Anthony Marciona

Anthony Marciona
Born (1961-09-27) September 27, 1961[1]
The Bronx, New York, U.S.
Occupation Actor, Musician, Dancer
Years active 1968–present

Anthony Marciona (born September 27, 1961) is an American film, Broadway and television actor, singer and dancer from New York City. Marciona began his acting career at the age of five playing Kirk Douglas' godson in The Brotherhood.[1]

Biography

Marciona was born in The Bronx, New York to parents Joseph Marciona, a retired NYC teacher, and Louise (née Smedile). He and his family moved to Pelham in Westchester County, where he graduated from Pelham Memorial High School. After graduating he moved back to New York City.

He currently resides in Los Angeles with his business and life partner, Joseph A. LoBue. He has one sister, Suzan Marciona, and two nieces, Francesca Louise and Simone Marie.

He helped create That's A Nice! a gourmet Southern-Italian specialty food line which produces all-natural gourmet products from original family Sicilian recipes at www.thatsanice.com

Education

Marciona studied film making at the School of Visual Arts in New York, University of California Los Angeles, and also received a business degree from SMC.He was also a composition/jazz major at the Manhattan School of Music. Marciona studied drama at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London, American Academy of Dramatic Arts, HB Studios, The Groundlings, BANG. He has also been coached under Sanford Meisner, Diane Castle, Bill Esper, and John Kirby.[1]

Career

Acting

Since his career began in 1966, Marciona has worked with a greatly diverse group of successful actor/actresses, producers, singers, dancers and composers including Angela Lansbury, John Guare, Chuck Norris, Dustin Hoffman, Harold Prince, Marisa Tomei, Stephen Schwartz, Jason Mraz, Pete Townshend, Jerome Robbins, F. Murray Abraham, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Herschel Bernardi, Alberto Sordi, Arthur Laurents, Jennifer Lopez and The B-52s.[1]

Aside from acting, Marciona has become active behind the scenes as well. In 1990 he founded and is director of ETC inc. a Non-profit organization which presents New American Theatre in Rome, Italy and Los Angeles. He produced four short film projects which have won awards on PBS and the festival circuit under his production company D.I.Y.N. Productions which he co-established with Raymond Carver Award winning writer/director Joyceann Masters.[1]

Marciona has also been a commercial casting session director having worked for McDonalds, Pepsi, United Airlines and many other company's.[1]

He created and ran a multi-media arts complex called The Space, in Hollywood, California consisting of multiple casting studios, 2 performing arts theaters, rehearsal facilities, and production offices.[1]

Music and dance

As a musical composer Marciona has completed the scores to the stage musicals Murder At The Palace and Powder Puff Derby. He is also composer in development with A.N.M.T. Marciona plays the piano and has written for and performed with two pop music bands Interpret and Ariel & Anthony.[1]

He studied dance under the legendary teacher and choreographer Phil Black, in New York.

Filmography

Year Film Character Role
1968 The Brotherhood Antonio (uncredited)
1973 My Brother Anastasia Giuseppe
1980 The Idolmaker Gino
1985 HeartBeat (TV) Roy
Invasion U.S.A. Carlos
1986 Playing for Keeps Ronnie Long
2003 Feet Afire Don Marciona Supporting role
2006 Jackass Number Two Dancer (uncredited)
2007 The Documents (Dokymentbl) Fig Man
2008 An American Carol Professor #6

Television appearances

Year TV Show Role Episode
1983 CHiPs Lenny "Return of the Brat Patrol"
1995 Murder, She Wrote Stage Manager "Murder in High C"
1996 Spider-Man (voice) Additional Voices "Sins of the Fathers Chapter 2: Make a Wish"
2003 Dragnet Slezak " Well Endowed"
2004 Six Feet Under (stunts) "In Case of Rapture"
2006 Cold Case Kit Kat Boy #2 "Willkommen"
Alias Luigi "No Hard Feelings"
2010/2011 Glee Dancer "In Case of Rapture"

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.