Tharon Musser

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Tharon Musser (born 1925) is a Tony Award winning lighting designer who has worked on over 150 Broadway shows. She is the current Dean of American Lighting Designers. She is best known for her work on the Broadway musical A Chorus Line in 1975. This show was the first Broadway production to utilize a completely computerized lighting console instead of the manually operated "piano boards." She is considered one of the pioneers in the field of lighting design.

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[edit] Life

Tharon graduated from Berea College in 1946 and, like lighting designer Jean Rosenthal, attended Yale University, obtaining her MFA in 1950. It is a common misconception that upon moving to New York that she became an assistant in Rosenthal's studio, but Tharon never assisted Jean. Her first Broadway lighting credit was José Quintero's staging of Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey into Night in 1956 at the original Helen Hayes Theatre.

Her design credits include two of the longest running Broadway shows: Michael Bennett's A Chorus Line, which ran from 1975 to 1990 and is currently in revival, and Gower Champions's 42nd Street running from 1980 to 1988. She has also worked with playwright Neil Simon and choreographer José Limón.

In 1972 she won her first Tony Award for Follies which was directed by Harold Prince and choreographed by Michael Bennett. That was followed by Tonys for Michael Bennett's A Chorus Line in 1976 and his Dreamgirls in 1982. In 1980 she received a Drama Desk nomination for her design of Children of a Lesser God . She was honored as a USITT Distinguished Lighting Designer in 1996.

At the first Eddy awards cermony presented by Entertainment Design in 2000 there was a panel discussion by the original production team of A Chorus Line. When asked what would she change in the show lighting after 25 years, Musser replied "Nothing, but I might use color changers."[citation needed]

[edit] Tony Award Wins

as Best Lighting Designer:

[edit] Tony Award Nominations

as Best Lighting Designer:

[edit] External links