Adam Seth Nelson
- Actor
- Producer
- Additional Crew
Adam Nelson began his career with an actor's grant for gifted and
talented children after an appearance on the Jerry Lewis annual
Telethon. He relocated to Houston, Texas to attend the High School of
Performing Arts on scholarship where he studied Theater. After
attending the University of the Arts in Philadelphia where he received
his BFA (1991), he attended certificate programs through both Yale
University (1989) and Oxford University at the British American Drama
Academy (1990). He returned to Manhattan to become a founding member of
Workhouse Theater Company whose original membership included Adrienne
Shelly, Gil Bellows, Calista Flockhart, Mira Sorvino, Dean Winters,
James Mcaffrey and Tom Seizmore. He gained recognition through
appearances in feature films A Tiger's Tale (1988) with Ann Margaret,
Lesser Prophets with John Turturro (1997), Dead Broke with Justin
Theroux (1999), Home Sweet Hoboken with Ben Gazzara (2001) and Shooting
Vegetarians with Elodie Bouchez (2005). Best known for his work in
theater, Nelson was been associated with some of New York's most
notable groups including Naked Angels, Cucaracha Theater Company,
Manhattan Class Company, Circle Rep, Arden Party and the Adobe Theater
Company. Called a "film star" by Toronto's Now Magazine for his role as
the suicidal gambler in Sundance Channel's cult classic Dogs: The Rise
& Fall of An All-Girl Bookie Joint (1996), he was granted exclusive
rights in 1997 by the Lenny Bruce Estate, Bruce's mother Sally Marr,
and producer Marvin Worth to produce and perform his one-person show
How to Talk Dirty and Influence People: The Story of Lenny Bruce which
ran at Workhouse before moving Off-Broadway to Mother located in New
York's Meatpacking District (1999). The sold-out performances benefited
the charity God's Love We Deliver and received critical acclaim from
the Village Voice which praised his rendition as "restless, brilliant
and hilarious" and TimeOut New York's chief theater critic, Sam
Whitehead, branded him "an impresario, a notorious theatrical madman".
After the tragedy of September 11th, he co-produced The 24 Hour Plays
to aid The NY State WTC Relief Fund with a cast that included Philip
Seymour Hoffman, Rosie Perez, Benjamin Bratt, Billy Crudup, Mary-Louise
Parker, Julianne Moore, Marisa Tomei, Kyra Sedgwick, Lili Taylor,
Natasha Lyonne, Scarlett Johansson, Liev Schreiber, Robert Sean
Leonard, Drena DeNiro, Catherine Kellner, Brendan Sexton, Jared Harris,
Sam Rockwell, and Fisher Stevens who each appeared in six short plays,
written less than a day before the curtain raised. Under the direction
of Gregory Mosher, Anna Strasberg, Pippin Parker, the plays were
written by Frank Pugliese, Warren Leight, Richard LaGravenese, Tamara
Jenkins, Nicole Burdette, and Christopher Shinn which debuted and closed
in New York on Monday, September 24th, 2001 at the Minetta Lane
Theater. He resides in New York City and has three children, including 2 daughters, Lulu Scout and Viva June, and a son,
Sailor. Nelson has been a proud union member of both SAG-AFTRA and Actor's Equity Association since 1987.