Kevin Fennessy
- Actor
- Casting Director
- Casting Department
Kevin Fennessy is an Actor, Theatre Director, and a former Boston-based
Casting Director. From 1998-2009, he was the owner of Kevin Fennessy
Casting ("KFC...we're not chicken"). Following a 15 year AEA/SAG/AFTRA
acting career in Boston and New York, he went into casting in 1994, and
amassed vast experience throughout New England in the Locations Casting
of principal, weekly and day-player roles, as well as Extras Casting on
major studio feature films and the main, additional, and extras casting
on Independent projects. In 2005 he took some time off to aid in the
care of his Dad, Robert Fennessy, Sr.,(b 3/15/25, d. 2/1/08) who
co-starred in the ABC-Family Series, My Life Is A Sitcom (2), and his
Mother, Georgia Ravanis Fennessy (b. 1/21/29, d.10/25/11). He continued
to freelance during this period, at Boston Casting as well as on his
own. In the summer of 2010, he followed a Twitter tweet that led him to
performing in the ensemble of the American Premiere of Todd Machover's
Electronic Opera, Death and the Powers: The Robots' Opera directed by
Tony Award winner Diane Paulus. He continued his return to acting in a
sold-out production of Chekhov's Uncle Vanya as Ilya "Waffles" Telegin,
and with roles in Maria Menounos's feature, Adventures of Serial
Buddies, and Emmy Grinwis' AFI Workshop for Women Directors project,
The Muskrat Boy Of Griffith Park. He was nominated for 2014 Best Actor,
Small Theatre by the Independent Reviewers of New England, for his
critically acclaimed performance as Blue, in Keith Reddin's Almost
Blue, with Charlestown Working Theatre. Other recent roles include
Harriman F Spritzer in Hairspray , Judge Harper and Drunk Santa in
Miracle on 34th Street, and The Doctor in Tennessee Williams' A
Streetcar Named Desire. Prior to that he performed in the acclaimed
production of Thornton Wilder's Our Town, directed by MacArthur Award
recipient David Cromer for the Huntington Theatre Company. An
experienced theatre director, he is the recipient of the Boston
Magazine Award for Best Theatrical Director 1995, and the 1997 Boston
Theatre Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Fringe Theatre Production.