Dan Hurlin's performance work has been seen in New York City at Dance Theater Workshop, P.S. 122, LaMama ETC, Danspace, The Kitchen, Arts at St. Ann's and St. Ann's Warehouse, as well as at alternative presenting spaces throughout the U.S. and internationally. He received a special Village Voice OBIE Award in 1990 for his solo adaptation of Nathanael West's A Cool Million, and his suite of puppet pieces, Everyday Uses for Sight: Nos. 3 & 7 (which premiered during the 2000 Henson International Festival of Puppet Theater) earned him a 2001 New York Dance and Performance award (a.k.a. "BESSIE"). Hurlin's most recent work, Hiroshima Maiden, with an OBIE award winning score by Robert Een, premiered at St. Ann's Warehouse in 2004 and was awarded a Citation of Excellence from the Union Internationale de la Marionette. Hiroshima Maiden was presented at the Clarice Smith Center during the 2005-06 season.
Dan Moses Schreier has worked extensively in the theater as a composer and a sound designer. His music compositions for the theater include Broadway productions of Dance of Death; Topdog/Underdog; Bring in 'Da Noise, Bring in 'Da Funk; Julius Caesar; and more. He composed soundscapes for Stephen Sondheim's Into the Woods, Tony Kushner's Homebody/Kabul and Claudia Shear's Dirty Blonde and also collaborated with Dan Hurlin on the chamber opera, The Shoulder. Schreier grew up in Detroit, Michigan in a musical world surrounded by the Motown sounds, the early punk rock of Iggy Pop and the Stooges and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and briefly attended the University of Michigan, studying music composition with William Bolcom. At Bolcom's suggestion, he got a job on a new musical being developed at the University called Up from Paradise, a collaboration between Arthur Miller and Stanley Silverman, launching a career that has resulted in numerous awards and honors.