Max McLean

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Max McLean is the founder and artistic director of Fellowship for Performing Arts, a New York City-based producer of live theater and film from a Christian worldview. McLean conceived, adapted, produced and starred in The Screwtape Letters, a play based on the book by Oxford and Cambridge scholar, author and fantasy writer C.S. Lewis. His stage adaptation of Lewis’ The Great Divorce launched its national tour in late 2013. McLean adapted, co-directed and starred in C.S. Lewis Onstage: The Most Reluctant Convert, and co-wrote and produced Martin Luther on Trial. McLean also is the narrator of The Listener's Bible.

Early life[]

Born in Panama City, Panama, on April 14, 1953, McLean migrated to the United States at age 4.[1] McLean graduated from the University of Texas in 1975, where participation in theater helped him overcome a fear of public speaking.[2] He then pursued theatrical studies in London.

Early career[]

McLean's interest in integrating art and Christian faith led him to produce one-man shows featuring dramatic presentations of entire books of the Bible, including Genesis, Acts and Mark. He received the 2009 Jeff Award in Chicago for Best Solo Performance for his one-man show Mark’s Gospel.[3]

Fellowship for Performing Arts[]

In 1992, McLean formed the non-profit theatre company Fellowship for Performing Arts (FPA). The organization's first funded project was a recorded New International Version of the New Testament voiced by McLean. With the Old Testament added, that became The Listener's Bible, which eventually included English Standard and King James Versions. The New International Version of The Listener's Bible was recorded in 1997 and rerecorded in 2003 and 2011. The English Standard Version was recorded in 2003 and the King James Version in 2006. McLean's narrations have received four Audie Award nominations from the Audio Publisher's Association and are aired daily on 650+ radio stations. FPA also produced stage performances of the biblical Books of Mark, Acts and Genesis in New York, Chicago and on tour at universities across the country.

McLean and his production company now primarily produce new and adapted works for the stage. McLean and playwright Jeff Fiske adapted C.S. Lewis' The Screwtape Letters for an Off-Broadway run in 2010. Following a well-reviewed season, The Screwtape Letters began a four-year national tour. In September 2013, McLean brought an adaption of C.S. Lewis' The Great Divorce to New York City for development; the play premiered in Phoenix, Arizona, in December that year and toured nationally in 2014. A revised revival of The Great Divorce opened Off-Broadway on Theatre Row in December 2019 and has since begun a national tour under the direction of Broadway veteran Christa Scott-Reed. Other FPA productions include the original C.S. Lewis on Stage: The Most Reluctant Convert, written and performed by McLean and co-directed with Executive Producer Ken Denison of Aruba Productions in 2016; Martin Luther on Trial, co-written by McLean and playwright and drama professor Chris Cragin-Day, in December 2016; the first New York City revival of William Nicholson's Shadowlands in 2018; Robert Bolt's A Man for All Seasons in 2019; and the world premiere of Paradise Lost by Tom Dulack, a retelling of John Milton's poem of the same name, in January 2020.

In addition to its New York season, FPA presented Imagine This! in 2018 and 2019, a series of staged readings of works under consideration for future production. The 2019 lineup included Malcolm & Teresa by Charles McHugh Gallagher, George Orwell's Animal Farm adapted by Ian Wooldridge and an adaptation of An Interview with God by screenwriter Ken Aguado.

Personal life[]

McLean is married to Sharon McLean, and they have two grown daughters and four grandchildren. They live in New York City.

References[]

  1. ^ "An Interview with Max McLean | Challies Dot Com". Challies.com. 2008-01-21. Retrieved 2015-04-09.
  2. ^ "From Sociophobia to the National Stage | The Alcalde". Alcalde.texasexes.org. Retrieved 2015-04-09.
  3. ^ "Jeff Awards". Jeff Awards. Archived from the original on 2016-11-23. Retrieved 2015-04-09.


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