Wayne Cilento
Wayne Cilento (born August 28, 1949, in the Bronx, New York) is an American director, choreographer, actor, and dancer renowned for his contributions to Broadway musical theater.[1] He is best known for originating the role of Mike in the landmark production A Chorus Line (1975–1990), where he performed the iconic solo "I Can Do That" and received a 1976 Theater World Special Award.[1][2] Cilento's performing career spanned several notable Broadway shows, including The Act (1977–1978) as one of The Boys and Dance Captain, Dancin' (1978–1982) as a performer and singer, and Big Deal (1986) as the First Narrator.[2] He earned a Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actor in a Musical for Dancin', marking the start of his seven total Tony nominations across acting and choreography.[1] Beyond stage work, Cilento appeared in the film adaptation of Annie (1982) and contributed to television commercials and music videos for artists like Billy Joel and Barry Manilow.[1] Transitioning to choreography and directing, Cilento achieved major acclaim for his work on long-running hits such as The Who's Tommy (1993–1995), for which he won a Tony Award, Drama Desk Award, and Fred Astaire Award; Aida (2000–2004, 1,852 performances); and Wicked (2003–present, over 7,500 performances as of 2025).[1][3][2] His choreography credits also include Jerry's Girls (1985, which he conceived), as well as Baby (1983), How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1995), Dream (1997, which he also directed), and Sweet Charity (2005), the latter earning Tony nominations for choreography.[1][3][2] Additionally, he directed Spirit: A Journey in Dance, Drums & Song (1998) and the revival of Bob Fosse's Dancin' (2023), and received an Olivier Award nomination for the West End production of The Who's Tommy.[1][3] Today, Cilento serves on the faculty of Broadway Dance Center, teaching dance and sharing his expertise with emerging performers.[3]Biography
Early life and education
Wayne Cilento was born on August 28, 1949, in the Bronx, New York City. His family later relocated to suburban Westchester County, where he grew up in Mamaroneck after the move during his childhood. As an only child, Cilento initially showed little interest in the arts before pursuing athletics in track and gymnastics during high school at Rye Neck High School.[4][5][6] Cilento's passion for dance ignited at age 18 during his senior year of high school, sparked by seeing a live performance of the musical Cabaret. Enchanted by the show's energy, he persuaded his gym teacher—who doubled as a part-time dance instructor—to teach him the basics, leading to participation in two school musicals. This newfound enthusiasm marked the beginning of his formal training in the New York theater scene, where he honed his skills through local classes and performances.[5][4] After high school, Cilento briefly attended Westchester Community College, initially planning to study pharmacy like his uncle, before transferring to the State University of New York College at Brockport (SUNY Brockport), from which he graduated in 1972 with a Bachelor of Science in dance. There, Cilento benefited from the mentorship of Bill Glassman, a dancer with the American Ballet Theatre, who provided crucial guidance in a rigorous program that emphasized physical and technical development. "I danced all day," Cilento later recalled of his immersive college experience.[1][5] Following graduation, Cilento married his high school sweetheart, Cathy Colety, a Mamaroneck native and fellow Rye Neck performer. Not long after, in 1973, he made his professional Broadway debut as a chorus member in the musical Seesaw, directed and choreographed by Michael Bennett, an early exposure to the influential director's innovative style.[4][1][7]Personal life
Cilento has been married to his high school sweetheart, Cathy Colety, since shortly before his Broadway debut.[4] The couple resides in a Tudor-style home in Mamaroneck, New York, which they purchased in 1975.[4] Cathy, a former schoolteacher and physical education instructor, has supported the family while conducting fitness classes in the local community.[4] The Cilentos have three sons: Brian, Keith, and Doug.[8] All three grew up in Mamaroneck.[9] Doug, the youngest, born in 1978, married Christina Abbonizio and had four children before his death in 2023 at age 44.[9] Cilento has credited his family with providing essential stability amid the demands of a theater career. In a 1983 interview, he described the importance of retreating from New York City to their suburban home: "I need to get out of the city, leave it all behind, see trees and the kids running around and have a backyard. I couldn't have made it without a contrast in energy level."[4] By 1995, he further explained that his family helped him "maintain his stability—and sanity—in a hectic business."[8]Career
