Edward Gero
Edward Gero is an American stage actor active primarily in the Washington, DC area, acclaimed for his performances in Shakespeare and other classical plays.
Early life and career
Gero, an Italian-American, was raised in Madison, New Jersey; his mother was a housemaid and his father a union president. Gero decided on a career in acting after seeing a production of Hamlet starring Stacy Keach in New York’s Delacorte amphitheater as a teenager. After his education at Montclair State University, Gero began playing small roles at Classic Stage Company, an off-Broadway theater in New York, and later was invited to play a full season at the Barter Theatre in Abington, Virginia. By 1983 he was appearing in productions at the Shakespeare Theatre in Washington, DC, where he remains a fixture to this day. He has appeared in seventy productions there, including roles in all the major works of Shakespeare as well as plays by Molière and Chekhov. Gero has branched out into non-classical plays as well, appearing to great acclaim as President Richard Nixon in the two-man play Nixon’s Nixon at Roundhouse Theatre in Bethesda, Maryland. In November 2009 Gero made his debut at Ford’s Theatre, playing the role of Ebeneezer Scrooge in the company’s annual version of Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. Gero has done voice-over work for documentaries on the Discovery Channel and PBS. He teaches drama at George Mason University, the University of Maryland, and George Washington University. Gero has won four Helen Hayes awards: in 1989 (for Macbeth), 1994 (for Richard II), 1995 (for Henry IV), and 1998 (for Skylight). He played Mark Rothko in John Logan's Red at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago and at Arena Stage in Washington, DC. In 2015, Gero played Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonin Scalia in John Strand's The Originalist, also at Arena Stage.[1] He is married to Marijke Ebbinge, a former Ford model. Their son, Christian, is an award winning sound designer and audio engineer.[2]
Filmography
- Die Hard 2 (1990) - Engineer #5
- Striking Distance (1993) - Officer Lulley
References
- ↑ Rosen, Jeffrey; Epps, Garrett (2 March 2015). "In "The Originalist", Theater Tries to Interpret Antonin Scalia". magazine article, online. The Atlantic. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
- ↑ http://christiangero.com/. Retrieved 27 June 2015. Missing or empty
|title=
(help)
Berg, Scott W. 2009. "The Other Guy", The Washington Post Magazine, Dec. 13.