Melissa Errico is an actress and vocalist who has appeared in television, film, and stage, will join the cast of Billions, an upcoming Wall Street drama written and produced by
Brian Koppelman and David Levien (Ocean's Thirteen, Runaway Jury, Runner Runner) and writer Andrew Ross Sorkin (Too Big to Fail).
Melissa Errico has starred on Broadway, on network television and film and is an accomplished recording artist and musical concert performer. While she is best known for her highly-acclaimed work on Broadway, she is unique in that she has throughout her career played many non-musical roles in plays by Oscar Wilde, George Bernard Shaw, Wally Shawn, to name a few.
She is a graduate of Yale University where she performed in Chekhov's Three Sisters with Ed Norton and Alessandro Nivola. In recent years she has increasingly been cast in strong dramatic roles on television and film. This year, she played the recurring role of Catherine on Stephen Soderbergh's Cinemax show The Knick, and has appeared in guest arcs on Blue Bloods and the Good Wife. Her Broadway credits include starring roles in My Fair Lady, Dracula, White Christmas, High Society, Les Miserables, Anna Karenina and Amour for which she was nominated for a Best Actress Tony Award. She starred in Stephen Sondheim's Passion and His Sunday in the Park With George. She has released three studio albums: Blue Like That (EMI Records) produced by Arif Mardin, Legrand Affair (Ghostlight) produced by Phil Ramone, and Lullabies and Wildflowers (VMG/Universal Records) produced by Rob Mathes. She tours with symphonies around the world.
Melissa Errico was a 2003 Tony nominee for Best Leading Actress in a
musical for
Michel Legrand's wistful and
wittily romantic Broadway debut, "Amour". In 2005, she recorded an
album, with Michel Legrand at the piano and arranging, produced by
Phil Ramone. This will be Melissa's second
solo studio album, her first being "Blue Like That", which was produced
by
Arif Mardin for Capitol Records EMI. In
2005, she can be seen in the film,
Loverboy (2005) (Sundance/ Cannes),
directed by
Kevin Bacon, with
Kyra Sedgwick,
Sandra Bullock and
Campbell Scott. During the 2004-2005
Broadway season, Melissa starred on Broadway in "Dracula", after
appearing in two off-Broadway hit revivals non-musical and musical:
Wallace Shawn's "Aunt Dan and Lemon" with
Lili Taylor and "Finian's Rainbow"
with
Malcolm Gets (recorded on Ghostlight
Records) in 2004.
Melissa is a graduate of Yale University, with a BA in Art History and
Philosophy. She made her critically-acclaimed Broadway debut at Circle
in the Square in "Anna Karenina", for which she withdrew from the Yale
Graduate School of Acting, Her professional career began during her
freshman year at Yale University, when, at 18, she landed the lead in
the Premier National Touring Company of "Les Miserables". Her theater
credits grew rapidly after graduation with "Anna Karenina", followed
that same year by an acclaimed performance as "Eliza Doolittle" in the
Broadway revival of "My Fair Lady" (opposite
Richard Chamberlain), a role
she reprised, triumphantly, in 2003 at The Hollywood Bowl with
John Lithgow and
Roger Daltrey and the Los Angeles
Philharmonic. Other Broadway credits:
Cole Porter's "High Society",
Michel Legrand's 2002 "Amour, Dracula".
After a season as "Alex Bartoli" in the CBS television series,
C.P.W. (1995),
Melissa made an enormous splash with New York audiences and critics,
winning raves for her silly and sexy turn as the goddess "Venus" in
Kurt Weill's "One Touch of Venus" at City
Center, a performance she has reprised at Avery Fisher Music Hall,
Lincoln Center. Melissa is a member of the Irish Repertory Theater,
where she has had great success in plays such as "Major Barbara" (with
Boyd Gaines) as "Barbara", and opposite
Eric Stoltz and
Nancy Marchand in "The Importance of
Being Earnest".
Melissa's other recent television credits include: "Laurel" on
Miss Match (2003),
Law & Order (1990),
The Norm Show (1999) and as
"Ed's ex-wife" on
Ed (2000). On film, she
costars with
Angelina Jolie in Twentieth
Century Fox's film,
Life or Something Like It (2002)
and
Jim Caviezel in the New Line Cinema
film,
Frequency (2000); and appeared in
many independent films, including
Bury the Evidence (1998), with
Karen Black, and starred in the
harrowing docu-drama,
Mockingbird Don't Sing (2001)
with
Sean Young.
For The Kennedy Center Sondheim Celebration (2002), Melissa was chosen
by
Stephen Sondheim to star in "Sunday
in the Park with George", opposite
Raúl Esparza, which followed with a
sold-out concert at Avery Fisher Music Hall and a 2003
Helen Hayes Nomination for "Best
Leading Actress". For her theater work, Melissa has been honored with
four Drama Desk nominations, four Outer Critics Circle Awards and five
Drama League Honors, and won the
Lucille Lortel Award for "Best Actress"
in "One Touch of Venus".
Melissa has appeared for solo engagements in the prestigious cabaret
rooms of Manhattan and Los Angeles, such as "The Cafe Carlyle", "The
Oak Room" and "Feinsteins". She regularly appears with her band at
Joe's Pub, The Cutting Room, Symphony Space, Wolf Trap in Washington
DC. She began concert work with her month-long run in May 2000 at Joe's
Pub in New York in "Real Emotional Girl: Melissa Errico Sings the Music
of Randy Newman", in tribute to her collaboration with
Randy Newman on his developing the
musical, "Faust". In March 2002, she opened in a show with pianist
Lee Musiker, titled "New Standards", which
ran for three weeks at the Café Carlyle, featuring jazz standards and
modern-day standards of
Michel Legrand,
Joni Mitchell and
Oleta Adams. And in 2004, she had a
successful month at The Oak Room at The Algonquin with her Spring
Fever, working for the first time with
James Taylor pianist
Clifford Carter in a programme of
original music by her brother and reworkings of classics by
Van Morrison,
Billy Joel,
Eddi Reader and
James Taylor with a five-piece
band.
On February 25, 2003, Melissa released her debut album, "Blue Like
That", on Capitol/ EMI with twelve tracks produced and arranged by
industry legend
Arif Mardin. Accompanying
Melissa is jazz pianist
Alan Pasqua, and her
own brother,
Mike Errico, on guitar and
vocals, who also wrote two original songs. Her next album is with
Michel Legrand and
Phil Ramone.