Who’s Who

Alli Bostedt (who doesn’t know her title) took her first foray into theatre at age 4 when she wandered away from a karate class and ended up in a talent show. She soon discovered that every stage has a backstage and has attempted to remain there ever since, though real life does occasionally interfere. Alli recently left the action-packed world of insurance processing and is delighted to be backstage with the RSC. A native of Las Vegas, Alli lives in California with a talking shower curtain and an extensive rubber ducky collection.

domcontiDominic Conti (Performer/Additional Material Hollywood) was discovered by RSC talent scouts in Chicago, performing America (abridged) with The Noble Fool Theater. He workshoped Hollywood (abridged) in Rohnert Park and St. Louis, premiered it at Pittsburgh Public Theatre, and tours it along with Sports (abridged), Books (abridged), Bible (abridged) and America (abridged). Other regional theaters he’s worked with include: Plasticene, Steppenwolf, Second City, Williamstown Theatre Festival, Goodman, Westport Country Playhouse, Beaver Creek Theatre Festival, Madison Repertory, Chicago Shakespeare, Next, A Red Orchid, Apple Tree TYA, First Folio Shakespeare Festival, Lost Angels Theatre and Odyssey Theatre Ensemble.  Film/TV credits include: April, Saturday, Badge & Skaggs, Shades of Hope, Fiona’s Fortune, The Roaring Twenties, Zombie Holocaust and You! and Fiasco. Web series: The Family Curse, Red Scare and The Best Friend (also co-wrote three episodes; Won LAWebfest Award — “Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series” and nominated for IAWTV Award — “Best Writing in a Comedy”).

michaelfaulknerMichael Faulkner (Performer/Additional Material Books) was an accomplished classically-trained actor before joining the RSC in 2001. Other accomplishments include his role as loving husband; producer of some award-nominated podcasts; his not-quite-nerdy yet not-quite-handsome looks that have enabled him to play average American men on numerous national television commercials; and small roles on such television hits as Strong Medicine, Angel, and The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. He disavows the notion that it is an accomplishment that all three of the above-mentioned television shows have been cancelled. Among his many non-accomplishments are the roles of millionaire, President of the United States, or Messiah.

jerrykernionJerry Kernion (Performer) received rave reviews for his performances as Falstaff in LA Shakespeare’s Henry IV, as Don in Rounding Third at The Colony Theatre, and as Donnie Dimes in Nickel and Dimes in San Diego. Now he’s back to doing this crap. Jerry’s appeared at the Mark Taper Forum and in many films and TV shows, most of which you probably missed. He’s also produced and directed several national and only mildly annoying commercials as well as The Complete History of America (abridged) DVD. In fact, prior to joining the RSC, Jerry had quite a successful little career going and he hopes it’s not too late to go back.

adamlongAdam Long (Founding Member/Writer/Performer) began his professional life as an accountant for an anti-nuclear political action committee by day and bassist for an acoustic punk band by night.  Then he put on a skirt and wig and became a founding member of the Reduced Shakespeare Company.  Adam toured with the RSC, spent five years following The Grateful Dead, performed stand-up comedy in Canada, became a Buddhist, and finally settled in England where he lives in London with wife Alex, son Joe, daughter Tilly, friend John, four guinea pigs, a fish, two tortoises, a cat, and a small grey rabbit called Willard.

jeffmarlowJeff Marlow (Performer) grew up in Belgium and is proud to say that absolutely everything he knows about U.S. history can be found in The Complete History of America (abridged). His theatre credits include Hamlet and Nothing Sacred at South Coast Repertory, You Can’t Take it With You at the Geffen Playhouse, The Sleeper and And the Winner Is at the Laguna Playhouse, and Around the World in 80 Days at the Colony Theatre, among many others. Jeff’s TV credits include Pushing Daisies, NCIS, Grey’s Anatomy, Without a Trace, The Bernie Mac Show, Judging Amy, and Strong Medicine. His film credits include Akeelah and the Bee, The Hebrew Hammer, and I-See-You.Com. His prison credits include Leavenworth, San Quentin, and a very short bus-and-truck tour of the Russian Gulag. Jeff would like to thank his parole officer and everyone at the work release program for this opportunity.

