Mark Setlock

Mark Setlock (born June 26, 1968 in Cleveland, Ohio) is a former American actor and playwright living in New York, NY.

Mark Setlock
Born (1968-06-26) June 26, 1968
EducationKent State University (BFA)
Harvard University (MFA)
Occupation[Computer Technician]

He attended the Institute for Advanced Theater Training of the American Repertory Theater at Harvard University. He won the 2000 Outer Critics Circle Award for best solo performance in a tie with Olympia Dukakis, and received a Drama Desk nomination for "Fully Committed", which he helped create with playwright Becky Mode,[1][2] and has performed in LA, Boston, Portland (Oregon), Bay Street Theatre, and London's West End. He was featured in the 1994 workshop and the Original Broadway Company of "Rent".[2] He collaborated with Playwright Steve Murray on an adaptation of the screenplay It's A Wonderful Life, called This Wonderful Life which premiered in Portland, Oregon in 2005, and has been produced regionally. With Matthew Wilkas, Setlock is a co-author of "Pageant Play", a satire about the world of child beauty pageants, produced in July 2008 at the Berkshire Theatre Festival.[3] Recent roles in New York: "The Last Sunday In June", "Roulette",[1] "Tea and Sympathy", "The Safety Net", and "Never Tell".[4] Television: Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Law & Order, All My Children, Film: New Suit, Life In Flight, Gangster's Crib.

Filmography

gollark: Is that a chess feature?
gollark: Blocking?
gollark: Too bad, it is inevitable.
gollark: Well, there are tradeoffs; either you accept it just repeating the input lots, or poor quality.
gollark: Which means it can capture other stuff less, and when it reaches 0 health it dies.

References

  1. Bartels, Eric (2004-04-16). "Personalities plus: From lackey to mobster to society matron, Mark Setlock plays them all". The Portland Tribune.
  2. Ehren, Christine (2000-06-26). "Roger Bart Is Fully Committed to Replace Setlock". Playbill. Archived from the original on 2012-10-18.
  3. Rizzo, Frank (2008-07-07). "Pageant Play". Variety.
  4. Gates, Anita (2006-07-31). "'Never Tell': Sex, Trust and Video Art". The New York Times.


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