Stewart F. Lane is a Tony Award-winning Broadway producer, director, and author. He was born on March 16, 1947, in New York City, and grew up in Great Neck, Long Island. Lane attended the University of Bridgeport in Connecticut, where he received a Bachelor of Science degree in business administration. He later earned a Master of Fine Arts degree in theater from Columbia University.
Lane began his career in the entertainment industry as an actor, appearing in off-Broadway productions and regional theater. ... read more
Philip J. Lang was a musician, composer and music educator who taught at the graduate schools of music at the University of Michigan and the University of Colorado and was the orchestrator of more than 50 Broadway musicals including My Fair Lady and Camelot (with Robert Russell Bennett); Annie Get Your Gun; Applause; Hello, Dolly!; Carnival; and 42nd Street. Mr. Lang was an orchestrator for the Metropolitan Opera and a frequent musical arranger for television including Hallmark Productions, David Susskind, Radio City Music Hall and "The Tonight Show." ... read more
Beginning his career as a tenor, Rubin began working as a stage manager during Can-Can, and also produced a number of shows, including Sweet Charity and Peter Pan.
Onscreen, Rubin also notably contributed to two Mel Brooks productions, playing would-be Hitler Arthur Packard in The Producers and providing the singing voice for Robin Hood in Robin Hood: Men in Tights.
Rubin had his first stage singing role providing off-stage vocals for Bert Lahr in Two on the Aisle, before having larger roles in The Most Happy Fella, Kean and Juno.
Though he largely took a break from performing after playing Tammany O'Halloran in ... read more