Jason Robert Brown

Composer

Birthday June 20, 1970

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Ossining, New York, United States

Age 53 years old

Nationality United States

#41247 Most Popular

1970

Jason Robert Brown (born June 20, 1970) is an American musical theatre composer, lyricist, and playwright.

Brown's music sensibility fuses pop-rock stylings with theatrical lyrics.

He is the recipient of three Tony Awards for his work on Parade and The Bridges of Madison County.

Brown grew up in the suburbs of New York City, and attended the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York for 2 years, rooming with fellow student, and vocalist, Christopher Mooney.

During summer, he attended French Woods Festival of the Performing Arts in Hancock, New York.

He said Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street and Sunday in the Park with George were two of his biggest influences, and had it not been for them, he would have joined a rock band and tried to be Billy Joel.

He began his career in New York City as an arranger, conductor, and pianist, working on shows such as William Finn's A New Brain, and playing at several nightclubs and piano bars in the city.

Songs for a New World marked the first major New York production of Brown's songs.

An off-Broadway revue with a limited run, the show was directed by Daisy Prince, daughter of director/producer Hal Prince, and featured the 25-year-old Brown's pop-rock-influenced music.

The song "Stars and the Moon" has since become a cabaret standard, and is probably Brown's best-known composition to date.

Brown was subsequently hired to write songs for the Broadway musical Parade, based on the trial and lynching of Leo Frank, after meeting Hal Prince.

1999

Parade, directed by Prince and with a book by Alfred Uhry, won Brown the 1999 Tony Award for Best Original Score.

During this production, Livent, one of the producers of Parade, pulled out after reviews were not as positive as they'd hoped.

RCA Victor, the other major producer, decided it would pull out as well.

Brown said of the event in 1999, "Livent dropped out shortly after the reviews came out. They announced they would not spend another dime on the show. RCA had an agreement to record all of Livent's shows. But when Livent pulled out of 'Parade,' the RCA higher-ups said they were pulling out, too. I had to go to Billy Rosenfield and ask him: 'What if we pay for this record and you just distribute it?' Billy said, 'Sure.'" Brown had to try to scrounge money from every corner, "In the end, RCA put in $25,000, Lincoln Center put in a big chunk, around $200,000, including the producer Scott Rudin's $25,000, and there was a contribution from the Gilman and Gonzalez-Falla foundation, which has helped support a lot of musical theatre composers over the years, of $40,000. Even Roy Furman, the new guy at Livent, gave us a little money. Somehow, we pulled it together."

Livent also was struggling at the time because the company had mishandled funds while applying for bankruptcy protection.

Brown went back to working with Daisy Prince for his third major show The Last Five Years, for which he wrote the book as well as songs.

Inspired by his own failed first marriage, the show is a two-person musical that tells the history of a relationship from two different perspectives.

The male's narrative begins at the beginning of the story and progresses through marriage, infidelity, and divorce, while the female narrative begins at the end of the relationship and ends with the couple's first date; the two actors' only direct interaction takes place midpoint, during the wedding sequence.

The original Chicago cast consisted of Norbert Leo Butz and Lauren Kennedy, with Sherie Rene Scott over the New York run.

The Last Five Years received mixed critical reviews and was not a commercial success, lasting only two months off-Broadway, although Brown garnered 2 Drama Desk Awards for music and lyrics.

Additionally, due to the cast recording featuring Scott and Butz, the show has gained popularity among contemporary musical theatre aficionados and is an oft-performed piece in regional and community theatres.

2003

The show was nominated, with 30 other composers, for the 2003 Tony Award for Best Musical Score, losing out to Hairspray.

2005

In June 2005, Brown released a solo album, entitled Wearing Someone Else's Clothes.

In December 2005, his Chanukah Suite received its world premiere with two performances by the Los Angeles Master Chorale at the Walt Disney Concert Hall.

He also teaches courses in musical theatre performance and composition at the University of Southern California.

Brown is an active performer of his own work, singing and playing the piano with or without his band, the Caucasian Rhythm Kings (Gary Sieger, guitar, and Randy Landau, bass).

2007

Brown's tween-oriented musical 13 premiered at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, CA on January 7, 2007.

2008

It opened on Broadway October 5, 2008, at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre, and closed on January 4, 2009.

2013

His Bridges of Madison County, a musical adaption of the film with Marsha Norman premiered at the Williamstown Theatre Festival on August 1, 2013.

Directed by Bartlett Sher, the cast featured Elena Shaddow as Francesca and Steven Pasquale.

2014

The musical opened on Broadway on February 27, 2014, at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre, starring Kelli O'Hara as Francesca.

Brown wrote the music for the 2022 musical, Mr. Saturday Night with lyrics by Amanda Green and a book by Billy Crystal,

Lowell Ganz & Babaloo Mandel.

Brown was nominated for best score at the 2022 Tony Awards.

According to Brown, Bree Lowdermilk used to be an assistant to him.

2015

A film version of the show, featuring Anna Kendrick and Jeremy Jordan, was released in February 2015.

Brown contributed several songs to the Broadway flop Urban Cowboy.

He had worked as an orchestrator with director Phillip Oesterman on the Off-Broadway musical New York Rock, and Oesterman called on him to help him out with Urban Cowboy.

Urban Cowboy had been denied the use of the Clint Black catalog, and Brown came in and wrote a few songs (with help from director Lonny Price, who replaced Oesterman after he died).