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Amanda Green

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Residence
  
Manhattan, New York

Spouse
  
Jeffrey Kaplan (m. 1999)

Role
  
Actress

Name
  
Amanda Green

Website
  
greenpiecemusic.com


Amanda Green www4pictureszimbiocomgi2013DramaDeskAwards

Born
  
December 29, 1963 (age 60) (
1963-12-29
)
New York City, New York, United States

Alma mater
  
Brown UniversityCircle in the Square Theatre School

Occupation
  
Actress, singer, songwriter

Movies
  
The Refrigerator, The Tale of the Magic Flute

Parents
  
Phyllis Newman, Adolph Green

Albums
  
Junk and Stuff, Wicked Witch, The Nineteen Hundreds

Similar People
  
Tom Kitt, Trey Anastasio, Doug Wright, Jeff Whitty, Lin‑Manuel Miranda

2013 tony awards red carpet with amanda green


Amanda Green (born December 29, 1963) is an American actress, singer and songwriter.

Contents

Amanda Green Hands on a Hardbody CoComposer Amanda Green Will Have a

Row J Episode 2- Amanda Green


Early life

Amanda Green Herkie Time Amanda Green on Her Dream Collaboration for

Born in New York City, New York, Green was raised on the Upper West Side with brother Adam by parents Phyllis Newman, an actress and singer, and Adolph Green, a lyricist and playwright.

Amanda Green Amanda Green Photos The Tony Award Nominees Pose in NYC

From an early age she was exposed to major talents of Broadway musical theatre, including Leonard Bernstein, Jule Styne, and Cy Coleman, all of whom were regular guests in the household.

Amanda Green Manhattan Musical Theater Lab Amanda Green

At the age of nine, she starred as Maria in her summer camp's production of West Side Story, and decided to focus on performing.

Amanda Green Amanda Green Pictures Photos amp Images Zimbio

After graduating from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, Green attended an actors' training program at the Circle in the Square Theatre School in New York City and then spent two seasons at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in Williamstown, Massachusetts. She began writing songs and performing in Manhattan cabarets like Joe's Pub.

Career

Amanda Green amandagreenjpg

In the mid-1990s, inspired by Lyle Lovett's writing, she moved to Nashville, Tennessee, to write country music.

In Los Angeles, California, Green wrote the lyrics for two musicals, Once Upon a Primetime (2002) and Up the Week Without a Paddle (2000), which earned her a nomination from the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle.

In New York City, a concert of Green's original revue Put a Little Love in Your Mouth!, was performed at off-Broadway's Second Stage Theatre in March 2003, and featured Jessica Molaskey, Mario Cantone and Billy Stritch. A recording of a live performance was released on compact disc.

She also wrote the lyrics for and co-starred with Nancy Opel in For the Love of Tiffany: A Wifetime Original Musical, which enjoyed a sold-out run at The Wings Theater as part of the New York International Fringe Festival in August 2003.

In July 2004, Green and her mother co-hosted a concert titled Bernstein, Comden and Green: A Musical Celebration at the Venetian Theatre at the Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts in Katonah, New York, with performers Sylvia McNair, Judy Kaye, Jason Graae and Hugh Russell.

In 2009, Green appeared in concert at Feinstein's at the Loews Regency, in New York City, with performers Jenn Colella, Ann Harada and Norm Lewis.

Green enrolled in the BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theatre Workshop, where she met Tom Kitt, who suggested the two collaborate on a musical stage adaptation of the comedy-drama film High Fidelity (2000). In a move reminiscent of the days when Broadway musicals routinely tested the waters out-of-town first, the show had a one-month run at Boston's Colonial Theatre before heading to New York City. After eighteen previews, the production opened on December 7, 2006, at the Imperial Theatre in New York City where, hampered by poor reviews, it closed after fourteen performances.

Green and Kitt are writing original songs for a movie musical version of Debbie Does Dallas.

The musical Bring It On: The Musical, with music and lyrics by Lin-Manuel Miranda, Tom Kitt and Green and book by Jeff Whitty, premiered at the Alliance Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia, on January 16, 2011.

Green has written a number of songs with Phish leader Trey Anastasio, one of which ("Burn That Bridge") was performed live by Anastasio in May 2010.

Green and Anastasio wrote the music, with lyrics by Green and the book by Doug Wright, for Hands on a Hardbody, which is a stage musical version of the documentary film Hands on a Hard Body: The Documentary (1997). The musical had its world premiere at the La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego, California, in April 2012, and ran on Broadway in April 2013. Green and Anastasio received a nomination for the Tony Award for Best Original Score.

She is the recipient of a 2004 Jonathan Larson Award and grant for excellence in songwriting, and a contributing writer to Playboy magazine.

Personal life

Green and her husband, Jeffrey Kaplan, who is an orthopedic surgeon, reside in Manhattan, New York.

Filmography

Actress
2021
tick, tick... BOOM! as
Aspiring Composer and Lyricist #6
2021
HouseBroken (TV Series) as
Momma B / The Horribly Out of Proportion One / Singing Cat #5
- Who's a Bad Girl? (2021) - Momma B / The Horribly Out of Proportion One (voice)
- Who's Going to the Vet? (2021) - Singing Cat #5 (voice)
1991
The Refrigerator as
Secretary #2
1989
Great Performances (TV Series) as
Mrs. Newsome
- Our Town (1989) - Mrs. Newsome
Writer
2022
Mr. Saturday Night: A New Musical Comedy
Soundtrack
2021
HouseBroken (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
- Who's Going to the Vet? (2021) - (performer: "The Musical Cat-Stravaganza" - uncredited)
2014
Peter Pan Live! (TV Movie) (lyrics: "Pirate March", "Vengeance", "Pirate March" (reprise), "Only Pretend", "A Wonderful World Without Peter", "True Blood Brothers", "I'm Flying (Reprise)", "Only Pretend/Tender Shepherd (Reprise)")
Self
2021
Save Birdland: A Celebration of Music, History, and Community (TV Special) as
Self
2013
The 67th Annual Tony Awards (TV Special documentary) as
Self - Nominee

References

Amanda Green Wikipedia