Anthony Deane Rapp // Time to celebrate
Anthony Deane Rapp
Anthony Deane Rapp (born
October 26, 1971) is an American actor and singer who originated the role of
Mark Cohen in the Broadway production of Rent. Following his original performance of the role in 1996,
Rapp reprised it in the film version of
the show and then the show's United States Tour in 2009. He also performed the
role of Charlie Brown in
the 1999 Broadway revival of You're
a Good Man, Charlie Brown and originated the role of Lucas in the
musical If Then in
2014. His screen roles include Lieutenant Commander Paul Stamets on the
television series Star
Trek: Discovery.
Early
Life
Rapp was born on October 26,
1971, in Chicago, Illinois, and raised in nearby Joliet,
Illinois, to Mary Lee (née Baird) and Douglas Rapp. After his
parents' divorce in 1974, he was raised by his mother, a trained nurse His
older brother is playwright, novelist, and filmmaker Adam Rapp. He also
has an older sister.
Rapp participated in community theater as a child and won
awards for his singing in junior high school.Rapp attended high school at Joliet
West High School and theatre camp at Interlochen Arts Camp in
Michigan. He moved to New York in 1989 to attend New York University as
a film student, but dropped out after a semester.Rapp has been a friend of
comic Andy Dick since childhood.
Career
Rapp first performed on
Broadway in 1981 in The Little
Prince and the Aviator, a musical based on Antoine de Saint- Exupery's novel The Little Prince. The show closed during previews. His
screen debut was as a member of the starring ensemble in the 1987 film Adventures in Babysitting, directed
by Chris Columbus, who would later direct him in the film version of Rent. He has appeared in several
movies and Broadway shows. His notable roles include those in such films
as Dazed and Confused, A Beautiful Mind, School Ties, Road Trip, Six Degrees of Separation (stage
and film versions), An American
Family, Danny Roane: First
Time Director, and You're
a Good Man, Charlie Brown.
Rapp went on to play the
character of Mark Cohen in the off-Broadway and original Broadway casts
of Jonathan Larson's musical Rent. For his audition, Rapp sang R.E.M.'s "Losing My
Religion", and received his callback in September 1994. After
offering him the role, Jonathan Larson wrote new songs for the production with
Rapp's voice in mind. He reprised that role in the film adaptation,
which was released on November 23, 2005. He returned to Rent on July 30, 2007, for a
six-week run, along with original cast member Adam Pascal. The two
continued in their return to Rent through
October 7, 2007. Rapp and Pascal, along with fellow original cast member
Gwen Stewart, reprised their roles of Mark and Roger in a national tour
of Rent beginning
January 6, 2009.
In 2000, Rapp released a
solo CD, entitled Look
Around. In 2006, he published a memoir about Rent and his relationship with
his mother, Without You: A Memoir
of Love, Loss, and the Musical Rent. The manuscript took him six years
to finish because of how personal it was. Rapp developed a one-man stage show
with music based on the memoir beginning in 2007, later performing it at such
locations as the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. A recording of the show
was released on December 11, 2012, by PS Classics.
In 2005, Rapp played the doctor in the world premiere of Feeling Electric (later to
become the Broadway musical Next
to Normal) at the New York Musical Theatre Festival. During Next to Normal's Off-Broadway run
(2008), he worked as assistant director to Michael Greif, who had directed him
in Rent, and later wrote
the introduction to the published script.
Rapp played the role of Lucas in If/Then, which starred fellow Rent alum Idina
Menzel . If/Then played the National
Theatre in Washington, D.C., and began previews on Broadway on March 5,
2014, and opened on Broadway at the Richard Rodgers Theater on March 30, 2014. In
July, Rapp had to miss performances due to a knee injury and surgery. It
closed on March 22, 2015. Rapp reprised the role in the 2015-2016 National
Tour, along with Menzel and the rest of the main Broadway cast.[
Rapp also appeared in "Psych: The Musical", an episode
of the TV series Psych,
which premiered on USA Network on December 15, 2013. In 2016, Rapp
was cast in Star Trek: Discovery as
Lt. Commander Paul Stamets, the first openly gay character in the Star Trek television series. This
was Rapp's first television regular role; while he had watched some Star Trek as a child, he watched
"curated lists" of episodes from the multiple series to prepare for
the role.
Personal
Life
Rapp had a close relationship
with his mother, who was battling cancer during the beginning of the
off-Broadway and Broadway transfer of Rent. He would visit her on weekends. She died at age 55 in
1997. He credits her for instilling values of justice and respect in him by
leading by example.
In 2012, the periodical Metro Weekly referred to Rapp as "one of the first
openly gay men on Broadway". He first came out to his mother at the
age of 18, and by her death in 1997 she had grown comfortable with it. During a
1997 interview with Oasis magazine,
the actor explained his sexual identity as "queer" rather than
"gay":
I
don't want to get into labels, but I've never labeled myself except to say I'm
queer. The thing that's been most important to me to be out about is that I
have been in loving relationships with men ... I haven't said "I am
gay." Because the truth is that I've also been in love with women,
although the truth is I do think I'm primarily homosexual.
He has also identified as "bisexual" and
"four-and-a-half" on the Kinsey scale. He has cited working
with Larry Kramer as a young man (in Kramer's play The Destiny of Me) for his commitment
to activism and "liv[ing] an open life".
Rapp is a "die hard" Chicago Cubs fan and
co-hosts the podcast The
Clubhouse about baseball. At the Cubs game on August 29, 2016,
he threw the first pitch and sang the Star Spangled Banner. He enjoys
playing poker and video games.
In November 2019, Rapp announced his engagement to his partner,
Ken.
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