Erik Orton
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Erik Orton | |
---|---|
Born | Erik Orton 1974 |
Occupation(s) | Composer Lyricist Playwright Theatrical producer |
Erik Orton (born in 1974 in California) is a New York-based writer and theatre producer. His father was an Air Force officer and his mother a Finnish immigrant. He was raised primarily in West Germany and the suburbs of Washington D.C. He graduated from Brigham Young University in 1998 with a degree in Media Music. He and his wife, Emily Orton, have five children together.
Orton's original musical, Berlin, was performed Off-Off-Broadway in 2003. In 2005, he produced the Off-Broadway musical, The Ark (written by BYU professor Kevin Kelly and LDS composer Michael McLean).[1] He is currently producing Children of Eden for Broadway (Music & Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz,[2] Book by John Caird). Orton also penned The Drummings (in collaboration with Joshua Williams) based on the life and times of Irish statesman Daniel O'Connell.
Orton has worked for a variety of Broadway general management and production offices including [ Wasser Associates, Richards/Climan Inc. and The Wolf Trap Center for the Performing Arts. Broadway shows and tours he has helped manage include Wicked, The Phantom of the Opera, Les Misérables, and Miss Saigon, among others.
Orton has been featured on the cover of Crain's Business New York as well as The New York Times and theatre industry news hub Playbill.com.
In 2007, Orton’s Berlin was performed at the Longwharf Theatre in New Haven and then again in 2008 at Brigham Young University's mainstage season. He is represented by Susan Gurman of the Gurman Agency.[3]
Berlin was made into a film by BYU and shown on BYU-TV in 2008.[4] In 2009 Berlin was shown at the LDS Film Festival in Orem, Utah.
Orton is a Latter-day Saint.[5] He co-wrote the book for Savior of the World and was the artistic director of Standard to the Nations the LDS Cultural production staged before the dedication of the Manhattan Temple.[6]
References
- ^ BYU Daily Universe, 26 September, 2005
- ^ "stephenschwartz.com". stephenschwartz.com. Retrieved 2013-07-07.
- ^ gurmanagency.com
- ^ See BYU magazine article in "New Links"
- ^ Meridian Magazine article on Berlin being performed in New York City Archived January 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ City Saints: Mormon in the New York Metropolis. (New York: Nauvoo Books, 2004) p. 110