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Marc Acito

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Alma mater
  
Colorado College

Spouse
  
Floyd Sklaver


Name
  
Marc Acito

Role
  
Playwright


Born
  
January 11, 1966 (age 58) Bayonne, New Jersey (
1966-01-11
)

Occupation
  
Playwright, novelist, and humorist

Plays
  
Allegiance, Birds of a Feather

Books
  
How I Paid for College: A Novel of Sex, Theft, Friendship, and Musical Theater, Attack of the Theater People

Education
  
Colorado College, Westfield High School

Awards
  
The Charles MacArthur Award for Outstanding New Play or Musical

Nominations
  
Lambda Literary Award for Gay Men's Debut Fiction

Similar People
  
Jay Kuo, Lorenzo Thione, Amy Freed, Jordan Harrison, Craig Lucas

Local playwright marc acito makes debut on broadway


Marc Acito (born January 11, 1966 in Bayonne, New Jersey) is an award-winning American playwright, novelist, and humorist.

Contents

He is openly gay and lives in New York City with his husband Floyd Sklaver.

The hub theatre presents marc acito s how i paid for college


Early life

Acito is a 1984 graduate of Westfield High School in Westfield, New Jersey. He studied acting in the musical theater program at Carnegie Mellon but left before graduation. In 1990 he received a bachelor’s degree from Colorado College, which awarded him an honorary doctorate in 2009.

Early career

Before becoming a playwright, Acito was a novelist and journalist. His comic novel How I Paid for College: A Novel of Sex, Theft, Friendship and Musical Theater won the Oregon Book Awards’ 2005 Ken Kesey Award for Best Novel, and was voted a 2005 "Teens Top Ten for favorite young adult book" of the American Library Association. In April 2008, Acito published Attack of the Theater People, a sequel to How I Paid for College.

He is also the writer of the syndicated humor column "The Gospel According to Marc", which ran for four years in nineteen gay publications. His humorous essays have appeared in many publications including The New York Times (April 3, 2006) and Portland Monthly magazine (January 2007, February 2007); as well as on NPR's All Things Considered (June, 2008 through February 2010)

Theatrical career

In 2012, Acito won the The Charles MacArthur Award for Outstanding New Play for Birds of a Feather, a comedy inspired by Roy and Silo, the same-sex male penguins in Central Park who raised a chick, and Pale Male and Lola, the red-tailed hawks that nested on the ledge of a Fifth Avenue cooperative.

Acito wrote the libretto for the musical Allegiance, which won the 2012 Craig Noel Award for Outstanding New Musical after a record breaking run at San Diego’s Old Globe Theater. ALLEGIANCE - A New Musical Inspired By A True Story opens on Broadway in November, 2015 and stars George Takei and Lea Salonga.

In 2012, Acito also turned his novel How I Paid for College: A Novel of Sex, Theft, Friendship and Musical Theater into a "one-man monologue with songs" that premiered at the Hub Theater in Fairfax, VA.

In 2014, his musical adaptation of E.M. Forster’s A Room With a View was presented in Seattle at the 5th Avenue Theater. In 2015, Acito wrote the concert adaptation of Lerner & Loewe’s Paint Your Wagon for New York City Center’s Encores! series.

He is currently working on the libretto for a new musical commissioned by the 5th Avenue Theater. The musical, Dutch Master, was awarded a development grant by the National Alliance for Musical Theater. Also in the works is Chasing Rainbows, a musical based on the early childhood of Judy Garland, which premieres in December, 2015 at Flat Rock Playhouse in North Carolina.

References

Marc Acito Wikipedia