Jane Martin (General Manager): Prior to joining the RSC and sleeping with Reed, Jane was manager/artistic director of the Hawk’s Well Theatre in Sligo, Ireland and then producer of the physical comedy troupe The Right Size, in London, England. In her copious free time away from RSC business, Jane spends time rearing two boys (three, if you count Reed) and teaching Theater at Sonoma Valley High School.

reedmartinReed Martin (Performer/Writer/Managing Partner) is a graduate of UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, The Bill Kinnamon School of Professional Umpire Training, and Clown College. He has performed in 46 states and 11 foreign countries, including New Jersey. Prior to joining the RSC in 1989, he was a clown with Ringling Brothers/Barnum & Bailey Circus where he spent two years frightening children and smelling of elephants. He lives in Northern California with his wife and two sons, all three of whom are much funnier than he is. Reed feels strongly that toilet paper should be fed over the top of the roll. (For a more extensive and less amusing bio, click here.)

Zach Moore (Sound Designer) is super-extra happy to return to the bosomy warm embrace of the RSC. He stage managed the first American tour of The Complete Millennium Musical (abridged), then led them to Edinburgh, where he drank many Guinnesses (Guinnii?).  He’s worked on all six RSC shows, in one way or another, as well as done audio work on the CD release of Bible. Zach’s a native of Pittsburgh, a freelance Sound Designer, has designed over 45 shows for the Pittsburgh Public Theater as well as being their Sound Engineer, rocks on guitar with his band Hero Destroyed, loves his Steelers, has seven pet rodents, and enjoys run-on sentences.

Davey Naylor (Stage Manager, Company Manger) was born in East Anglia at the age of 5. He is a jack of all trades yet a master of none. He can regularly be found working backstage with the Reduced outside of the US simply because he only works for beer. He is also in cahoots with Mr Rippy designing websites. Davey first met up with the RSC in 1996; he was working as a waitress in a cocktail bar. That much is true. They picked him out and shook him up, turned him around and turned him to something new. Since then he’s toured all over the UK and bits of Europe and his left hand can be seen in The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged) DVD. He cannot say the word “cheese” and is still mostly ginger! Follow him on Twitter @gingerdaveski.

mickorfeMick Orfe (Performer) was named Car & Driver Magazine‘s “Midsize Sedan of the Year” three years running in 2003, ’04, and ’05. Reviewers said “Love the ride, big feel, corners like a dream.” As an actor, Mick has appeared in several films, among them Eraser, Ready To Rumble, and Bedazzled, in which he frightened Elizabeth Hurley by staring at her too long (at the craft services table, not in the movie). On television, he’s been seen on Mad TV, where he was killed by Will Sasso; Threat Matrix, where he was killed by James Denton; Cold Case, where he was suspected of killing someone; and Strong Medicine, where the director said, “Mick, get to the set now before I kill you!” Theatrically, Mick has appeared in numerous actual Shakespeare plays (as opposed to “reduced” ones). He’s also been in Blue Jacket: The Epic Outdoor Drama, where he shaved his head and rode a horse; as well as the National Tour of the Obie-award-winning Freedom Train: The Harriet Tubman Story, in which he played all the mean white people. Mick graduated from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, where he received a BFA in “Waiting Tables”. He’s done improv and sketch with The Groundlings and Second City in Los Angeles. He plays six musical instruments, does a myriad of bad accents, donates frequently to loose poker games, and counts performing with the RSC as one of his favorite things to do. His most cherished roles, however, are “Husband” to Sarah, and “Dad” to Mason and Hudson.

