July 9, 2009

Home
Playbill Club
Discounts
Benefits
Join Club
Member Services
News
U.S./Canada
International
Tony Awards
Obituaries
Awards Roundup
All
Listings/Tickets
Broadway
Off-Broadway
Regional/Tours
London
Features
Week in Review
Broadway Grosses
On the Record
The DVD Shelf
Stage to Screens
On Opening Night
Inside Track
Playbill Archives
Ask Playbill.com
Special Features
Tony Features
All

Buy Broadway show merchandise
Shop for Broadway Merchandise
Casting & Jobs
Job Listings
Post a Job
Celebrity Buzz
Diva Talk
Brief Encounter
The Leading Men
Cue and A
Onstage & Backstage
Who's Who
Insider Info
Playbill Digital
Multimedia
Photo Galleries
Interactive
Polls
Quizzes
Contests
Theatre Central
Sites
Connections
Reference
Awards Database
Seating Charts
Restaurants
Hotels
FAQs

RSS News Feed


Features: Special Features
Related Information
Email this Article Email this Article
Printer-friendly Printer-friendly

Bookmark and Share
A Life in the Theatre: Stage Manager Jack Gianino

By Mervyn Rothstein
14 Dec 2004

Jack Gianino
Jack Gianino

Stage professionals look back at decades of devotion to their craft

****************

Jack Gianino has worked in the theatre for more than 45 years, mostly as a stage manager. His shows have included the Pulitzer Prize-winning original 'night, Mother; The Scarlet Pimpernel; Black and Blue; The Tap Dance Kid; and Love, Janis. But most likely you've never heard of him.

Which is all right with Gianino, who in his own words has "kept a low profile and preferred it that way." And besides, who other than a theatre aficionado would know anything about stage managers?

Gianino is one of the legion of theatre people — production crew, casting directors, lighting technicians, musicians — who work behind the scenes with no publicity, and yet without whom the shows we love would not be possible.

What does a stage manager do? "A stage manager is a director's right-hand man," Gianino says. "If the show runs for a while, he or she becomes the surrogate director, responsible for keeping the director's vision in the show and making sure that what the director had in mind remains on the stage."

The stage manager "watches the show every night and gives notes to the actors. He's involved in casting replacements when the director is not available, rehearsing the replacements and understudies, and putting those people in the show."

But there's more. "I try to make a happy company, which is very important, both to the people involved and the quality of the show."

Gianino was born and grew up in Boston, the son of Sicilian immigrants. He had a happy childhood, but one devoid of theatre. He entered the University of Massachusetts at Amherst as a chemistry major, but in his second year, he "saw an ad in the school paper for a play being cast — a one-act, The Informer. I auditioned and got the job, and we took it to a theatre festival in Pittsfield, MA. We were driven there, and we were given lunch. And I thought, wow, I get driven around, I get a free lunch, there are pretty girls. This theatre stuff is a really good racket."

So he kept on acting. Eventually, he moved to New York, getting jobs in the city, in road companies, in stock and regional theatre. But he had married and was starting a family. So he had a chat with a good theatre friend, Norman Rothstein, who was then a production manager and was to become a producer and general manager. "And Norman asked if I would consider stage managing."

And that's how his career as a stage manager began. "I think most of it has been fun," Gianino says. "There have been a lot of ups and downs, good years and lean years, but I've been very fortunate. I met my wife through the theatre; we're still together, and we have terrific children."

Theatre, in fact, runs in the family. His wife, Lucy Martin, is an actress. His son, Gian-Murray, is an actor, and his younger daughter, Antonia, is also a stage manager. (His older daughter, Gemina, is an educator.)

"Sometimes there are disappointments," he says, "and sometimes you have to struggle to pay the rent. But I certainly wouldn't hold anyone back from going into it."

Yes, it can be hard to get a job. "But when nothing is happening, and you think there's no hope," he says, "all of a sudden the phone rings."




Keyword:

Features/Location:

Writer:

 


advanced search

Free Membership
Exclusive Ticket Discounts
Join

NEWEST DISCOUNTS
Memphis
The Tempermentals
Tin Pan Alley Rag
Waiting for Godot
Our Town
Girls Night
Stone Soup
South Pacific
Vanities

ALSO SAVE ON BROADWAY'S BEST
Blithe Spirit
Chicago
Hair
Next to Normal
The 39 Steps
The Norman Conquests
The Phantom of
   the Opera
Shrek The Musical
Waiting for Godot
and more!

Latest Podcast:
"Next to Normal" orchestrator Michael Starobin and music director Charlie Alterman


Newest features from PlaybillArts.com:

Photo Journal: Dessay and Pirgu Star in Santa Fe Traviata

"Britain's Got Talent" Winner Paul Potts Brings U.S. Tour to New York July 9

Click here for more classical music, opera, and dance features.


· Schedule of Upcoming Broadway Shows
· Schedule of Upcoming Off-Broadway Shows
· Broadway Rush and Standing Room Only Policies
· Broadway's July 4 Performance Schedule Changes
· Long Runs on Broadway
· Weekly Schedule of Current Broadway Shows
· Upcoming Cast Recordings


Click here to see all of the latest polls !


Email this page to a friend!