Brs/Gage has promoted four assistants to agent status effective immediately.
Craig Feblowitz (Los Angeles), Chris Foster (New York), Erika Karnell (New York) and Justin Noga (New York) have all been promoted to talent agents in their respective offices in NY and La. All four have been assistants with the company since the merger of Brs and The Gage Group in 2014. Feblowitz and Noga had been with Brs and Foster and Karnell with The Gage Group.
In the La office Feblowitz joins partner David Shaul along with veteran agents Amy Abell Rosenfield and Sarabeth Schedeen. In the NY office Foster, Karnell and Noga join partners Mark Redanty and Steven Unger, along with veteran agent Charles Bodner.
Martin Gage remains a consulting partner in La and Phil Adelman remains a consulting partner in NY.
Craig Feblowitz (Los Angeles), Chris Foster (New York), Erika Karnell (New York) and Justin Noga (New York) have all been promoted to talent agents in their respective offices in NY and La. All four have been assistants with the company since the merger of Brs and The Gage Group in 2014. Feblowitz and Noga had been with Brs and Foster and Karnell with The Gage Group.
In the La office Feblowitz joins partner David Shaul along with veteran agents Amy Abell Rosenfield and Sarabeth Schedeen. In the NY office Foster, Karnell and Noga join partners Mark Redanty and Steven Unger, along with veteran agent Charles Bodner.
Martin Gage remains a consulting partner in La and Phil Adelman remains a consulting partner in NY.
- 10/8/2018
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Gary Beach, the Broadway actor who created the role of Lumiere in Disney’s Beauty and The Beast and won a Tony Award for his unforgettable turn as director Roger DeBris in Mel Brooks’ The Producers, died Tuesday in Palm Springs. He was 70.
His death was announced by his agent Steven Unger. No cause was given.
“I am the happiest boy in the fifth grade,” Beach said as he accepted the 2001 Tony for Best Featured Actor in a Musical. He was nominated for the award two other times: In 1994 for Beauty and the Beast (same category) and 2001 as Best Actor in a Musical for his performance as Albin in the revival of La Cage aux Folles.
“Gary Beach, an actor of consummate skill and artistry, was a glorious human being,” said The Baruch Frankel Routh Viertel Group, the producers of The Producers, “a gifted, generous and incredibly funny actor whose...
His death was announced by his agent Steven Unger. No cause was given.
“I am the happiest boy in the fifth grade,” Beach said as he accepted the 2001 Tony for Best Featured Actor in a Musical. He was nominated for the award two other times: In 1994 for Beauty and the Beast (same category) and 2001 as Best Actor in a Musical for his performance as Albin in the revival of La Cage aux Folles.
“Gary Beach, an actor of consummate skill and artistry, was a glorious human being,” said The Baruch Frankel Routh Viertel Group, the producers of The Producers, “a gifted, generous and incredibly funny actor whose...
- 7/18/2018
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
Gary Beach, who earned a Tony Award in 2001 for Mel Brooks’ Broadway musical “The Producers,” died Monday in Palm Springs, Calif., his agent Steven Unger confirmed. No cause of death was given.
Beach also earned Tony nominations for playing Lumiere in Disney’s 1994 Broadway adaptation of “Beauty and the Beast” and the drag star Albin in the 2004 revival of Jerry Herman’s “La Cage aux Folles.”
But he is best remembered for his turn as the flamboyantly gay director Roger de Bris who tries to stage the musical-within-a-musical “Springtime for Hitler” in Brooks’ musical comedy “The Producers.”
He won wide acclaim — and one of the show’s record-breaking 12 Tony Awards — for the role, first played by Christopher Hewett in Brooks’ 1967 film of the same name. “I am the happiest boy in the fifth grade,” he said on accepting the award on the stage of Radio City Music Hall.
Also Read:...
Beach also earned Tony nominations for playing Lumiere in Disney’s 1994 Broadway adaptation of “Beauty and the Beast” and the drag star Albin in the 2004 revival of Jerry Herman’s “La Cage aux Folles.”
But he is best remembered for his turn as the flamboyantly gay director Roger de Bris who tries to stage the musical-within-a-musical “Springtime for Hitler” in Brooks’ musical comedy “The Producers.”
He won wide acclaim — and one of the show’s record-breaking 12 Tony Awards — for the role, first played by Christopher Hewett in Brooks’ 1967 film of the same name. “I am the happiest boy in the fifth grade,” he said on accepting the award on the stage of Radio City Music Hall.
Also Read:...
- 7/18/2018
- by Thom Geier
- The Wrap
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