Ellen Boscov

Ellen Boscov
Image from Boscov's Garden

Ellen Boscov is a multidisciplinary artist (a composer, writer and performer). Her art song Green Tree was released as a music video directed and produced by Carla Dauden in July 2016.[1] Long before Ellen studied music, she wrote the poem, Green Tree. A desire to set her poetry to music led her to learn about musical composition. Ellen also wrote the script for the Green Tree video.

Education and Experience

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Ellen received her BFA from University of North Carolina School of the Arts. Further studies include: poetry writing with Leslie Ullman and Li-Young-Lee; playwriting with Will Dunne and Richard Caliban; canon and fugue composition with Professor Richard Brodhead (Temple University Boyer College of Music and Dance); music theory with Jordan Klein and David Carpenter.

Ellen has worked as a teaching artist with California Poets in the Schools and Philadelphia Playwrights in the Schools.

Notable Works

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Ellen’s full length drama THE ROSES ON THE ROCKS was produced by Manhattan Theatre Source in New York City.[2]

NOBODY’S MAMA, the first draft of The Roses on the Rocks, was a semi-finalist in the Cherry Lane Mentor Project in New York City.[3]

Her full-length comedy, DILLSBERRY U.S.A., was produced by the Marsh in San Francisco, CA. It received a Zellerbach Family Fund grant to support its production.[4]

It also received a showcase at the Cable Car Theatre's Off the Track Series in San Francisco and a staged reading at the Castillo Theatre in New York City. Ellen's full-length play, WE’RE JUST ONE HAWAIIAN DANCER, was produced at the Theatre Shoppe in Chicago, IL. Ellen wrote her first play, BUNNY HIPS, with Mary Louise Parker.

Actress career

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As a professional actor, Ellen has worked in numerous theatres including: Wisconsin Shakespeare Festival; Cable Car Theater, San Francisco; The Marsh, San Francisco. Ellen has also performed improvisational movement and storytelling with Olivia Corson and Third Stone Production.

Ellen’s short stories were published by "Phoebe: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Feminist Scholarship, Theory and Aesthetics;" Primal Voices;" and "American Writing: a magazine."

References

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Category:Composers


References

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