Chambers Stevens
Chambers Stevens | |
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Born | June 10, 1964 |
Chambers Stevens (born June 10, 1964) is an American actor, playwright, author and acting coach. Stevens was the co-founder in 1988 of the Nashville Shakespeare Festival.
Actor
Stevens played the title character in the multi-Emmy-award-winning The Steve Spots as well as the Emmy-award-winning The Parent Zone.
For PBS he also played the title character in the children’s series Funnybones, as well as the spin-off series Geo-Scout, for which he received an Emmy nomination.,[1][2]
Playwright
In 1994 Chambers won the Back Stage Garland Award for his play Desperate for Magic [3] a one man show in which Stevens also starred.
Plays
- 1989: Desperate for Magic
- 2001: Travels with Jack Lemmon's Dog
- 2005: Twain and Shaw Do Lunch
Author
- Magnificent Monologues for Kids: Kids’ Monologues for Every Occasion Sandcastle Publishing 1999 ISBN 1-883995-08-6
- 24 Carat Commercials for Kids: Everything Kids Need to Know Sensational Sandcastle Publishing 1999 ISBN 1-883995-09-4
- Sensational Scenes for Teens: The Scene Study-guide for Teen Actors Sandcastle Publishing 2001 ISBN 1-883995-10-8
- Magnificent Monologues For Teens: The Teens’ Monologue Source For Every Occasion! Sandcastle Publishing 2002 ISBN 1-883995-11-6
- Sensational Scenes for Kids: The Scene Study-Guide for Young Actors Sandcastle Publishing 2003 ISBN 1-883995-12-4
- The Ultimate Commercial Book for Kids and Teens: The Young Actors’ Commercial Study-guide Sandcastle Publishing 2005 ISBN 1-883995-13-2
- Magnificent Monologues for Kids 2: More Kids’ Monologues for Every Occasion Sandcastle Publishing 2009 ISBN 1-883995-14-0
Acting Coach
Stevens has been a highly sought after audition coach for young actors since 1990.[4] His clients have appeared on television, film and the Broadway stage.[5]
Former students and clients
- JC Gonzalez
References
- ^ "Next". Buffalo News. July 10, 2002.
- ^ "Chambers Stevens...Still a Boy at Heart". The Star News. July 26, 2002.
- ^ Kendt, Rob (Jan 5, 1994). "Stage Notes". Backstage West.
- ^ LA Weekly. Aug 7, 2003.
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(help) - ^ Charleston Gazette. May 3, 2001.
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