David Warren (director)

David Warren is an American theatre and television director.

David Warren
Born
OccupationTheatre director, television director
Spouse(s)
(
m. 2017)

Career

Theatre

Warren has a number of Broadway production directing credits to his name, including Holiday, Summer and Smoke and Misalliance. His other, more extensive work includes the Jekyll & Hyde and Copacabana national tours, and several significant off-Broadway productions including Pterodactyls, Matt & Ben, Minutes from the Blue Route, Night and Her Stars, Hurrah at Last, The Dazzle, Raised in Captivity, Hobson's Choice and Drumstruck.[1][2] He also has many credits for regional theatres including, among many others, Baltimore Center Stage, New York Stage and Film and South Coast Repertory.[3]

Television

Warren's television credits include episodes of Desperate Housewives, Weeds, Gossip Girl, In Plain Sight, 90210, Ugly Betty, Drop Dead Diva, and Valentine. Desperate Housewives creator and executive producer Marc Cherry asked Warren to direct an episode of the show's third season having known him previously from the theatre. Warren and Cherry became close friends after Warren gave Cherry his first professional acting job over twenty years ago in a children's musical.[2] Warren hopes to work both in theatre and television in the future: "I'm very excited by this career change. But it's not permanent, because I love theatre too much."[2]

Personal life

Warren is openly gay; his partner since 1988, and husband since 2017, is actor Peter Frechette, who has featured in a number of Warren's productions.[1][2] Warren has an older brother, Seth, and younger sister, Jennifer, and currently lives in Los Angeles, though he is originally from New York City.[2]

gollark: The governments in question can probably do something about it.
gollark: They *can* choose to stop making "economic crops" and make food ones, nobody is forcing them to.
gollark: They could be an AI.
gollark: Antinatalism 1000.
gollark: Distribution isn't exactly trivial. If there's surplus food here, then it's not very easy to ship it across the world to someone who might need it.

References

  1. Brian Scott Lipton (August 13, 2003). "Mr. Warren's Profession". Theater Mania. Archived from the original on December 16, 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-17.
  2. Michael Buckley (December 17, 2006). "STAGE TO SCREENS: "Dreamgirls" Composer Krieger and Co-Star Rose; Plus David Warren". Playbill. Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-17.
  3. "David Warren, Director". Drama Dept. Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2007-12-17.
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