Today the American Foundation for Equal Rights, in partnership with Broadway Impact, announced additional casting and roles for the highly anticipated one-night only staged reading of "8," a new play chronicling the historic trial in the federal legal challenge to California's Proposition 8. The play is written by AFER Founding Board Member and Academy Award-winning writer Dustin Lance Black and will be directed by two-time Tony Award-winning actor and director Joe Mantello.
Academy, Tony and four-time Emmy Award nominee Bob Balaban; acclaimed "White Collar" television star Matt Bomer; Emmy Award-winning journalist Campbell Brown; celebrated playwright and gay rights activist Larry Kramer; two-time Academy Award-nominated, multiple Emmy and Golden Globe Award-winning, two-time Tony Award-winning actor John Lithgow; Tony Award nominee and Broadway Impact Co-Founder Rory O'Malley; and Emmy Award winner and three-time Golden Globe Award nominee Bradley Whitford will appear in the world premiere of "8" on Broadway, joining the previously announced Anthony Edwards, Morgan Freeman, Cheyenne Jackson, Christine Lahti, Rob Reiner, Yeardley Smith and Marisa Tomei. The production is an unprecedented account of the Federal District Court trial in Perry v. Schwarzenegger (now Perry v. Brown), the case filed by AFER to overturn Proposition 8, which eliminated the right to marry for gay and lesbian couples in California.
Black, who penned the Academy Award-winning feature film Milk, based "8" on the actual words of the trial transcripts, first-hand observations of the courtroom drama and interviews with the plaintiffs and their families. The new play will have its world premiere on Broadway at the
Eugene O'Neill Theatre in New York City on Monday, September 19, 2011 for an exclusive, one-night only fundraiser to benefit AFER. Additional casting for the all-star benefit will be announced soon.
Bob Balaban will play US District Chief Judge Vaughn Walker, who ruled over a year ago in California that Prop. 8 is unconstitutional.
Morgan Freeman and
John Lithgow will play
David Boies and Theodore B. Olson, the two attorneys appointed by AFER to lead the case filed to overturn Prop. 8.
Bradley Whitford will play
Charles Cooper, the lead attorney for the defense, the proponents of Prop. 8.
Matt Bomer and
Cheyenne Jackson will play
Jeff Zarrillo and
Paul Katami, a gay couple of ten years and two of the four plaintiffs in the Prop. 8 trial;
Christine Lahti and
Marisa Tomei will play the other plaintiffs,
Sandy Stier and
Kris Perry, a lesbian couple that have been together for eleven years and are the parents of four boys.
Anthony Edwards,
Larry Kramer,
Rory O'Malley,
Rob Reiner and
Yeardley Smith will play witnesses in the trial:
Anthony Edwards will play Dr. Ilan Meyer, a Columbia social psychologist and expert in the relationship between discrimination and mental health outcomes;
Larry Kramer will play E
Van Wolfson, the Founder and President of Freedom to Marry, the national campaign to end marriage discrimination;
Rory O'Malley will play
Ryan Kendall, a young gay man who was forced by his parents to undergo gay conversion therapy;
Rob Reiner will play David Blankenhorn, Founder and President of the Institute for American Values and the principal witness for the opponents of marriage equality;
Yeardley Smith will play Dr. Nancy Cott, a Harvard Professor who specializes in the history of marriage.
Campbell Brown will play the role of the Broadcast Journalist. Additional casting for the all-star benefit will be announced soon.
Following the New York debut on September 19th, AFER and Broadway Impact will license "8" to schools and community organizations nationwide in order to spur action, dialogue and understanding. AFER and Broadway Impact will coordinate these staged readings across the country, so that "8" will live on beyond its September premiere.
The story for "8" is framed by the trial's historic closing arguments in June 2010, but features the best arguments and witness testimony presented by both legal teams. Scenes include reenactments of many of the well-documented jaw-dropping moments of trial, such as the admission by the Prop. 8 supporters' star witness David Blankenhorn that "we would be more American on the day we permitted same-sex marriage than we were on the day before."
AFER prevailed in federal district court when, based on the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, Chief Judge Walker concluded that California had no rational basis or vested interest in denying gays and lesbians marriage licenses and thus found Proposition 8 "unconstitutional" on August 4, 2010. It is currently under appeal by the anti-marriage proponents and is being expedited through the court system at a relatively rapid pace.