Elaine M. Randolph (Stage Manager) Elaine’s credits include stage management (compulsive) and lighting design (creative) in theater, music, and dance, for the Kennedy Center, Walnut Street Theater, Actors Theater of Louisville, Theatre J, Washington Stage Guild, and 12 years at Totem Pole Playhouse. Recent projects include The Suzanne Farrell Ballet, Dana Tai Soon Burgess, Bowen McCauley Dance, Barbara Cook in Concert, The International Ballet Festival, The Sondheim Celebration and The National Heritage Awards. Favorite projects include: Quilters, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Noises Off, Pump Boys & Dinettes, Radio Gals, A Tuna Christmas, Forever Plaid, and A Christmas Carol.

Matt RippyMatt Rippy (Performer/Director/Webmaster) ran away with the Reduced in ‘96 and has appeared with them in the West End and (near) Broadway as well as various tours around the globe. Rippy acts as the Reduced webmaster and from time to time he acts as director. Sometimes he even acts like a real actor in movies: he acted like a bad guy in Day of the Dead, a good guy in Boogeyman 3 and a blink-and-u-miss-me in The Dark Knight. He also acted on TV as a confused WW2 pilot in Torchwood. Rippy knows one day he must act like a grown up, but until then he’ll just keep hanging out with the Reduced Shakespeare Company.

Jenni Schwaner (Wardrobe Supervisor) joined the RSC after survivalist training in South Australia, grad school, summer stock and the costume rentals business. As the backstage props-and-costumes wrangler, she rarely gets to see an RSC show from the front, and often has to ask the guys what the audience is laughing at. She also creates nifty fashions for her eBay business, Costuminatrix Designs.

williamshakespeareWilliam Shakespeare (Dead Playwright) supposedly wrote some, most, or all of the 36 plays published in the “First Folio” as well as Pericles, Two Noble Kinsmen, and reams of poetry. He must have been an interesting guy to have written all those keen plays, but there is no evidence that he was fun at parties, handy around the house, or even good at Chinese checkers. The RSC claims that were Shakespeare alive today, he would not only approve of their interpretations of his plays, but would also go bowling with them after the show.

danielsingerDaniel Singer (RSC Founder/Writer/Performer), a native Californian, trained in London for a career as a theatrical impresario.  Following the creation of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged), Daniel hung up his doublet-and-hose to design theme park attractions for Walt Disney Imagineering.  He’s particularly proud of his work on Disneyland’s Toontown.  After 12 years as an Imagineer, Daniel left Disney to become a freelance bohemian; these days he restores old houses, sculpts, gardens, and continues to write plays in hopes of another hit.

Austin TichenorAustin Tichenor (Writer/Performer/Managing Partner) is a fifth-generation Californian born on the 54th anniversary of the San Francisco Earthquake and the 185th anniversary of Paul Revere’s Ride, which makes him older than he looks but short for his weight. Since his debut writing and performing his boldly conceived kindergarten puppet show, Austin’s interest in sticking his hands up the backsides of interesting characters continues to this day.

An intellectual welterweight, Austin remains disappointingly average despite three very expensive degrees (two from UC Berkeley and one from Boston University). For seven seasons, he served as Associate Producing Director of the American Stage Festival in Milford, NH, writing over 20 plays and musicals for young audiences, as well as directing summer-stocky things like The Foreigner and Jesus Christ Superstar. His productions there of A Christmas Carol and Frankenstein (which he wrote) and Much Ado About Nothing and The Tempest (which he directed) were seen by literally dozens of people. Fortunately, children’s theatre, summer-stock Shakespeare and puppets proved to be the ideal training ground for the RSC, which he joined in 1992.

