Mark Saltzman - Theater

Theater

Saltzman's musical play The Tin Pan Alley Rag tells the story of a fictional meeting in 1915 between Scott Joplin and a young Irving Berlin. Tin Pan opened at the Pasadena Playhouse in 1997 and was nominated for five Los Angeles Ovation Awards, including Best Musical. The show continued on to many US theaters, including Miami's Coconut Grove Playhouse, Goodspeed Musicals, and the Cleveland Play House. In the summer of 2009, it was produced in Off-Broadway by The Roundabout Theatre Company in a production starring Michael Therriault and Michael Boatman in a production described by critics as "tunefully original" and containing "flashes of brilliance."

Saltzman's stage musical Romeo and Bernadette played at the Coconut Grove Playhouse in Miami and New Jersey’s State Theater, The Paper Mill Playhouse. His comedy Mr. Shaw Goes to Hollywood, based on the true story of George Bernard Shaw's 1933 visit to MGM, premiered at the Laguna Playhouse in April 2003. His play, Clutter, had its world premier at the Colony Theater in Burbank on February 7 of 2004. In 2002 he adapted the musical classic Show Boat for a Hollywood Bowl performance.

In May 2009 Saltzman's play "Setup and Punch" premiered at The Blank Theatre in Los Angeles. His play Rocket City had its world premiere in April 2008 as part of the Alabama Shakespeare Festival's Southern Writers' Project, which has a mandate to encourage "plays that delve into Southern issues and the African American experience" and to contribute "nationally significant works to the American theater canon." Rocket City is based on the true story of Wernher Von Braun and his recruitment by the US Government to work on the U.S. Missile program and eventually the Saturn V, the rocket used in the Apollo program. Saltzman's play weaves Von Braun's real-life in Huntsville, Alabama, with a fictional plot in which a young Jewish woman in Huntsville becomes aware of Von Braun's Nazi past and tries to inspire awareness and outrage among Huntsville's long-established Jewish community, the town in general, and the country at large.

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