Unfortunately, the American public was not given a chance to witness the historic trial because the proponents of Proposition 8 launched a number of desperate attempts to forever hide the trial videotapes. Although the trial proceedings were open to the public, and all courtroom testimony and events were thoroughly documented, the trial video most vividly compares the weakness of the proponents' arguments to the well-reasoned, valid and constitutionally-based arguments and evidence put forth by AFER's renowned legal team, plaintiffs and expert witnesses.
The trial videotapes have been kept under seal due to a federal protective order. On August 29th, 2011, AFER's legal team made a strong case for the full and unedited release of the trial recordings at a hearing before Chief Judge Ware at US District Court. While a swift decision is expected from Chief Judge Ware, there is no guarantee that the trial footage will ever be available for the public to see. This is precisely the reason Black wrote "8."
Proceeds from the September 19th reading will go directly to the fight for full federal marriage equality and to support educational efforts on the freedom to marry nationwide.
For more information including how to buy tickets, visit: www.afer.org/broadway8
For information on how your local theater can produce "8," visit:
www.BROADWAYIMPACT.com
Follow "8" on Twitter: @8theplay or on Facebook.
Bob Balaban (Judge Vaughn Walker) recently received an Emmy nomination for directing
Joan Allen and
Jeremy Irons in Georgia O'Keeffe (Lifetime). He received three 2008 Emmy Award nominations, two for directing and producing the HBO film Bernard and Doris, starring
Susan Sarandon and
Ralph Fiennes, the third for his performance in Recount. Other directing credits include The Last Good Time (starring
Armin Mueller-Stahl and
Maureen Stapleton) and Parents (with
Randy Quaid and
Sandy Dennis). He produced and co-starred in the Academy and BAFTA award-winning film Gosford Park. His acting career spans nearly one hundred films including Howl, Capote, A Mighty Wind, Ghost World, Best in Show, Cradle Will Rock, Waiting for Guffman, Absence of Malice, Prince of the City, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Catch-22, Midnight Cowboy and the upcoming Moonrise Kingdom, directed by Wes Anderson. His theatre appearances include Plaza Suite, The Inspector General (Tony Award nomination), Speed the Plow, You're a Good Man Charlie Brown, Marie and Bruce and Some Americans Abroad. He directed and produced the original hit off-Broadway production of The Exonerated (Drama Desk Award, Outer Critics Circle Award, New York Times #1 Play, Fringe First Award at Edinburgh Fringe Festival) as well as the television version starring
Susan Sarandon and
Danny Glover. His bestselling series of children's books, McGrowl, sold over two million copies, and he is currently at work on another series of children's books for Viking/Penguin.
Matt Bomer (Jeff Zarillo). Theatre:
Ernest Hemingway in Villa America at
Williamstown Theater Festival; Spring Awakening (
Sundance Theatre Lab) - dir.
Michael Mayer; Grey Gardens WS (
Playwrights Horizons) - dir. Michael Grief; and the 2011 Kennedy Center Honors - dir.
Rob Ashford. TV: Neal Caffrey on "White Collar," "Traveler," "Chuck," "Tru Calling," "Guiding Light." Film: Flightplan (dir. Robert Schwentke), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (dir. Jonathan Liebesman), and upcoming In Time (dir. Andrew Niccol), and Magic Mike (dir.
Steven Soderbergh).
Campbell Brown (Broadcast Journalist) is an award-winning journalist who has covered stories around the globe for CNN and NBC News. Most recently, Brown hosted the primetime nightly news program, "
Campbell Brown for CNN." While at CNN, Brown won accolades for her political coverage of the 2008 presidential campaign. Brown was chosen to moderate and direct questions at two of the Presidential Debates during the 2008 election. Prior to CNN, Brown spent 11 years at NBC News where she served as White House Correspondent and primary substitute anchor for
BrIan Williams on "NBC Nightly News." Brown also hosted the weekend edition of "The Today Show," the nation's top-rated weekend news program. She has interviewed and profiled world political and business leaders, including the last three sitting Presidents. Brown lives in New York City with her husband and two sons.
