Richard O'Donnell (born June 17, 1956 in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania) is a playwright, producer, actor, and stand-up comic living in Chicago. He has worked and lived in New York City and Chicago where he has written and performed for the stage and television. O'Donnell wrote the award-winning off-Broadway show One & One, Radio City Music Hall's A Manhattan Showboat, and co-founded the New Age Vaudeville theatre company, the New Variety cabaret, and the R. Rated Chicago television show.
Biography
Early life
Richard O'Donnell began in the entertainment industry as a professional
ventriloquist. He ran away with the Sells & Gray 3-ring tent
circus at the tender age of 15, sleeping in the back of the elephant truck that transported their sole elephant, Bessie. O'Donnell was eventually forced to return home to finish high school, earning a scholarship to attend the
Pennsylvania Governor's School of the Arts where he studied theatre alongside classmate
Kevin Bacon.
New York City
In 1978, at 22 years-old, Richard O'Donnell co-authored the book (with Fred Bennett) and the music and lyrics (with Dianne Adams) for the
musical One & One that played The Carter Theatre, in the Carter Hotel, 250 West 43rd street. It opened
off-Broadway, November 15, 1978 received three
ASCAP Awards, and was later recorded by actor
Nathan Lane (
The Producers) for the
Broadway Backers Audition.
For Showplace of the Nation, Radio City Music Hall, O'Donnell co-wrote a hit mega-review entitled, A Manhattan Showboat in 1979 that celebrated over 100 years of American entertainment.
He was invited to participate in the American Film Institute's "New Directors" program based on the merits of an original screenplay Closet Lovers, directed by tap-legend Miriam Nelson and scored by Henry Mancini.
In the 1980's, billed as "The Double R" comedy duo, in collaboration with writer Richard LaGravenese, O'Donnell co-penned and consecutively performed in several off-off-Broadway productions including Spare Parts, Blood-brothers, and Entrees at The 78th Street Theatre Lab, The Lion Theatre, and West Bank Cafe. The Double R were regular guests on the Linda Lichtman Comedy hour, WNBC Radio, 30 Rockefeller Plaza. On the college circuit they opened for Leon Redbone and further developed their work in stand-up comedy clubs such as New York's Comedy Cellar and Yuk-Yuks in Toronto. While working with O'Donnell, LaGravenese discovered he had a knack for writing dialogue.
Fish Creek, Wisconsin
In 1983 Richard O'Donnell was contracted by
Tony award-winning producer James B. McKenzie to create an after-show review to complement evening performances of the
Peninsula Players in Fish Creek,
Wisconsin. The Comedy
Cabaret, as it came to be known, was an immediate success and returned to
Door County for a follow-up season in 1984 as
New Age Vaudeville in its own 100-seat theater in Baileys Harbor. O'Donnell also took to the main stage at
Peninsula Players, starring in two highly acclaimed title roles in
Larry Shue's
The Nerd and
The Foreigner, O'Donnell was featured on the cover of the
Chicago Tribune Arts Section, The Summer Stock Life.
In 1998, O'Donnell was commissioned to write the book, music, and lyrics for a new musical play entitled Wish Wisconsin, to celebrate the state's 150th birthday. Directed and produced by Amy McKenzie, it opened Friday January 2, in the Fish Creek Town Hall Auditorium. Songs of merit included Wish, So Blessed, and the show-stopper Oh!, Wisconsin.
Chicago, Illinois
Following the summer-stock season in 1983 Richard O'Donnell co-founded (with Amy McKenzie) the highly acclaimed Chicago theater company
New Age Vaudeville (1984-1987). Throughout its run, O'Donnell produced, wrote, composed,
choreographed, and acted in numerous productions with actors
Megan Cavanagh, Amy McKenzie, Todd Erickson, Bobby McGuire, Peter Neville, Michael Dempsey, Lisa Keefe, Caroline Schless and Tom Purcell (head writer
The Colbert Report). Productions included the cult-hits
An Evening with Elmore & Gwendolyn Putts - The Neighbors Next Door and
The TV Dinner Hour (the later featured
iO, formerly ImrovOlympic, founder
Del Close). Rick Kogan of the
Chicago Tribune hailed both productions as "Among the most polished and clever productions of the season, a pair of devilishly inventive shows that won over critics and audiences alike."
Stand-up and variety
As a stand-up comic billed as R. O'Donnell, he played numerous clubs including Zanies, The Chicago Improv, the Funny Firm, Catch A Rising Star, as well as featuring for celebrated comics
Chris Rock,
Bill Maher,
Brian Regan,
Rick Overton, and the late
Bill Hicks.
O'Donnell co-produced the New Variety, which played, among other venues, at the 500-seat Chicago Improv Comedy Club for over 2 years. He was responsible for changing a faltering 3-ring comedy presentation into a successful variety format. The New Variety, which was hailed by the Chicago Tribune as "A cabaret for the 90's!" was a fast-paced, ever-changing volley of acts that included award-winning jugglers, fire-eaters, comics, and sketch comedy groups including the all-girl Nude Coffee, the all-gay The Boys in the Bathroom, and the all-improv The Upright Citizens Brigade. Dr. Boom (who literally blew things up on stage) was the highlight of the evening.
Fox TV shows
O'Donnell produced and directed comedy segments for the 1998 New Year's Eve special
Twisted, which aired on
FOX TV,
Chicago featuring
Matt Besser (
Comedy Central's
The Upright Citizens Brigade) as well as writing and directing commercials for
McDonalds,
Toyota,
Jiffy Lube, and
Ameritech starring Besser and
stand-up comic Michelle Garb in a stylistic homage to the works of
Ernie Kovacs.
In 1999, O'Donnell went on to Executive Produce and host R. Rated which also aired on FOX TV, Chicago, a comedy anthology featuring short works by The Annoyance Theater featuring Rachel Dratch (Saturday Night Live), Mick Napier (Second City), and Stephnie Weir (Mad TV), along with Tim Kazurinsky (Saturday Night Live), among many other independent film and video makers. It is said that O'Donnell hoped his new comedy series would shift the LA and NYC comedy spotlights to Chicago talent.
Awards
3
ASCAP (1978) Music Awards – Music & Lyrics,
off-Broadway Musical
One & One (shared with Dianne Adams)
References
External links