Cusi Cram is an American playwright, screenwriter, actress, and model.
Background
Cusi Cram was born in Manhattan, New York City, New York, on September 22, 1967, to Lady Jeanne Campbell, daughter of Ian Campbell, 11th Duke of Argyll and granddaughter of Max Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook, and John Cram III, a descendant of railroad developer Jay Gould.
Career
After signing with Wilhelmina Models at 13 years old, Cram went on to originate the role of Cassie Callison on the American Broadcasting Company soap opera One Life to Live. Following her graduation from Brown University, Cram focused on play-writing and screenwriting, namely for the series Arthur, The Octonauts, and The Big C. Her plays have been produced at American regional theaters and she had her off-Broadway debut at 59E59 Theaters in 2009 with her play A Lifetime Burning. Cram"s first foray into the world of theater came at age six when she played the role of Moth in a production of A Midsummer Night"s Dream at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival.
Mailer"s later wife Norris Church, a former actress and model, suggested that Cram try out modelling.
At age 13, she did, becoming the youngest model ever to sign with Wilhelmina Models, Church"s former agency. At the time, Cram attended the Chapin School in Manhattan.
While working with Wilhemina, Cram modeled for a variety of publications including Interview, Seventeen, Brides, and Young Mississippi While still 13, she joined the cast of the soap opera One Life to Live on American Broadcasting Company. She originated the role of Cassie Callison, a job that required her to leave the Chapin School for the Professional Children"s School which allowed her time to both study and participate in filming.
She eventually transitioned from acting to playwriting during her twenties, graduated from Brown University in 1990, and landed a job writing for the animated Public Broadcasting Service show Arthur.
Cram worked in regional theaters in Massachusetts, California, and Colorado, and had some of her work produced Office-Office-Broadway. Her work on Arthur inspired her 2009 play Dusty and the Big Bad World. The Arthur spinoff Postcards from Buster was subject to a controversy that eventually involved United States Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings after an episode depicted a Vermont family with two lesbian mothers.
Dusty, which premiered at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, was a comic retelling of the controversy.
Cram" General’ s Office-Broadway debut also came in 2009 when her play A Lifetime Burning, based on the experiences of author Margaret Seltzer and the discovery of her partially fictitious memoir Love and Consequences, was produced at 59E59 Theaters by Primary Stages. Aside from Arthur, Cram has also written for the Cbeebies children"s television series The Octonauts, and contributed two episodes to the Showtime comedy-drama The Big C. As of January 2014, she teaches playwriting as part of the joint Fordham University – Primary Stages Master of Fine Arts program
Production history
Additionally, Cram"s one-act West of Stupid was anthologized in The Best American Short Plays 2000-2001. She has also performed two one-woman shows, Bolivia and Euripidames, at New Georges in New York City.