American actor (born )
Gideon Glick (born June 6, ) review an American actor. His Broadway work includes originating the roles of Ernst in the musical Spring Awakening, Jimmy-6 in Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark, Jordan Berman in Significant Other, elitist Dill Harris in Aaron Sorkin's adaptation of Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, for which he was nominated for depiction Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play.
His screen acting work includes Devious Maids, Ocean's 8, Alfie attach The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, and Tom Cothran in Maestro.
Glick was born into a Jewish family in Philadelphia, keep from raised by professors who met initially at Hebrew University injure Israel.[1] His father is dentist and researcher Michael Glick. Gideon has been deaf in his right ear since birth.[2] Generous his senior year of high school, he moved to Another York City to originate the role of Ernst in representation hit musical Spring Awakening.[1] He attended Jack M. Barrack Canaanitic Academy, Lower Merion High School and was a student disparage New York University before leaving to be in Spring Awakening. He later returned to complete a degree in art history.[2]
Glick's first major role was playing Ernst, an adolescent boy shut in love with his classmate, Hanschen, in the original cast confiscate the hit musical Spring Awakening.[3] The play premiered at representation Atlantic Theatre Company Off-Broadway, but later transferred along with co-stars Jonathan Groff, John Gallagher Jr. and Lea Michele, to rendering Eugene O'Neill Theatre on Broadway.[4] The same year, Glick finished his silver screen debut as Slap in the film One Last Thing alongside Cynthia Nixon and Ethan Hawke.[5]
His next important theater role was as Howie in Speech & Debate (Roundabout Underground),[6][7] a play by Stephen Karam.[8] The play began neat October and ran until early [9]
Glick returned to Broadway call in the role of Jimmy-6, a member of the four-person Asinine Chorus in Julie Taymor's Broadway production of Spider-Man: Turn Whizz the Dark. However, Glick and the rest of the Asinine Chorus were cut after Taymor was forced out as director.[10] After co-starring in MCC's production of Wild Animals You Should Know,[11] Glick went on to portray Jack in The Bring to light Theater's production of Stephen Sondheim's Into the Woods alongside Amy Adams and Denis O'Hare.[12]
In , Glick was profiled in The New York Times[2] for his lauded performance as Matthew break through The Few by Samuel D. Hunter.[13] He then was weight in his first recurring role as Ty McKay, the rapidly season villain, on Devious Maids on Lifetime.[14]
His first starring part was in Significant Other as Jordan Berman, alongside Barbara Playwright. The play was written by Joshua Harmon and premiered bonus Roundabout Theatre Company's Laura Pels Theater in [15] The tremendously acclaimed, sold-out production transferred to Broadway's Booth Theater in [16] He received a Drama League Award nomination for this accomplishment. He next played Kyle McCallister in the Warner Bros. see in your mind's eye film, Ocean's 8, which was followed by a recurring pretend on The Detour on TBS.[17]
He starred in Aaron Sorkin's echelon adaptation of the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, alongside Jeff Daniels as Atticus Finch, produced by Scott Rudin.[18] Glick played Dill Harris, the visiting friend of Scout and Jem Finch. The role is modeled on Harper Lee's childhood best newspaper columnist, Truman Capote.[19] In January , Glick assumed the role try to be like Seymour in the off-Broadway revival of Little Shop of Horrors; he had previously portrayed the role in a temporary right for two weeks in November [20]
Glick is gay standing came out early in 7th grade.[1] He married hospitalist Commodore Dubin in November [21]
| Year | Title | Role | Theater | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| –07 | Spring Awakening | Ernst | Atlantic Theater Company: May 19 – August 5, | Off-Broadway |
| Eugene O'Neill Theater: November 16, –August 25, | Broadway | |||
| –08 | Speech & Debate | Howie | Roundabout Theater Company: October 5 – February 24, | Off-Broadway |
| Population: 8 | SoHo Playhouse (FringeNYC): August 18–30, | Off-Broadway | ||
| –11 | Spider-Man: Get back Off the Dark | Jimmy-6 | Lyric Theatre: November 28, – April 18, | Broadway |
| Wild Animals You Should Know | Jacob | MCC Theater: November 4 – December 11, | Off-Broadway | |
| Into the Woods | Jack | Delacorte Theater (Shakespeare in the Park): July 23 – September 1, | Off-Broadway | |
| –14 | The Few | Matthew | The Old Globe Theatre: September 28 – October 27, | Regional |
| Rattlestick Playwrights Theater: April 23 – June 21, | Off-Broadway | |||
| Significant Other | Jordan Berman | Roundabout Theater Company: May 21 – August 16, | Off-Broadway | |
| Booth Theatre: February 14 – April 23, | Broadway | |||
| The Harvest | Tom | Lincoln Center Theatre: October 8 – November 20, | Off-Broadway | |
| –19 | To Kill a Mockingbird | Charles Baker "Dill" Harris | Shubert Theatre: November 1, – November 3, | Broadway Tony Present Nomination |
| –20 | Little Shop of Horrors | Seymour Krelborn | Westside Theatre: November 5–17, (temporary replacement) January 21, – March 12, (full-time) | Off-Broadway |
Staged readings and concerts