Matt Clemons
Credits include: Evil Lives Here (Actor, Discovery Investigation), Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt (choreographer, Netflix), Radio City Christmas Spectacular (Assistant Director/ Assistant Choreographer), Wicked (1st National tour and Chicago company, ensemble), Aida (1st National Tour ensemble), and Gus Giordano Jazz Dance Chicago (former company member). Matt is a summa cum laude graduate of
Oklahoma City University with a degree in Dance Performance, and he holds a certificate from the UCLA Professional Program in Screenwriting. In 2016 Matt was a semifinalist in the Academy Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting, and his screenplays have placed as semi- and quarterfinalist in a variety of competitions, including: American Zoetrope, ScreenCraft Fellowship, ScreenCraft Comedy, Final Draft Big Break, WeScreenplay Diverse Voices, and the OutFest Screenwriting Lab. In 2017 Matt’s one-act plays, I ♥ Soccer Moms and I Hate You People, were produced by the Matthew Corozine Studio Theater.
With Theater in Asylum: The Debate 2016, The Debates 2020
Oklahoma City University with a degree in Dance Performance, and he holds a certificate from the UCLA Professional Program in Screenwriting. In 2016 Matt was a semifinalist in the Academy Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting, and his screenplays have placed as semi- and quarterfinalist in a variety of competitions, including: American Zoetrope, ScreenCraft Fellowship, ScreenCraft Comedy, Final Draft Big Break, WeScreenplay Diverse Voices, and the OutFest Screenwriting Lab. In 2017 Matt’s one-act plays, I ♥ Soccer Moms and I Hate You People, were produced by the Matthew Corozine Studio Theater.
With Theater in Asylum: The Debate 2016, The Debates 2020
Theater in Asylum (TIA) is a New York-based theater company founded in 2010 to challenge and empower our community. TIA joyfully pursues a rigorous research and an ensemble-driven approach to theater-making. We create performances to investigate our past, interpret our present, and imagine our future. We prize space to process, space to question—asylum—for ourselves and our community.
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