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Jane Reisman
Broadway lighting designer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Maritza Jane Reisman (March 25, 1937 - December 1, 2017[1]), known as Jane Reisman, was an American lighting designer for Broadway, ballet and opera.[1]
Early life
Reisman's parents were Lillian Castleman and Leo Reisman, a violinist and big band leader. Reisman spent her childhood in Manhattan and Massachusetts and attended Vassar college with a degree in drama. She then moved to London to begin her career.[1]
Career
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Reisman worked as a professional lighting designer beginning in 1963.[2]
Work
Reisman designed the lighting for shows both on and off-broadway as well as for ballet and opera companies around the world. Notable work includes designs for ABT, Rome Opera Ballet, and the Royal Winnipeg Ballet as well as over 50 opera productions.[3] Reisman and her husband, Neil Peter Jampolis, collaborated on the Tony-nominated lighting design for the Broadway musical Black and Blue.[4] They again teamed up on Forever Plaid a musical show along with the 2009 film adaptation on which Reisman designed the lighting and Neil designed the production. The show has been performed globally since originally opening in New York City in 1989.[1]
Teaching
Reisman taught Lighting Design at Emerson College, Bennington College and UCLA. She also taught master classes at Banff for seven years.[5]
Legacy
Reisman and her husband founded a trust in 2003 that stipulated their home on the shores of the Minas Basin to be left to a non-profit organization that would use it as a retreat for writers and artists. The cottage in Avonport, Nova Scotia was donated to the Writers' Federation of Nova Scotia fulfilling its intended purpose.[6]
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Notable productions
Broadway
Source:[7]
WARP - Opened February 14, 1973[8]
Me Jack, You Jill - Opened March 14, 1976[9]
G.R. Point - Opened April 16, 1979[10]
Black and Blue - Opened January 26, 1989[11]
Off Broadway
Shadow of Heroes - Opened December 5, 1961[12]
Breakfast Conversations in Miami - January 1984[13]
A Breaking the Prairie Wolf Code - Opened November 13, 1985[14]
Faith, Hope and Charity - Opened December 1988[15]
Forever Plaid - Opened May 20, 1990[16]
Tale of Two Cities - April 1990[17]
Who Will Carry The Word? - November 1993[18]
Beauty's Daughter - Opened January 25, 1995[19]
Saint Lucy's Eyes - Opened March 28, 2001[20]
Other
Cornet Christoph Rilke's Song of Love and Death (Manhattan School of Music) - December 1990[21]
The Postman Always Rings Twice (Boston Lyric Theatre) - March 1994[22]
Turn of the Screw (Manhattan School of Music) - April 1994[23]
References
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