Anthony Edwards (Dr. Ilan Meyer). Best known as Dr. Mark Greene on the hit series "ER," for which he received four Emmy nominations for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series. Edwards won three Screen Actors Guild Awards (Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series in 1996 and Best Ensemble Cast in 1998 and 1999), and the Golden Globe Award in 1998. Edwards recently executive produced the HBO biopic "Temple Grandin," which won multiple Emmys and Golden Globes. Recent films include Motherhood with
Uma Thurman, Flipped directed by
Rob Reiner, and Zodiac directed by
David Fincher. Other recent credits include Thunderbirds, the Polish brothers' Northfork, and Don't Go Breaking My Heart, which he executive produced in association with his
Production Company. The company also produced the NBC telefilm "Borderline," starring Sherry Stringfel
D. Edwards has starred in more than twenty features, including Goose in the blockbuster feature Top Gun. Other feature film credits include Playing by Heart, The Client, Miracle Mile,
Mr. North, Hawks, Pet Semetary II, Delta Heat, Landslide, The Sure Thing, Gotcha, Revenge of the Nerds, Heart Like a Wheel and Fast Times at Ridgemont High. Directorial debut: Charley's Ghost Story starring
Cheech Marin and Linda Fiorentino. He has also directed several episodes of "ER." Other television credits include "Northern Exposure" and "It Takes Two," opposite Richard Crenna,
Patty Duke, and
Helen Hunt. Edwards is philanthropically involved with Shoe4Africa (shoe4africa.org), a charity that is building a children's hospital in Kenya.
Morgan Freeman (
David Boies) returns to Broadway in the staged reading of "8." In 1978, he won a Drama Desk Award for his role as Zeke in The Mighty Gents. He also received a Tony nomination for Best Performance by a Featured Actor. In 1987, Freeman received his second Drama Desk Nomination for the role of Holk Colburn which he created for the
Alfred Uhry play Driving Miss Daisy and reprised in the 1989 movie of the same name. Other theatre credits include The Country Girl, The Niggerlovers, and Hello Dolly. Freeman won the Academy Award in 2005 for Best Supporting Actor for his role in Million Dollar Baby. In 1990 he won the Golden Globe for Best Actor for his performance in Driving Miss Daisy. Freeman also received an Academy Award nomination in 1987 for Best Supporting Actor for Street Smart and in 1994 for Best Actor for The Shawshank Redemption. In 2010, he received an Academy Award nomination, a Golden Globe nomination and a Broadcast Critics Association nomination for his performance as Nelson Mandela in the acclaimed film Invictus, produced by his
Production Company Revelations Entertainment. He won the National Board of Review award for Best Actor. Freeman's credits include The Dark Knight, The Bucket List, Glory, Clean and Sober, Lean on Me, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, Unforgiven, Se7en, Kiss the Girls, Amistad and Deep Impact.
Cheyenne Jackson (
Paul Katami) currently appears on NBC's "30 Rock," Fox's "Glee" and HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm." He has also been seen in "Family Practice," "Life on Mars," "Lipstick Jungle," "Ugly Betty", "Law and Order" and "It Takes a Village." Jackson's film credits include Curiosity, Hysteria, Photo Op and the Academy Award-nominated film United 93. He'll next appear in the indie films Smile, The Green, and Price Check. He also recently wrapped production on
Daryl Wein's Lola Versus. His first Broadway role was in All Shook Up, earning him the Theatre World Award. Jackson has also appeared in productions of Finian's Rainbow, Damn Yankees, Xanadu, The Agony & The Agony, Altar Boyz, Aida, Thoroughly Modern Millie, The Cartells, On the 20th Century and The 24 Hour Plays. Jackson is an ambassador for amfAR and serves as national ambassador for The Hetrick-Martin Institute.
Larry Kramer (E
Van Wolfson). Kramer's groundbreaking play The Normal Heart was revived on Broadway this Spring, winning 2011 Tony, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle and Drama League Awards for Best Revival. Co-founder, Gay Men's Health Crisis (world's first HIV/AIDS service organization). Founder, ACT UP (the international network of activists responsible for the development/release of most HIV/AIDS treatments). BA, Yale (1957). Film: Women in Love, producer and screenplay (Oscar nomination). Plays: Sissies' Scrapbook, The Normal Heart, Just Say No, The Destiny of Me, A Minor Dark Age. Non-fiction: Reports from the Holocaust: the making of an AIDS activist; The Tragedy of Today's Gays. Fiction: Faggots, The American People (forthcoming from Farrar Straus). Recipient: Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters; the first openly gay person to receive a Public Service Award from Common Cause. Kramer and his lover, architect/designer
David Webster, live in New York and Connecticut.
