Co-executive
producer of Over the Moon: The Broadway
Lullaby Project, a collection of original lullabies by musical theatre
composers, performed by musical theatre singers, illustrated by theatrical
designers and children’s book artists, available as a book, cd and ebook all to
benefit breast cancer charities, Jodi Glucksman holds degrees in both
theatrical producing and English Education from NYU. Her broad career dates back to the
Hartman/Huntington Theatre Company under the direction of Ed Sherin (Semelweiss, Moliere in Spite of Himself, Mahalia),
Circle in the Square Theatre Company (The
Caine Mutiny Court Martial, Heartbreak
House, Awake and Sing) and McCann
& Nugent Productions (Leader of the
Pack, RSC’s Cyrano de Bergerac/Much
Ado About Nothing). Branching into
the music management, she worked with such legendary artists as the Average
White Band, the Ohio Players and Afrika Bambaataa. As an educator in New York and Massachusetts
she earned grants and awards teaching language and literature through arts and
humanities to students ranging from public middle and high schools to private
universities. Jodi’s distinguished and
diversified career continued when, with her husband Daniel, she co-founded
Luckimann LLC, a production company specializing in education, theatre and
film. Through Luckimann, Jodi has
designed and implemented interdisciplinary, arts-integrated curricula including
the plan for Discovery High School, a New Visions Charter School in the Bronx. She has consulted dramaturgically on numerous
productions including Daniel Beaty’s acclaimed Through the Night and the DiCapo Opera Theatre’s 75th
Anniversary tour of Porgy and Bess as
well as Roundabout Theatre Company’s Language
of Trees, Tin Pan Alley Rag and Ordinary Days. Jodi was a producing partner on the
award-winning a capella musical In
Transit and sponsors the Roundabout Underground for emerging
playwrights. She has executive produced
several documentary films including A
Broadway Lullaby which chronicles the making of Over the Moon: The Broadway Lullaby Project.
Jodi’s dot was
inspired by her recent trip to the Redwood National Forest with her husband and
three amazing children, and by her fascination with Jay Defeo’s sculptural
painting, “The Rose.” She’s thrilled and
honored to celebrate International Dot Day because nurturing creativity keeps
all of us in this universe we share alive and joyful through the eternity of
art in whatever form that manifests.
9-year-old
Keegan Glucksman has been singing for five years and playing guitar for more
than 2 years. She has performed at the Rack and Roll Café in Stamford and
Whipporwill Hall in Armonk. She fences both foil and epee and competes around
the country. Keegan is thrilled to have
recorded “The Man Who Invented Ice Cream” for Over the Moon: The Broadway Lullaby Project along with her twin
brother and older sister.
Keegan designed
her “Sunflower Dot” to remind people that they should ”love nature the way they
love their families to help make the world a better place.”
Tillie
Glucksman is 11 years old. A singer and
keyboard player, she has performed at the Rack and Roll Café in Stamford,
Connecticut and the Highline Ballroom in NYC.
She is an avid foil fencer and a student at the Harvey School in
Katonah. Tillie is proud to have recorded “The Man Who Invented Ice Cream” by
the legendary Charles Strouse and Sammy Cahn on Over the Moon: The Broadway Lullaby Project in honor of her
grandmothers and her late-great-grandmother (after whom she’s named) to support
breast cancer awareness and research.
Tillie’s
“Comet Dot “ was inspired by watching the night sky with her father’s friend,
Mike, who came over one evening with his special telescope. When invited to make a dot, she thought of
the comet and all the giant dots and colors she saw in space.
9-year-old
Zi Glucksman is a nationally ranked epee fencer. As a drummer, guitar player and singer with
the School of Rock Westchester he has performed at the Rack and Roll Café in
Stamford, Connecticut. Zi is also a sculptor and filmmaker. He works in both clay and “garbage” then
creates stop-animation films using many of his creations as characters. He can be heard singing with his twin sister
Keegan and his older sister Tillie on Over
the Moon: The Broadway Lullaby Project.
Zi offered
his original sculpture of a “Pink Elephant with Purple Polka DOTS Shooting a
Roll of Toilet Paper in a Sling Shot” to celebrate International Dot Day
because it’s fun and silly and it’s great to be silly. He says “it represents a world full of crazy,
different things.”
like your dot
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