Performing career
Wayne Cilento's performing career on Broadway began in the ensemble of ensemble roles but quickly elevated under the mentorship of director Michael Bennett, who recognized his talent during workshops that shaped landmark productions. In 1975, Cilento originated the role of Mike Costa in A Chorus Line, drawing directly from his own experiences as a self-taught dancer who started performing to accompany his sister at dance classes; this inspired the character's solo "I Can Do That," a high-energy tap number that showcased Cilento's athleticism and became a pivotal moment in the show's narrative about dancers' aspirations.[1][10] The musical, which ran for 6,137 performances and won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, owed much of its authenticity and success to contributions like Cilento's, as Bennett's improvisational process incorporated real-life stories from the cast, transforming chorus performers into featured voices.[1] Following A Chorus Line, Cilento continued to secure prominent dance roles that highlighted his versatility. In 1977, he performed as one of Liza Minnelli's backing dancers in The Act, contributing to its 233 Broadway performances through intricate jazz routines.[1] His breakthrough as a soloist came in Bob Fosse's 1978 dance revue Dancin', where he appeared in every number across its 1,774-show run, earning a Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actor in a Musical for his commanding presence in the demanding choreography.[1] Cilento also ventured into film with a small role as the Photographer in the 1982 adaptation of Annie, directed by John Huston, sharing the screen with fellow Broadway dancers Ann Reinking and Pamela Blair.[1] By 1986, he took on the role of First Narrator in Big Deal, Fosse's final original Broadway musical, which reimagined Italian neorealist film Big Deal on Madonna Street through streetwise dance numbers during its 69-performance run.[11] Cilento's ascent from anonymous chorus member to featured performer exemplified the rigorous path of Broadway dancers in the Bennett-Fosse era, where raw talent and endurance opened doors to stardom. However, the physical toll of these roles—marked by marathon rehearsals and eight-shows-a-week schedules—prompted his gradual shift toward directing and choreography in the 1980s. Reflecting on Dancin', Cilento described it as "very physically challenging and the dancing was really intense"; Fosse himself likened the endurance required to "playing a pro football game eight times a week."[12] In a 1997 seminar, he recalled Fosse's exacting style: "Bob would rehearse us until we were blue in the face, about one little hand-wrist," underscoring the emotional strain of perfectionism alongside the bodily exhaustion.[1] These experiences, while rewarding, highlighted the unsustainable demands of long-term performing, leading Cilento to leverage his expertise behind the scenes by the mid-1980s.[5]Directing and choreography
In the early 1980s, Wayne Cilento transitioned from performing to directing and choreography, beginning with musical staging for the Broadway production of Baby in 1983, which explored themes of parenthood through ensemble-driven movement.[13] This shift extended to concert work, including choreography for Alicia Keys' world tour, where he incorporated contemporary dance elements to complement her performances.[3] His early directorial efforts also encompassed television specials and music videos for artists such as Liza Minnelli and Chita Rivera, broadening his influence beyond theater into multimedia formats.[1] Cilento's Broadway choreography gained prominence with the 1993 staging of The Who's Tommy, where he crafted dynamic sequences blending rock concert energy with narrative theatricality to depict the protagonist's sensory world. He continued this trajectory with long-running productions like Elton John and Tim Rice's Aida in 2000, featuring opulent, culturally inspired dances that supported the opera's ancient Egyptian motifs across 1,852 performances.[1] In 2003, his choreography for Wicked introduced fluid, character-driven routines that have sustained the show's international appeal, with ongoing stagings and tours through 2025 utilizing his original musical staging for diverse ensembles.[14] More recently, Cilento served as director and musical stager for the 2023 revival of Dancin', honoring Bob Fosse's legacy by adapting jazz-infused numbers for modern performers.[13] Cilento directed and provided musical staging for Holler If Ya Hear Me in 2014, a Tupac Shakur-inspired musical where his urban, serpentine choreography integrated hip-hop and street dance to reflect themes of inner-city life and resilience.[15] His work has shaped Broadway's evolving dance styles by prioritizing adaptable, inclusive movements that accommodate diverse casts, as seen in revivals and tours like Wicked's ongoing North American production, which marked over 7,000 performances by 2025 and continues to draw record audiences.[1] Through these projects, Cilento has emphasized conceptual integration of music and story, influencing contemporary musical theater's shift toward hybrid genres and accessible physicality.[3]Credits
