Friday, March 16, 2007

About Retta Blaney


Retta Blaney is the author of Working on the Inside: The Spiritual Life through the Eyes of Actors, which features interviews with Kristin Chenoweth, Dudu Fisher, Edward Herrmann, Liam Neeson, Phylicia Rashad, Vanessa Williams and many other actors. Her freelance work has appeared in The Washington Post, New York Newsday, National Catholic Reporter,The Jewish Week, The Living Church, American Theatre, Back Stage and other publications. She is editor of the anthology Journalism Stories from the Real World, a book of essays for which Walter Cronkite wrote the introduction, and has taught at Brooklyn College, New York University and Marymount Manhattan College.

As a full-time reporter, she worked for newspapers in Maryland and New York, winning a half dozen reporting awards, five of which were for first place.

She holds a Master of Arts in modern drama from New York University, a Master of Fine Arts in playwriting from Brooklyn College and a Bachelor of Arts in English from the College of Notre Dame of Maryland.

She is founder and producer of Broadway Blessing, an interfaith service that has been bringing the theatre community together every September since 1997 to ask God’s blessing on the new season. Among those who have taken part are Broadway Inspirational Voices, Kathleen Chalfant, Boyd Gaines, Edward Herrmann, Marc Kudisch, Anna Manahan, Ken Prymus, Marian Seldes, Frances Sternhagen, KT Sullivan, Elizabeth Swados and Three Mo' Tenors.

In December 2005 Retta produced the revival of Elizabeth Swados’ choral drama Missionaries, about the lives, work and murders of four American churchwomen in El Salvador in 1980. It was done at the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine in honor of the 25th anniversary of their deaths.

1 comment:

  1. Hi Prof. Blaney,

    You were my journalism professor at Brooklyn College in the late 80s/ early 90s. I eventually graduated and worked at a journalist for NBC News. This fall I began teaching journalism in Michigan. As I take my place in the classroom, I find myself wondering, "Is this what Prof. Blaney would do?" It is amazing to me that the impact you had on my life still lingers even today. May God richly bless you!

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