Jeff Blumenkrantz

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Jeff Blumenkrantz (born June 3, 1965 in Long Branch, New Jersey) is an actor, composer and lyricist.

Born and raised in New Jersey, Blumenkrantz is a graduate of Northwestern University School of Communication.[1] His acting credits include roles in such Broadway productions as Into the Woods (1987), The Threepenny Opera (1989), Damn Yankees (1994), How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1995), and A Class Act (2001), as well as appearances in such television shows as Will & Grace, 30 Rock, The Good Wife, Ugly Betty, Just Shoot Me!, and Law & Order.

In 2000, noted Broadway actress and recording artist Audra McDonald included Blumenkrantz's song "I Won't Mind" on her CD, How Glory Goes. This lullaby (with lyrics by Annie Kessler and Libby Saines) has become a staple of McDonald's repertoire. Blumenkrantz also contributed a piece to The Seven Deadly Sins, a song cycle commissioned by Carnegie Hall for the singer. His comic song, "My Book," addressed the sin of sloth.

In 2003, Blumenkrantz was nominated for a Best Original Score Tony Award for his work on Urban Cowboy, a nomination he shared with Jason Robert Brown and twenty-eight others.

In 2005-2006, he created and hosted The Jeff Blumenkrantz Songbook Podcast, a weekly podcast featuring the songs from his songbook, occasional additional episodes of which were released until at least February 2010. This project was succeeded in 2008 by the BMI Workshop Songbook Podcast, which Blumenkrantz hosted, showcasing the eponymous songbook, which features the work of members of the BMI Songwriters' Workshop.

Blumenkrantz is the recipient of the 2011 Fred Ebb Award for excellence in musical theatre songwriting.[2]

Most recently, Blumenkrantz starred opposite Brett Ryback in the Off Broadway musical Murder for Two in the role of "The Suspects," playing 10 characters, as well as the piano. He played The Beadle in the New York Philharmonic's March 2014 concert of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, which was broadcast on PBS.

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