Christine Lahti (Sandi Stier). Broadway: God of Carnage, The Heidi Chronicles, Loose Ends, Present Laughter, Scenes and Revelations, Division Street. Off-Broadway: Body of Water, Little Murders (Obie Award), Three Hotels (Drama Desk Nom), Landscape of the Body, The Woods (Theatre World Award). Regional: Love, Loss, and What I Wore; Third; A Moon for the Misbegotten; Summer and Smoke; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Film: Petunia, Touchback, Flying Lessons, Smart People, Yonkers Joe, Obsessed, Swing Shift (Academy Award nom, NY Film Critics Award, Golden Globe nom), Running on Empty (L.A. Film Critics Award, Golden Globe nom), The Doctor, Housekeeping, Just Between Friends, ...And Justice for All, Whose Life Is it Anyway?, Gross Anatomy, Leaving Normal, Funny About Love. TV: "The Cleaner," ‘'Law & Order: SVU,' ‘'The Closer,' "Studio 60," "Ally McBeal," "Chicago Hope" (Emmy Award, Golden Globe Award), "Jack and Bobby" (Golden Globe nom), "No Place Like Home" (Cable Ace Award, Golden Globe Award, Emmy nom), "Crazy From The Heart," "Out of the Ashes," "The Pilot's Wife," "Open House," "The Book of Ruth," "Amerika" (Emmy nom, Golden Globe nom), "An American Daughter" (Golden Globe nom). Directing: My First Mister (opening night, Sundance Film Festival), "Chicago Hope," Lieberman in Love (Academy Award).
John Lithgow (Theodore B. Olson). An acclaimed stage, screen, television actor and best-selling author,
John Lithgow made his stage debut at age two (before he even remembers), onstage with his director father,
Arthur Lithgow. He has performed on Broadway twenty times, receiving two Tony awards out of five nominations. Since 2008 he has toured his one-man theatrical memoir, Stories by Heart, all over the US and at London's
National Theatre. Next up for Lithgow on Broadway is the title role in the premiere of
David Auburn's The Columnist for the Manhattan Theatre Club in the Spring of 2012. Mr. Lithgow has appeared in over thirty major films. He received Academy Award nominations in two successive years, for The World According to Garp and Terms of Endearment. His current projects on film include Rise of the Planet of the Apes and the upcoming This is 40 for
Judd Apatow. For his work on TV, Mr. Lithgow has been nominated for 11 Emmy Awards. He has won five, three for his role on NBC's "3rd Rock from the Sun," the hit comedy series which also brought him a Golden Globe, two SAG Awards, and the American Comedy Award. In 2009, he joined the cast of "Dexter" for its fourth season as the villainous Trinity Killer, earning another Golden Globe and his fifth Emmy. Mr. Lithgow received a bachelor's degree from Harvard and studied on a Fulbright at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. For children has written several best-selling picture books, released three CDs, performed concerts with major symphony orchestras, and even danced with the New York City Ballet. He was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame in 2005 and into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2010, and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2001. Mr. Lithgow's memoir Drama: An Actor's Education is an upcoming release from HarperCollins, due out in late September of this year.
Rory O'Malley (
Ryan Kendall, Broadway Impact Co-Founder) is honored and inspired to be a part of "8". As a Co-Founder of Broadway Impact, Rory has had a front row seat to the theater community's courageous fight for marriage equality. Currently Rory is starring in The Book of Mormon. He received both Tony and Drama Desk nominations for the role of openly closeted Mormon Elder McKinley. Other credits include Broadway: The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Off-Broadway: Newsical. Regional: created the role of Richie Cunningham in
Garry Marshall's
Happy Days The Musical for
Goodspeed Opera House,
Paper Mill Playhouse, and recorded the original cast album. Rory expanded his repertoire of pasty white dudes by butchering the song "Cadillac Car" as lead singer of 'Dave and the Sweethearts' in the film Dreamgirls. Carnegie Mellon grad. Love and thanks to Gerold for putting up with an Actorvist.
