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Dylan MarcAurele

Dylan MarcAurele is a NYC-based writer and composer. Highlights: 2025 Jonathan Larson Grant Winner; 2024 NAMT Festival; 2024 JMF Writers Grove at Goodspeed; 2024 Johnny Mercer Songwriters Project in Nashville; 2023 Richard Rodgers Award; 2020-21 Dramatists Guild Foundation Fellowship. Book/Music/Lyrics: Pop Off, Michelangelo! (2024 & 2025 Edinburgh Fringe Festival; The Other Palace & Underbelly Boulevard, London), MEG4N (2024 tour starring Rosé of RuPaul’s Drag Race), The Real Housewives of NYC: The Musical (featured on Bravo’s Watch What Happens Live), Daddy Doodle (upcoming). Music: Lewis Loves Clark (Rhinebeck Writers Retreat; Barn on Fire Residency; Village Theater Festival of New Musicals), Tea with G (ART NY), The Land of Forgotten Toys (Greenhouse Theater, Chicago). Playwriting: God Gives Ryan a Very Important Job (2023 Samuel French OOB Festival). Music/Lyrics: Miley Chase: The Science Ace (Broadway Licensing), “Say Bravo!” (sung by Andy Cohen and the cast of Vanderpump Rules at the Paris Theatre in Las Vegas). He also created the 27K-follower musical Instagram account @rhonymusical. TNNY Writers Lab; Harvard University, ’16.

Dylan MarcAurele

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Land Acknowledgement

 

Our office is on the original homeland of the Munsee Lenape tribal nation. Theatre Now acknowledges the painful history of genocide and forced removal from this territory, and we honor and respect the many diverse Indigenous peoples still connected to this land on which we and our artists live and work.

 

As an organization and as artists, we often gather in virtual space. Take a moment to consider the legacies of colonization embedded within the technologies, structures, and ways of thinking we use every day. We are using equipment and high-speed internet not available to all communities. Even the technologies that are central to much of the art we make leave significant carbon footprints, contributing to changing climates that disproportionately affect indigenous peoples worldwide. Theatre Now invites you to join us in acknowledging all this as well as our shared responsibility: to make good of this time, and for each of us to consider our roles in reconciliation, decolonization, antiracism, and allyship.

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