Roberto Munoz | |
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Born | August 22, 1951 Unterensingen, Germany |
Nationality | Canadian |
Occupation | Producer, Writer |
Website | |
cubecity.org |
Roberto Munoz (August 22, 1951) is a Producer, Director, and Screenwriter. He founded and is president of the not-for-profit New York based CubeCity Entertainment, Inc. He is one of the writing team members that writes under the name R.M.M. Munoz.[1]
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Munoz was born in Unterensingen, Germany on August 22, 1951. His father was a member of the 1936 Spanish Olympic Boxing team. His mother's family was of German-Russian origin. He immigrated with his parents to St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada when he was eight.
Munoz began in the entertainment industry in the 1980s when he managed the alternative Gospel band, Level Heads, featuring Juno award-winning musician, Jim Chevalier. As a promoter, he staged Phil Keaggy and Second Chapter of Acts concerts. In 1988, Munoz went on to promote Freedom 88, a three-day alternative Gospel Music festival at Bingeman Park in Kitchener, Ontario with such notable names as Steve Taylor, Adam Again, and the Grammy-award winning band The Choir.
In the 1990s, he turned to musical theatre, collaborating with sons Miq and Mann Munoz on Job and the Snake, which premiered in the Niagara Peninsula in September 1994.[2] Munoz went on to found Trinity Basement Theatre [3] in Toronto, Ontario where he workshopped various musicals, including Job and the Snake starring Kevin Connelly, at the Betty Oliphant Theatre, home of the National Ballet School of Canada.[4]
In 2000, Job and the Snake had a three week run at the Grove Theatre in the Los Angeles area.[5]
Later in October 2004, the musical was showcased in New York City, starring Troy Kurtis of Menudo in the role of Job.
While in New York City, Munoz showcased his off-Broadway musicals Purim Day[6] and Epimenides at the Lamb's Theatre. Two of his other musicals, Come Away and Aesop, were performed at the Producers Club Theatre on 44th Street in Manhattan.
In 2006, Munoz switched gears once again—this time to independent filmmaking -- when he wrote, produced, and directed his first feature film, Dear J (originally entitled Liars and Lunatics[7]). The film features Joseph Halsey, Allison Lane, Carson Grant, and Karen Lynn Gorney in the role of the Judge.
In 2009, Munoz wrote and produced his second feature film, Under Jakob's Ladder. Directed by Mann Munoz, it stars Jeff Stewart and Christopher Elliott, and also features Ken Jennings. This film is based on the experiences of his maternal great-grandfather, who was one of the Germans from Russia who survived the Holodomor and was arrested and thrown into prison during Stalin's Great Terror in the late 1930s. One of the chess endgames in the movie was created by grandmaster Susan Polgar.
2010 saw the DVD release of "Christianity and the Competition", a eight-part seminar by Dr. Paul L. Maier, which Munoz produced.
As of January 2011, Munoz is working on a documentary about the closing of the Bick's plant in Dunnville, Ontario.[8]
Year | Title | Position |
2008 | Dear J | Director, Writer, Producer |
2008 | FINALe: Larry Norman Live in NYC | Producer |
2008 | Grandmother Granddaughter | Producer |
2010 | Christianity and the Competition | Producer |
2011 | Under Jakob's Ladder | Writer, Producer |
In the late 1980s, Munoz developed an educational tool, called Y7K. It's a series of flash cards that are based on historical figures and can be used as a game.
In 2004, he began teaching a theatre/film course at the New York School of the Bible in Manhattan.[13]