Rob Reiner (David Blankenhorn, AFER Board Member). Actor and director
Rob Reiner has been a leader in elevating the issue of pre-Kindergarten education and other services for children ages 0 to 5. He chaired the campaign to pass Prop. 10, the California Children and Families Initiative, and chaired from 1999-2006 First 5 California, the state agency responsible for allocating $600 million a year for health, education and other services for young children and parents. He played a key role in defeating Prop. 1D, which would have gutted critical programs for Californian children, and he has also championed open space preservation and alternative energy. Recently, he and his wife Michele joined with the American Foundation for Equal Rights to bring the landmark federal court challenge to California's Prop. 8, the ban on marriage for gay and lesbian couples. Reiner's career as one of the nation's most accomplished actors and directors includes his Emmy Award-winning role in "All in the Family" and directing the films This is Spinal Tap, Stand by Me, The Princess Bride, When Harry Met Sally, Misery, A Few Good Men, The American President, The Bucket List, Flipped and the just-completed Summer At Dog Dave's.
Yeardley Smith (Dr. Nancy Cott) is an Emmy Award-winning actress, playwright, author and shoe designer. She is perhaps best known for her work as the voice of Lisa Simpson on Fox's hit television series "The Simpsons," which is in its twenty-third season. Other television credits include: "Murphy Brown," "Herman's Head," "Dharma & Greg" and "The Big Bang Theory." Favorite films include: The Legend of
Billie Jean, City Slickers, As good As It Gets, Waiting for Ophelia and the upcoming Virginia, written and directed by
Dustin Lance Black. Her novel, I, Lorelei was published to critical acclaim by Harper Collins in 2009. She appeared in the original Broadway production of The Real Thing directed by
Mike Nichols. She is currently in the Off-Broadway production of Love, Loss and What I Wore at
The Westside Theatre. Her new shoe line, Marchez Vous, will be available in stores and online this Fall.
Marisa Tomei (
Kris Perry). Marisa won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in My Cousin Vinny and earned her second Academy Award Nomination for In the Bedroom. Marisa received her third Academy Award Nomination for
Darren Aronofsky's critically acclaimed indie drama The Wrestler. Recent credits include: Crazy, Stupid, Love alongside
Steve Carell, Salvation Boulevard with
Greg Kinnear, and Lincoln Lawyer opposite
Matthew McConaughey. Being fiercely committed to the theatre, Marisa returned to the stage this spring in the critically acclaimed
New Group revival of Wally Shawn's Marie and Bruce co-starring with
Frank Whaley. In 2009, Marisa traveled to Ethiopia to direct a short film based on the
Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl Wudunn's book Half The Sky. Marisa can be seen in Howard Zinn's documentary The People Speak alongside
Josh Brolin and
Viggo Mortensen and in
Sidney Lumet's critically praised jewel heist drama Before the Devil Knows You're Dead alongside
Ethan Hawke and
Philip Seymour Hoffman (Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress). Other recent film credits include Cyrus with
John C. Reilly and
Jonah Hill; War Inc. with John Cusack; Factotum with
Matt Dillon, directed by Bent Hamer; the box office hit Wild Hogs; and the Sundance favorites Loverboy (directed by
Kevin Bacon) and Marilyn Hotchkiss. Tomei's diverse credits include What Women Want, Happy Accidents, Anger Management, The Guru, Slums of
Beverly Hills, Welcome to Sarjevo, The Perez Family, A Brother's Kiss, and Unhook the Stars opposite
Gena Rowlands (Screen Actors Guild nomination). Broadway credits include:
Caryl Churchill's Top Girls and
Oscar Wilde's Salome in the title role opposite
Al Pacino. Her favorite theater credits include
Will Eno's Oh! The Humanity and Other Good Intentions,
Dario Fo's We Won't Pay! We Won't Pay!, Clifford Odet's Waiting for Lefty and Rocket to the Moon, both directed by
JoAnne Woodward, among many, many others. Tomei also starred in Noel Coward's Design for Living at the
Williamstown Theater Festival. Tomei is a member of the
Naked Angels Theater Company in New York City. Upcoming film: The Ides of March with
George Clooney.