He created the roles of The Conspirator Guy, Moses, Adolph Hitler, the World’s Ugliest Rhinemaiden, Don Quixote, Lucas Butch Cassidy Rowdy Rooster Sundance Jennifer McShane, and ‘Scoop’ Tichenor in the Complete (abridged) shows he also co-wrote. He’s performed his own material on the BBC, NPR, and England’s Channel 4; other writings have appeared in The Independent newspaper in London, the Washington Post, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the New York Times Book Review, and the men’s room wall of Spenger’s Fish Grotto in Berkeley, California. As an actor, Austin played recurring roles on 24, Alias, Felicity, Ally McBeal, and The Practice, as well as guest starring as Guys In Ties in many hours of episodic television. With Reed Martin, he also co-created and co-starred in the TBS pilot The Week Reduced.

Austin possesses a heartwarming spirituality and a delightful suspicion of organized religion; over the years, he’s been an Agnostic (lapsed), a Pantheist (reformed), and now considers himself a Utilitarian – he believes in God when it’s useful. This theological confusion is described in his comic memoir (written with Reed Martin) called The Greatest Story Ever Sold, available at blaspheming bookstores everywhere. He also collaborated with Reed on the definitive compendium of Shakespearean scholarship Reduced Shakespeare: The Complete Guide for the Attention-Impaired (abridged); and his play for young audiences Dancing on the Ceiling is published by Broadway Play Publishing.

He also produces and hosts the podcast award-nominated Reduced Shakespeare Company Podcast. He has two kids (one of each) and lives in Los Angeles, where he is writing the Great American Novel and the Terrible Lithuanian Screenplay.

Brent TubbsBrent Tubbs (Performer, US, Belgium, Holland) got his start in theatre as “Soldier 1″ in the play The Happy Troll at Junior Theatre in Davenport, Iowa. Now, Brent performs regularly in many different improv groups in Los Angeles at such theatres as Second City and IO. Brent’s TV and film credits include small roles on shows that are now canceled, and leading roles in films that went nowhere. Brent’s theatre credits include the role of “Brent” in All the Great Books (abridged). He has also played the part of “Brent” in Completely Hollywood (abridged), and he can be seen also playing to great reviews as “Brent” in The Bible: The Complete Word of God (abridged). Brent hopes that one day you will get to see him playing the extraordinary part of “Brent” in The Complete History of America (abridged). Brent would like to note that his favorite part that he has ever played, was the part of “Brent”. Brent would like to try and fit the name “Brent” into this bio 5 more times… Brent, Brent, Brent, Brent, Brent. Enjoy the show!

Jon Weber (Composer/Arranger) has toured all over the world and received numerous honors for performance and composition.  “A virtuoso pianist” (UK’s Jazz Journal International), Jon has opened for jazz luminaries Pat Metheny, Freddie Hubbard and Buddy Rich, as well as selling out Carnegie Hall four times and scoring for television since 1987.  His newest CD, Simple Complex, was voted 2004′s #1 Jazz CD by the Chicago Tribune, Swiss National Radio, Norwegian National Radio, Estonian National Radio, and BBC Online. His website is www.jonwebermusic.com.  Why he’s worked with the RSC on three shows is anybody’s guess.

jesswinfieldJess Winfield (Founding Member/Writer/Performer) was an original member of the RSC, co-author of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged), and performed with the troupe from its founding in 1981 until 1992, when he realized he’d played the title role of Hamlet more times than John Gielgud and Laurence Olivier combined and suddenly felt very old. He left the troupe to write and produce animated television for the Walt Disney Company, which made him feel young again — until he’d been there for ten years, at which point he felt old again. He left Disney to write My Name Is Will — A Novel of Sex, Drugs, and Shakespeare (Twelve Books). Depicting excessive drug use and promiscuous sex by both a would-be young Shakespeare scholar in the 1980s and the 18-year old Immortal Bard himself in the 1580s made Jess feel young again; but then he and Daniel Singer revised the Complete Works in honor of its 20th anniversary and directed it in the West End, which made him feel old again. He now lives in Hollywood with his wife (and original RSC costume goddess) Sa, and is working on his second novel… which makes him feel like he’s in his forties. www.jesswinfield.com

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