Ivy Austin

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Ivy Austin
Born
Ivy Lynn Epstein

(1958-01-19) January 19, 1958 (age 63)
Brooklyn, New York
Alma materColgate University
OccupationActress, singer, voice artist
Websitehttp://www.ivyaustin.com/

Ivy Austin (born Ivy Lynn Epstein; January 19, 1958 in Brooklyn, New York) is an American actress, singer, and voice-over artist, known for her performances on Garrison Keillor's A Prairie Home Companion and her Sesame Street voices, Ivy Austin also starred on Broadway as Raggedy Ann.

Biography[]

Early life and education[]

Ivy Austin is an alumna of NYC’s High School of Performing Arts, has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Biology from Colgate University, and a Master of Science degree in Marriage and Family Therapy from Manhattan College.

Career[]

Austin's stage career began with national tours of Hair (as Crissy) in 1976 and They're Playing Our Song (Alter Ego) in 1979. She made her New York City Opera debut in 1982's Candide (Pink Sheep) and remained on the guest artist roster through 1989. Other NYCO credits include Naughty Marietta (Lisette), The Merry Widow (Zozo), The Music Man (Ethel Toffelmier), The New Moon, The Desert Song, South Pacific, and Sweeney Todd (Beggar Woman). Austin's Broadway debut in 1986 was as the starring role in the Joe Raposo/William Gibson musical Raggedy Ann: The Musical Adventure, directed by Patricia Birch.

In 1989, Austin performed "The Story of Gloria" on American Radio Company (now known as A Prairie Home Companion). According to Time Magazine, "The show's funniest sketch, a serial, produced a new star, actress Ivy Austin."[1] She also played the crusty-voiced French lady Babette, and sang with Rob Fisher and The Coffee Club Orchestra.

Austin has recorded countless songs for Sesame Street, and is the voice of Sesame Street characters Cereal Girl, Hammy Swinette, Sublime Miss M, Soo-ey Oinker of The Oinker Sisters, and Gloria Esta-worm. As writer/producer, Ivy Austin created holiday programs for National Public Radio and a long-running concert series at The World Financial Center. Ivy Austin appeared in numerous television commercials and has an impressive list of theatrical and concert credits.

Austin is in her sixth year as a contributing lyricist and performer in The Thalia Follies, a political satire in on New York's Upper West Side.

Austin performs regularly at Symphony Space on WNYC radio broadcasts of Selected Shorts and Bloomsday, and has participated in years of "Wall-to-Wall" music marathons. She appeared in Wall-to-Wall Broadway singing "Adelaide's Lament". She has performed several plays with the Night Kitchen Radio Theater for XM Satellite Radio.

Selected credits[]

Discography[]

  • Sing! Songs of Joe Raposo
  • Big Bird Discovers the Orchestra
  • Sesame Road
  • Born to Add
  • Splish Splash: Bathtime Fun
  • Sing-Along Travel Songs
  • Silly Songs
  • Hot!/Heat! Hot!/Heat! Hot!/Heat! Dance Songs
  • Sesame Street Platinum-All Time Favorites
  • Elmopalooza!
  • We Are All Earthlings
  • I’m Green and I’m Proud
  • Signs of the Times from Moo-town Records
  • Sesame Street Kids/Kid Favorite Songs
  • Sesame Street Best
  • Cheap Thrills
  • New York City Opera Candide
  • Lady Be Good!
  • Wall to Wall Richard Rodgers
  • A Prairie Home Christmas
  • A Prairie Home Companion 25th Anniversary Collection
  • Selected Shorts: A Night at the Office

Filmography[]

Artistic direction and producing[]

  • Christmas at Rainbow Corner (co-producer Denise Lanctot) 1993, National Public Radio[2]
  • Her Funny Valentine, 1994, National Public Radio
  • Women in Cabaret, 1994, World Financial Center
  • Women on Broadway, 1995, World Financial Center
  • The Tony Awards, 50 Years of Broadway's Best Musicals, 1996, World Financial Center
  • The Men I Love, A Centennial Salute to Ira Gershwin & George Gershwin, 1997, World Financial Center
  • Happy Birthday New York, A Musical Tribute to the City's Centennial, 1998, World Financial Center
  • The Great Songwriters of Hollywood, 1999, World Financial Center
  • Spring Fling, 2000, World Financial Center

References[]

  1. ^ Skow, John (December 11, 1989). "Show Business: Wild Seed in the Big Apple: Garrison Keillor". Time. Archived from the original on March 1, 2009.
  2. ^ Holden, Stephen (December 5, 1994). "CABARET REVIEW; Innocent Radio Days". The New York Times.

External links[]

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