Bradley Whitford (
Charles Cooper) is a classically trained stage actor who has received critical acclaim for his roles in theater, film, and television. Whitford recently completed production on the Hall
Mark Hall of Fame movie Have a Little Faith, based on the best-selling book by
Mitch Albom and directed by
Jon Avnet. Whitford most recently starred in and produced the FOX police comedy series "The Good Guys" opposite
Colin Hanks. For seven years, Whitford was seen on the celebrated drama "The West Wing" created by
Aaron Sorkin. His performance earned him a 2001 Emmy Award as well as Golden Globe Award nominations in 2001 and 2002. Whitford's film credits include the upcoming horror film The Cabin in The Woods, written and produced by Joss Whedon and co-starring
Chris Hemsworth; Bottleshock co-starring
Alan Rickman and
Chris Pine; An American Crime with
Ellen Page and
Catherine Keener; Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, Little Manhattan, Kate and Leopold, The Muse, Bicentennial Man, Scent of a Woman, A Perfect World, Philadelphia, The Client and many others. Growing up in Wisconsin, Whitford studied theater and English literature at Wesleyan University and attended the Juilliard Theater Center. Whitford's professional performance debut was in the Off-Broadway production of Curse of the Starving Class opposite
Kathy Bates. Additional theater credits include Boeing Boeing on Broadway, Three Days of Rain at the Manhattan Theatre Club, Measure for Measure at
Lincoln Center Theater, and the title role in Coriolanus at the Folger Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, D.C.
Dustin Lance Black (Playwright, AFER Founding Board Member) is an award-winning screenwriter, director and producer. He won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for Milk and was a writer and producer of the acclaimed TV series "Big Love." He recently completed his feature directorial debut, Virginia, and penned the screenplay for the upcoming J. Edgar, directed by
Clint Eastwood and starring
Leonardo DiCaprio. Black is also a noted equal rights advocate. He was a leading opponent of Prop. 8 during the 2008 election, was a featured speaker at the 2009 March on Washington, has spoken at scores of colleges across North America and Europe, topped The Advocate magazine's list of "Forty Under 40," and has repeatedly been listed in OUT Magazine's "50 Most Powerful LGBT persons."
Joe Mantello (Director). Directing credits include Other Desert Cities, The Pride, Pal Joey, 9 to 5, November, The Receptionist, The Ritz, Blackbird, Three Days of Rain, The Odd Couple, Glengarry Glen Ross (Tony nomination), Laugh Whore, Assassins (Tony Award), Wicked, Take Me Out (Tony Award), Frankie and Johnny in the Clair De Lune, A Man of No Importance, Design for Living and Love! Valour! Compassion! (Tony nomination). As an actor: The Normal Heart (Tony nomination), Angels in America (Tony nomination) and The Baltimore Waltz. He is recipient of Outer Critics Circle, Drama Desk,
Lucille Lortel, Helen Hayes,
Clarence Derwent, Obie and
Joe A. Callaway awards. He is a member of
Naked Angels and an associate artist at Roundabout Theatre Company.
ABOUT THE AMERICAN FOUNDATION FOR EQUAL RIGHTS
The American Foundation for Equal Rights is the sole sponsor of the federal court challenge to Proposition 8, Perry v. Schwarzenegger. After bringing together Theodore B. Olson and
David Boies to lead its legal team, AFER successfully advanced its case through federal district court and is now leading it through the appeals process. The Foundation is committed to achieving full federal marriage equality. AFER Board of Directors includes
Chad Griffin (President),
Bruce Cohen,
Dustin Lance Black,
Jonathan Lewis,
Ken Mehlman,
Michele Reiner and
Rob Reiner.
www.AFER.org
BROADWAY IMPACT is a non-profit organization of theatre artists and fans mobilized in support of marriage equality. Founded in 2008 by Tony-nominated performers Rory O'Malley (Book of Mormon), Gavin Creel (HAIR) and Production Coordinator Jenny Kanelos, BROADWAY IMPACT works to educate and inspire the theatre community into action. Recent initiatives include helping to staff the phone banking efforts in New York State, creating a 3,000 piece letter writing campaign, gaining the funding for 1,400 supporters to attend the National Equality March and producing a rally for over 5,000 attendees in Midtown Manhattan where speakers included, Cynthia Nixon, Audra McDonald, David Hyde Pierce, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and Governor David Paterson. BROADWAY IMPACT was awarded the 2009 Human Rights Campaign Community Award.
www.BROADWAYIMPACT.com