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Charles Busch

Milestones

  • Birthplace: New York City, New York, USA
  • Birthday: August 23, 1954
  • 2001

    Joined the cast of the ABC daytime serial "One Life to Live" playing Peg Barlow

  • 2000

    First screenwriting credit, adapting "Psycho Beach Party"; too old for the lead role of Chicklet, he portrayed adult femmes Captain Monica Stark and Mrs. Forrest

  • 2000

    Wrote "The Tale of the Alergist's Wife" (his most accessible play yet) for Linda Lavin; did not act in it; opened to successful Off-Broadway run in the spring; transferred to Broadway in fall; earned Best Play Tony nomination

  • 1999 to 2000

    Had recurring role as an inmate on HBO's "Oz"; his character suffocated Italian mob boss Antonio Nappa

  • 1997

    Conceived "Queen Amarantha" as his (Sarah) Bernhardt vehicle; portrayed a drag actor playing a woman (Amarantha) who's conflicted about her gender and dresses as a man; rejecting his usual "camp" style, he successfully addressed a serious subject ending in tragedy

  • 1997

    Performed his one-man show "Flipping My Wig", subtitled "An Evening with Charles Busch"; directed by Elliott

  • 1997

    Portrayed Ms. Ellen, the resident, fortune-telling drag queen in "Trouble on the Corner"

  • 1997

    With composor-lyricist Rusty McGee concocted the Off-Broadway musical "The Green Heart", based on the same Jack Ritchie story that inspired Elaine May's "A New Leaf" (1971); did not act in it

  • 1996

    Co-authored and appeared in the Off-Broadway musical "Swingtime Canteen"

  • 1995

    Played a gay man in his "You Should Be So Lucky", his first play featuring Jewish humor, as well as gay humor

  • 1994

    Uncharacteristically played a male role (Timothy) in Andrew Bergman's "It Could Happen to You"

  • 1993

    Appeared as Countess Aphasia du Barry in "Addams Family Values"

  • 1991

    Portrayed Mary Dale, a well-meaning Pollyanna of a Hollywood star who names names at the McCarthy hearings, in his "Red Scare on Sunset"

  • 1988

    Adapted Guy Bolton and Eddie Davis' book for a new production of the 1955 musical "Ankles Aweigh" at Goodspeed Opera House, East Haddam, Connecticut; first thing he had written that he did not perform in

  • 1988

    Provided the voice of Gemnen, a two-headed monster, in the animated sci-fi feature "Light Years"

  • 1988

    Wrote and performed in "The Lady in Question", playing an American concert pianist and Nazi hunter in World War II Europe; moved from Limbo Lounge to WPA Theatre and finally to the Orpheum Theatre in 1989

  • 1987

    Played the lead in his own "Psycho Beach Party"

  • 1985

    Off-Broadway debut, "Vampire Lesbians of Sodom"; ran five years, becoming one of the longest-running non-musicals in Off-Broadway history

  • 1985

    Wrote and performed in "Times Square Angel", a touching Christmas tale of a tough cookie with a tender heart, starring Busch as Irish O'Flanagan

  • 1984

    Formed Theatre-in-Limbo with a group of friends (including Kenneth Elliott) and began performing plays at the Limbo Lounge, where the hit "Vampire Lesbians of Sodom" originated

  • 1978

    Wrote and performed one-man show "Hollywood Confidential" in Greenwich Village

  • After college, worked for two years in Chicago with a small company of unimaginative actors who resented him writing and starring in all their shows

  • Raised by his Aunt Lillian in Hartsdale, New York after his mother died when he was seven

  • Toured the country with one-man show, "Charles Busch Alone with a Cast of Thousands"; seeing this piece, Charles Ludlum provided him with the space to perform "Hollywood Confidential"

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