| Marc
Durso, Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers Associate and
a member of Actors' Equity Association, has assisted Broadway directors
Alan Arkin, Tony Stevens, Tony Award winner Ann Reinking and Tony
Award winner Charles
Nelson Reilly.
He has directed/associate
directed NY and LA premieres starring Tony Award winners Uta
Hagen and Fritz Weaver as well as for legendary Master Teacher,
Sanford
Meisner.

He has written
for a CBS animated series, CADILLACS & DINOSAURS, with head writer,
Steven de Souza, writer of the blockbuster films, DIE HARD and BEVERLY
HILLS COP.
Marc assisted
Impresario James A. Doolittle in presenting the Baryshnikov, Kirov,
Joffrey, American
Ballet Theatre and Radio City ROCKETTES
dance companies at the Dorothy
Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles developing budgets for multi-million
dollar productions.
He has coached
actors for Film/TV in Los Angeles and taught Acting and Directing
as guest faculty at The Musical Theatre Project, the Ford Festival
of One Act Plays-Heidelberg, Germany, where he received the Award
for Excellence, and E.T.A.'s International Thespian Festival held
at the University of Nebraska.
He assisted the Cayman National Cultural Foundation on the country's
first live televised theatrical production.
He coaches actors
for Film and TV in the South Florida Entertainment Market where
his is the Rehearsal Coach for the Miami Telenovela OCEAN AVENUE,
as well as the US competitors in the World Ballroom Theatrical Dance
competition in Blackpool, England.
His client
list includes:
Marc teaches
private workshops throughout the United States and Europe. His students
are working SAG, AFTRA and AEA members with film and TV starring
and co-starring roles, national tours and commercials to their credit.
His students
have gone on to study at The Atlantic Theater Company, AADA, Neighborhood
Playhouse, H.
B. Studio in New York, The Irish Theatre and Oxford Summer Programs.
Marc is a graduate
of the Burt Reynolds Institute, where he studied with Tony Award
winners and Broadway stars Julie Harris, Leonard Frye, Tom Troupe,
Alan Arkin, Jerry Herman and Charles
Nelson Reilly.
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