Wallace Mack White first stepped onstage in tap shoes when he was five, and in a way, he never stopped performing. With experience on both coasts, he has excelled as a performer, composer, novelist, short-story writer and playwright. He recently played the lead~~a man doing business with the Devil~~in the Sight and Sound Studio film ‘Tales and Tarot and Tea' and was featured in ‘Prince Street Quotidian’ and the festival film ‘Le Saucisson.’ In a recent New York Actors Gym production, he played George in 'Of Mice and Men.' In April, 2018, he appeared in Andy Yu's re-creation of the classic opening scene of Bela Tarr's acclaimed Hungarian film 'Werckmeister Harmonies.' Shortly before that, he assumed his blue-collar persona (it's real - he used to belong to the Teamsters Union) to take on the role of Frank, an unrepentent embezzler, in Hamza Zaman's original stage production 'Sixteen.' Earlier, Wallace was co-host and accompanist in a special with Garrison Keillor. He is also the composer and lyricist of over 100 songs, and is the author and composer/lyricist of the off-off-Broadway musical 'Out to Lunch.' He is skilled at accents, including New York elite, New York Jewish, street bum, mobster, Midwestern, Southern and country hick. After growing up in California, Wallace Mack White settled in Manhattan, where he wrote for The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly and The New York Times. In addition to training at the New York Actors Gym, he has studied acting with Maria Riboli, Ann Loring and Mark Stolzenberg. Fluent in French and German, he has degrees from Stanford University and Columbia University and a diploma from the Université de Paris-Sorbonne. He is a US Army veteran.
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