, along with others, produced Stomp , which ran at the Orpheum Theatre in New York City for 29 years and still tours throughout the United States. The Viertel/Routh/Baruch/Frankel partnership's early Broadway projects included Angels in America Part One and Part Two, The Sound of Music , and Smokey Joe's Cafe , which would go on to become Broadway's longest-running revue.
In 2000, Frankel and his partners were selected by Mel Brooks to serve on the team of producers for The Producers . The musical would go on to break the all-time Tony Awards records by earning twelve awards in 2001, winning the Tony Award in all categories for which it was eligible. [3] Frankel's partnership followed this success with another hit when they opened Hairspray in 2003. Other Broadway productions included the John Doyle-directed revivals of Sweeney Todd and Company , the Patti LuPone-led revival of Gypsy , and the Catherine Zeta-Jones-led revival of A Little Night Music .
During this time period, Frankel and his team also produced in London, including transfers of their Broadway mountings and new productions, and across Asia as part of a partnership with Broadway Asia, owned by Routh. They also operated the Arts Theatre in London from 2000 to 2005.
In 2008, Frankel formed Frankel Green Theatrical Management with his long-term general managing partner Laura Green in order to expand general management services. [4] Apart from shows produced by Frankel and his partners, the company managed the Broadway productions Rock of Ages, Finian's Rainbow, and Forever Tango. Green left the company in 2013 to become the Production Manager of Paper Mill Playhouse. [5]
In 2012, Frankel and his partners Viertel, Baruch, and Routh announced plans to build and produce a new cabaret space 54 Below. [6] The space opened on June 2, 2012, with a two-week engagement by Patti LuPone. It has gone on to play over one thousand shows by over two hundred artists. In addition to earning many cabaret awards, 54 Below was awarded a 2022 Tony Award Honor for Excellence in the Theatre for its mission to preserve the music of Broadway and expand the art of the cabaret.[ citation needed ]
Frankel is married to playwright Kathleen Clark and has three children and four grandchildren. [7]
The Really Useful Group Ltd. (RUG) is an international company set up in 1977 by Andrew Lloyd Webber. It is involved in theatre, film, television, video and concert productions, merchandising, magazine publishing, records and music publishing. The name is inspired by a phrase from the children's book series The Railway Series in which Thomas the Tank Engine and the other locomotives are referred to as "Really Useful Engines".
Timothy Busfield is an American actor and director. He has played Elliot Weston on the television series thirtysomething; Mark, the brother-in-law of Ray Kinsella in Field of Dreams; and Danny Concannon on the television series The West Wing. In 1991 he received a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for thirtysomething. He is also the founder of the 501(c)(3) non-profit arts organization Theatre for Children, Inc. In 2024 he was inducted into the Sacramento Baseball Hall of Fame as a pitcher.
William Ivey LongII is an American costume designer for stage and film. His most notable work includes the Broadway shows The Producers, Hairspray, Nine, Crazy for You, Grey Gardens, Young Frankenstein, Cinderella, Bullets Over Broadway and On the Twentieth Century.
Smokey Joe's Cafe is a musical revue showcasing 39 pop standards, including rock and roll and rhythm and blues songs written by songwriters Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. The Original Broadway cast recording, Smokey Joe's Cafe: The Songs of Leiber and Stoller, won a Grammy Award in 1997.
Jules Fisher is an American lighting designer and producer. He is credited with lighting designs for more than 300 productions over the course of his 50-year career of Broadway and off-Broadway shows, as well extensive work in film, ballet, opera, television, and rock and roll concert tours. He has been nominated 24 times for Tony Awards, more than any other lighting designer, and won nine Tony awards for Lighting Design, also more than any other lighting designer.
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The Laurence Olivier Awards, or simply TheOlivier Awards, are presented annually by the Society of London Theatre to recognise excellence in professional theatre in London. The awards were originally known as the Society of West End Theatre Awards, but they were renamed in honour of the British actor of the same name in 1984.
Karen Mason is an American musical theatre actress and singer. She has appeared on stage in Broadway theatre, notably as Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard, and is a multiple award-winning cabaret performer.
The Los Angeles Civic Light Opera (LACLO) was an American theatre/opera company in Los Angeles, California. Founded under the motto "Light Opera in the Grand Opera manner" in 1938 by impresario Edwin Lester, the organization presented fifty seasons of theatre before closing due to financial reasons in 1987. Typically the LACLO presented four to six productions during an annual season. The company produced or co-produced several of their own shows in addition to bringing in shows from Broadway to California, often with their original casts. Productions that originated at the LACLO and then went on to wider success, included Song of Norway (1944), Magdalena (1948), Kismet (1953), Peter Pan (1954) and Gigi (1973). Initially the organization mainly presented American operettas, but by the 1960s the company was presenting mostly musical theatre; although the company never completely left its roots.
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Marc Routh is a theatrical producer, entrepreneur and professor.
Broadway Asia is an international Broadway production company based in New York City. It was founded by partners Simone Genatt and Marc Routh in 1991.
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