Edwin Sherin (born January
15, 1930) is an American
theatre and television director and producer and
husband of award-winning actress Jane
Alexander.
Biography
Born in
Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania
, Sherin began his theatrical career as an actor,
playing small roles on Broadway
in
A Desert Incident,
Face of a Hero, and
Romulus.
He met
Alexander while serving as the resident director at Washington, DC
's Arena
Stage
, where he cast her and James Earl Jones in The Great White Hope.
In 1968,
he brought the play and its two stars to New York City
, and the production marked the start not only of
his Broadway directorial career, but a long professional and
personal relationship with Alexander, whom he married in 1975, as
well.
Sherin won the 1969
Drama Desk
Award for Outstanding Director (
The Great White Hope)
and was nominated for a 1974
Tony Award
for Best Direction of a Play (
Find Your Way Home).
In 1974,
Sherin directed a revival of A Streetcar Named
Desire at London
's Piccadilly
Theatre
with Claire Bloom,
Martin Shaw, Joss Ackland, and Morag
Hood.
Sherin executive-produced 163 episodes of the popular
NBC drama
Law &
Order between 1993 and 2000. His television directing
credits include all three editions of the current
L&O franchise,
Hill Street Blues,
L.A. Law,
Doogie Howser, M.D.,
Homicide: Life on the
Street, and
Medium.
Sherin and Alexander live in the suburbs north of New York City.
They have four children - Alexander's son
Jace, a television director who frequently
worked for him during his reign with
L&O, and his
three sons, Tony, Geoffrey, and Jon, from a previous
marriage.
Stage productions
References
External links