Mark Bruce Rosin
- Writer
- Producer
Mark Bruce Rosin received his B.A. in English Language and Literature
from University of Chicago where he was feature editor of the campus newspaper
and directed The Changeling and The Importance of Being Earnest for
University Theatre. While in college, he was a stringer for The Chicago Daily News.
He received an M.A. in English Language and Literature from Yale University,
and studied at the Yale Drama School with Shakespearean scholar Jan Kott
and theatre director Gordon Rogoff.
While still at Yale, Mark sold a short story to Harper's Bazaar and soon joined the magazine's staff as associate literary editor before becoming a contributing editor, writing celebrity interviews and articles on subjects ranging from psychology to contemporary art. Simultaneously, he was brought in as co-director of the New York production of the rock musical Stomp at the Public Theatre.
After working with director Alex Grasshoff on a documentary film in Toronto, Mark was brought to Los Angeles by Grasshoff to write a screenplay, then worked as a story editor and went on to become an executive at CBS, West Coast, where he was part of the team that oversaw the development and production of comedy and drama pilots. He left CBS to head television and film development for Talent Associates, West Coast, and later earned his first screen credits for indie legends Roger Corman and Samuel Arkoff.
Mark was lured back to the world of publishing by Parents magazine, which brought him to New York where he became the magazine's senior editor and special projects editor. While writing and editing articles about parenting and child psychology by day, Mark also worked with the Ensemble Studio Theatre, which did successful workshop productions of his play Salt Air and his and Barry Glasser's play Twice Removed. Mark also was an uncredited "show doctor" for musicals on Broadway and off-off Broadway.
Mark left Parents to write Stepfathering for Simon & Schuster. In this pioneering book about stepfathering, Mark, who became a stepfather when he married actress Cynthia Hoppenfeld and became stepfather of her sons Kevin and Timothy Barry, wrote about his own experience and the experiences of over 50 stepfathers all over America.
With the publication of Stepfathering, Mark moved back to Los Angeles to pursue screenwriting and continue his work in publishing. While authoring, coauthoring, and editing nonfiction and fiction for publishers including Times-Random House, Bantam, and St. Martin's Press, he wrote screenplays for Paramount Pictures and for Jodie Foster's company, Egg Pictures, and did uncredited rewrites for Columbia Pictures and Savoy Pictures. He has written pilot scripts for HBO and Castle Rock, and, with Barry Glasser, for Showtime. He also served as a consultant to MediaCorp Studios in Singapore and as a judge for the Singapore Film Commission. Compelling Interest: Examining the Evidence on Racial Dynamics in Colleges and Universities, a book for which Mark was an editor, was cited by the United States Supreme Court in its decision to support aspects of affirmative action. He wrote the screenplay and is a producer of the film 55 Steps, based on a true story of a landmark civil rights case that helped to improve America's mental health system. 55 Steps is directed by Bille August and stars Hilary Swank and Helena Bonham Carter.
Mark and Cynthia live in Los Angeles. Kevin and his family live in Hermosa Beach, California, and Timothy and his family live in New York.
While still at Yale, Mark sold a short story to Harper's Bazaar and soon joined the magazine's staff as associate literary editor before becoming a contributing editor, writing celebrity interviews and articles on subjects ranging from psychology to contemporary art. Simultaneously, he was brought in as co-director of the New York production of the rock musical Stomp at the Public Theatre.
After working with director Alex Grasshoff on a documentary film in Toronto, Mark was brought to Los Angeles by Grasshoff to write a screenplay, then worked as a story editor and went on to become an executive at CBS, West Coast, where he was part of the team that oversaw the development and production of comedy and drama pilots. He left CBS to head television and film development for Talent Associates, West Coast, and later earned his first screen credits for indie legends Roger Corman and Samuel Arkoff.
Mark was lured back to the world of publishing by Parents magazine, which brought him to New York where he became the magazine's senior editor and special projects editor. While writing and editing articles about parenting and child psychology by day, Mark also worked with the Ensemble Studio Theatre, which did successful workshop productions of his play Salt Air and his and Barry Glasser's play Twice Removed. Mark also was an uncredited "show doctor" for musicals on Broadway and off-off Broadway.
Mark left Parents to write Stepfathering for Simon & Schuster. In this pioneering book about stepfathering, Mark, who became a stepfather when he married actress Cynthia Hoppenfeld and became stepfather of her sons Kevin and Timothy Barry, wrote about his own experience and the experiences of over 50 stepfathers all over America.
With the publication of Stepfathering, Mark moved back to Los Angeles to pursue screenwriting and continue his work in publishing. While authoring, coauthoring, and editing nonfiction and fiction for publishers including Times-Random House, Bantam, and St. Martin's Press, he wrote screenplays for Paramount Pictures and for Jodie Foster's company, Egg Pictures, and did uncredited rewrites for Columbia Pictures and Savoy Pictures. He has written pilot scripts for HBO and Castle Rock, and, with Barry Glasser, for Showtime. He also served as a consultant to MediaCorp Studios in Singapore and as a judge for the Singapore Film Commission. Compelling Interest: Examining the Evidence on Racial Dynamics in Colleges and Universities, a book for which Mark was an editor, was cited by the United States Supreme Court in its decision to support aspects of affirmative action. He wrote the screenplay and is a producer of the film 55 Steps, based on a true story of a landmark civil rights case that helped to improve America's mental health system. 55 Steps is directed by Bille August and stars Hilary Swank and Helena Bonham Carter.
Mark and Cynthia live in Los Angeles. Kevin and his family live in Hermosa Beach, California, and Timothy and his family live in New York.