Loading AI tools
American musical entertainer and actress From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kim Criswell (born July 19, 1957) is an American musical entertainer and actress.
Kim Criswell | |
---|---|
Born | Hampton, Virginia, U.S. | July 19, 1957
Education | University of Cincinnati (BFA) |
Occupation(s) | musical entertainer and actress |
Known for | soloist at The Proms |
Notable work | one-woman show Doin What Comes Naturally |
Criswell was born in Hampton, Virginia, United States,[1] and grew up in Chattanooga, Tennessee. After she graduated from Hixson High School[2] in suburban Chattanooga, she studied musical theatre at the University of Cincinnati's College Conservatory of Music. She then moved to New York City where she landed a role in the touring company of Annie. She made her Broadway debut in The First in 1981.[1] She has been in numerous musicals and has appeared with some of America's leading symphony orchestras as the featured soloist. She won the Helen Hayes Award in 1989 for her 1988 performance in Side By Side By Sondheim at the Olney Theatre in Washington.[3]
In September 1991, she presented her one-woman show Doin What Comes Naturally, at the Shaw Theatre in London.[1] She has lived in London since 1992, when she was invited to play Annie Oakley in Irving Berlin's musical Annie Get Your Gun.[4]
On August 1, 2009, she was a featured soloist in the "BBC Proms 2009: a Celebration of Classic MGM Film Musicals" at the Royal Albert Hall. On that evening she performed a number of songs including: "The Trolley Song", "Over the Rainbow" and "Get Happy" all originally made famous by Judy Garland. She additionally performed the songs "I Got Rhythm" (also in Garland's repertoire) and "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" in a duet with Seth MacFarlane. On October 4, 2009, she was a featured artist at the Broadway to West End Gala in the Theatre Royal Drury Lane.[5] She repeated her Proms Concert success when she appeared in a Rodgers and Hammerstein evening, once again with the John Wilson Orchestra at The Royal Albert Hall with opera singer Rod Gilfry in August 2010.
In January 2012, she performed at Vienna's Volksoper, starring in Bernstein's Candide.
Title | Character |
---|---|
Side By Side (1988) | Soloist |
Side By Side By Sondheim | Soloist (won the Helen Hayes Award!) |
Annie | Star to be / Ensemble |
Annie Get Your Gun (1992) | Annie Oakley |
Anything Goes (studio recording) | Reno Sweeney |
Baby (Dec 4, 1983) | Narrator, 6th woman, people in town |
Dames At Sea (1996) | Ruby |
Dubarry Was A Lady | |
Elegies For Punks And Raging Queens (1993) | Soloist |
The First (1981) | Girl at bat/Dodger wife/Hilda Chester |
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (May 1991) | Dorothy Shaw |
Girl Crazy | Kate (?) |
Glory Of Easter | Virgin Mary (Mary Magdalene for 1 performance) |
Guys And Dolls | Miss Adelaide |
The History Of The Musical by Richard Fawkes (Naxos Audiobooks) | Narrator |
Kiss Me Kate | Lois Lane/Bianca |
Lady Be Good (2000) | |
Let Em Eat Cake (March 21, 1994) | Mary Turner |
Man Of La Mancha (2000 Covent Garden Festival) | Aldonza / Dulcinea |
Nine | Francesca, (U/S Claudia, Carla,) |
Of Thee I Sing (June 27, 1998) | Diana Devereaux |
On The Town | Hildy the taxi driver |
One Touch Of Venus | |
Sitting Pretty | |
Slow Drag (1997) | June Wedding |
Strike Up The Band | |
Trouble in Tahiti (12 October 2008, BR Klassik 403571900300) | Dinah |
Wonderful Town (1999) | Ruth |
"Dearest Enemy" (2012)
Mary Murray
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.