As performer
Cilento began his Broadway performing career in the early 1970s, appearing in ensemble roles that showcased his dance background.[2] In the musical Irene (1973–1974), he performed as a replacement Ninth Avenue Fella and Swing.[2] In the musical Seesaw (1973), he performed as a member of the chorus, credited as a Citizen of New York, during the show's original run from March 18 to December 8, 1973.[2] He gained prominence originating the role of Mike in the original Broadway production of A Chorus Line (1975–1990), in the Michael Bennett-directed musical that ran from July 25, 1975, to April 28, 1990, alongside co-stars including Donna McKechnie and Robert LuPone.[16] In The Act (1977), Cilento appeared as one of Liza Minnelli's "Boys" and served as dance captain, performing from October 29, 1977, to July 1, 1978, in the Martin Scorsese-helmed production.[2] Cilento was a featured dancer and singer in the original Broadway production of Dancin' (1978–1982), part of the ensemble in Bob Fosse's revue that ran from March 27, 1978, to June 27, 1982.[17] In V.I.P. Night on Broadway (1979), he performed as a member of the American Dance Machine.[2] In Perfectly Frank (1980), Cilento appeared as a performer during the show's run from November 30 to December 13, 1980.[2] In Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (1982), he performed in the ensemble during the Broadway run from January 27 to September 4, 1982.[2] His Broadway performing credits continued with Big Deal (1986), where he took on various roles including the First Narrator in the Bob Fosse-directed musical, which ran from April 10 to June 8, 1986.[2] In Happy Birthday, Mr. Abbott! (1987), Cilento appeared as a performer on June 22, 1987.[2] On film, Cilento appeared as a dancer in Annie (1982), contributing to the dance sequences in the musical adaptation directed by John Huston.[18]As choreographer and director
Wayne Cilento has built an extensive career as a choreographer and director, contributing to numerous Broadway productions, revivals, tours, and international stagings in musical theater. His work spans original musicals, revivals of classic shows, and national and international tours, often blending innovative movement with narrative storytelling. Notable credits include both long-running hits and critically acclaimed shorter runs, demonstrating his versatility across genres from rock operas to contemporary spectacles.[2]Broadway Productions
- Baby (1983, original musical): Musical staging.[19]
- Jerry's Girls (1985, original revue): Choreographer and conceiver.
- The Who's Tommy (1993, original musical): Choreographer.
- How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1995, revival): Choreographer.
- Dream (1997, original musical): Director and choreographer.
- Aida (2000, original musical): Choreographer.
- Wicked (2003–present, original musical): Choreographer; production continues with ongoing Broadway run and multiple national tours through 2025.[20]
- Sweet Charity (2005, revival): Choreographer.
- Chance & Chemistry (2009, original revue): Additional choreography.
- Holler If Ya Hear Me (2014, original musical): Musical staging and choreography.[15]
- Bob Fosse's Dancin' (2023, revival): Director and musical staging; earned seven Chita Rivera Award nominations.[21][22]
Tours and International Productions
Cilento's choreography has extended to national and international tours, enhancing the accessibility of Broadway-caliber productions. Key examples include:- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (1982, U.S. tour at Ford's Theatre): Original choreography.
- The Who's Tommy (1990s U.S. tour): Choreographer.[23]
- How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (post-1995 national tour): Choreographer.[24]
- Aida (2000s U.S. and European tours, including Germany and Amsterdam): Choreographer.[3]
- Wicked (2005–2025 multiple national and international tours): Choreographer.[20]
- Sweet Charity (2005–2007 U.S. tour): Choreographer.[25]
- Copacabana (2000s U.S. tour): Musical staging and choreography.[26]
- The Who's Tommy (1996 West End production): Choreographer.[27]