Jim Brochu
- Actor
- Writer
Jim spent the better part of 2008 in New York City, starring in his
Off-Broadway hit, "The Big Voice: God or Merman?" which the New York
Times called, "Triumphant - a hilarious and utterly enthralling evening
of musical theatre." In 2005, Jim was nominated by the Los Angeles
Ovation Awards as Best Actor in a Musical for "The Big Voice", an honor
he won from both the Palm Springs Desert Star Awards and the Valley
Theatre League ADA Awards. "The Big Voice: God or Merman?" was also
given the Ovation Award as Best Musical, presented to himself and
composer-partner, Steve Schalchlin, by the legendary Jerry Herman. A
native of Brooklyn, Jim produced his first show, a charity revue
featuring the Bay Ridge neighborhood kids, at the age of thirteen and
four years later was working on Broadway - selling orange drink at the
back of the St. James Theatre during intermissions of "Hello, Dolly!"
After studying drama at Carnegie-Mellon University, where his classmate
was Stephen Schwartz, he returned to New York, got his BA in English
from St. Francis College (Brooklyn) and made his Broadway debut (on
stage at Town Hall) as Christopher Sly in a very bad revival of "The
Taming Of The Shrew." His off-Broadway credits include Berkeley Square
with Christopher Reeve at the Manhattan Theatre Club, Robert Lowell's
"Endicott And The Red Cross" at the American Place Theatre, Ephraim
Kishon's "Unfair To Goliath" at the Cherry Lane, "Skye" at Lincoln
Center and Frank Loesser's "Greenwillow" for the Equity Library
Theatre. While working as a stage actor, he appeared in two legendary
television commercials - first as a dancing raisin for Post Raisin Bran
and then as the "Lemon from Outer space" with Madge the Manicurist for
Palmolive. His television work includes regular stints as Father James
on "All My Children," Judge Julius Weyburn on "The Young and The
Restless," Officer Jerry Chandler on the cult-classic "Mary Hartman,
Mary Hartman" and the befuddled bailiff on NBC's "Sirota's Court" with
Michael Constantine. Although the part was small, he can also boast
that he made his motion picture debut in "The Gang That Couldn't Shoot
Straight" opposite another newcomer, Robert DeNiro. His acting career
has taken him to regional stages all over the United States, including
the Washington Theatre Club in D.C., the Alliance Theatre in Atlanta,
two seasons at the Goodspeed Opera House where he originated the role
of Flint in "Something's Afoot," Theatre Building Chicago, Stages
Repertory Theatre in Houston, the Trinity Arts Center in Dallas and the
DejaVu Theatre in Los Angeles where he won the Backstage West Award as
Best Actor for his performance as Marvin in Robert Patrick's
"T-Shirts." While playing Tevye at the Waldo Astoria Dinner Theatre in
Kansas City, Missouri - he wrote his first play "Cookin' With Gus"
which was immediately published by Samuel French and has since been
performed all over the United States and has been translated into
several languages for productions all over the world. A huge hit in
Quebec, Canada; it was recently taped in French by HBO. One play led to
another and soon Jim was writing full time. For the theatre, he has
written the comedies "The Lucky O'Learys" with Kathleen Freeman, "Fat
Chance" with Virginia Capers, "The Lady Of The House" with Rue
McClanahan and the off-Broadway smash hit musical, "The Last Session",
which he also directed. After "The Last Session's" New York run (for
which he received Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle nominations), the
show was named by the Los Angeles Times as one of the ten best plays of
the 1998-1999 Los Angeles season, garnering him the Oscar Wilde Award
and the GLAAD Media Award. Brochu won another Backstage West Award for
his direction of the show, along with the Los Angeles Drama Critic's
Circle Award as playwright. In 1988 he got an offer he couldn't refuse
- a call from his idol, Lucille Ball, who had read his play "The Lucky