Paul Malamphy
Paul J. Malamphy is a classically trained singer and actor who has trod the boards in classic musicals and operettas such as Man of La Mancha , 42nd Street, Little Mary Sunshine, The Most Happy Fella, The Unsinkable Molly Brown, South Pacific, Paint Your Wagon, Patience and The Merry Widow. He’s also performed in socially relevant theatrical pieces such as The Cradle Will Rock and Pins and Needles.
Paul originated roles in many new musicals: Lord Henry Wotten in Dorian, Edward Rochester in Bill Kilpatrick’s Jane Eyre, Ed Meyers in Jon Steinhagen’s Emma and Company, Tom Jemison in Robert Collister’s Captive, Francis of Assisi in Scapegrace, Baron Varville in Camille and Chanticleer in The Canterbury Tales.
He has essayed roles in many plays, among them Antigone, Dracula, A Kiss for Cinderella and King Lear.
Paul has performed with The Mint Theater, North Carolina Theatre, New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players, The Howl Project Festival, New Jersey Verismo Opera and many others.
Paul has taught Voice and Speech for the Stage at The Lee Strasberg Institute, where he passed on the teachings of Robert Neff Williams of the Julliard School.
His original comic strip, Cicero & Co., depicted the farcical world of a struggling actor and his duck-billed platypus for six years in the theatrical journal Backstage.
Paul received his B.A. in Theatre from UCLA.
Paul originated roles in many new musicals: Lord Henry Wotten in Dorian, Edward Rochester in Bill Kilpatrick’s Jane Eyre, Ed Meyers in Jon Steinhagen’s Emma and Company, Tom Jemison in Robert Collister’s Captive, Francis of Assisi in Scapegrace, Baron Varville in Camille and Chanticleer in The Canterbury Tales.
He has essayed roles in many plays, among them Antigone, Dracula, A Kiss for Cinderella and King Lear.
Paul has performed with The Mint Theater, North Carolina Theatre, New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players, The Howl Project Festival, New Jersey Verismo Opera and many others.
Paul has taught Voice and Speech for the Stage at The Lee Strasberg Institute, where he passed on the teachings of Robert Neff Williams of the Julliard School.
His original comic strip, Cicero & Co., depicted the farcical world of a struggling actor and his duck-billed platypus for six years in the theatrical journal Backstage.
Paul received his B.A. in Theatre from UCLA.