Janine McGuire & Arri Simon
By School of Performing Arts
Janine McGuire and Arri Lawton Simon are an award-winning musical theatre writing and producing team based in New York City. In addition to Express, their musicals include The Bubble, based on the 2006 Eytan Fox film of the same name, and Kibby The Space Dog, based on Wichita author Andrea Cassells children's book of the same name.
Their work has been developed at the Dramatists Guild Foundation Fellowship, Fire Island Pines Arts Project, Goodspeed Musicals, The Johnny Mercer Writers Grove, New York Film Academy, New York Theatre Barn, New York Transit Museum, The Phoenix Theatre, Rhinebeck Writers Retreat, Wichita Childrens Theatre & Dance Center, and The York Theatre. Theyve contributed original songs to The Rainbow Lullaby album on Broadway Records, The Broadway Star Project, The Lotte Lenya Songbook, and many concerts and events. They produce an annual salon of new holiday music which benefits a worthy charitable cause each year. They have guest-lectured at the university-level on songwriting and collaboration.
The pair met over ten years ago at the BMI Musical Theatre Workshop, a program widely regarded as the premiere training ground for emerging musical theatre composers, lyricists, and librettists, and the birthplace of numerous historic collaborations. Arri currently serves on the BMI Workshop steering committee, and Janine and Arri are each frequent guest moderators of workshop sessions.
School of Performing Arts
Arri Lawton Simon, originally from Wichita, Kansas, earned a B.M. in Composition and Vocal Performance from Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University. In addition to writing for musical theatre, he composes music for film and dance, most notably scores for Chaplins The Kid commissioned by the Tallgrass Film Festival, the contemporary ballet Freedoms Fancy commissioned by SAFEHouse Arts San Francisco, and the illustrated short film Hearts to Half, commissioned by Broadway producer Dori Berenstein. In 2014 he received the Jerry Harrington Award for Outstanding Creative Achievement in Musical Theatre for Composition.
As a performer, Arri launched his career on the stages of Wichita Childrens Theatre and Dance Center and Music Theatre Wichita. A member of AEA, he has since appeared at Carnegie Hall, New York City Center, Lincoln Center, and most recently the new Perelman Performing Arts Center, originating a principal role in Watch Night, a multi-disciplinary contemporary opera conceived by Bill T. Jones. Arri is a frequent music director and guest performer for the concerts of Jeremy Stolle (one of Broadways Phantoms), performing all over the world and, in May 2021, locally at the Capitol Federal Amphitheater. Following in the footsteps of his arts educator parents, Arri is an educator as well, on faculty at the Professional Performing Arts School/Rosies Theater Kids in NYC, in addition to maintaining his own private voice studio.
@mcguireandsimon