Ryan Duncan

Ryan Duncan

Ryan was born in Ft. Devens, Massachusetts and moved around quite a bit after that due to a military father. His family finally settled in the Washington D.C. area (Woodbridge, VA) which is where he spent most of his time before moving to New York City in 1997 where his roommates were good friend Tracie Thoms and Anthony Mackie. Ryan has a degree in Foreign Language from George Mason University in Fairfax, VA, and got his start in D.C. area professional theaters and industrial films. He is fluent in Spanish, conversational in French and Italian, and studies Arabic. In New York, he was in the original cast of the Off-Broadway hit, Altar Boyz ('Juan') and went on to perform in Shrek the Musical on Broadway as one of the three Pigs ('Bricks') and performed the role of Donkey many times. He also wrote and performed with NY based sketch group Honorable Mention, and has created and performed in other comedy projects at venues such as Broadway Comedy Club and the PIT. Coming up, Ryan can be seen in Gettin' the Band Back Together on Broadway. Ryan also volunteers and works with such organizations as TDF (Theater Development Fund), ASTEP (Artists Striving To End Poverty), and Only Make Believe which provides interactive theater for children in hospitals around the NYC area.
Ryan Duncan

Movies

Shrek the Musical
  • Sep 16, 2013
  • English
Shrek The Musical is a musical with music by Jeanine Tesori and book and lyrics by David Lindsay-Abaire. It is based on the 2001 DreamWorks Animation's film Shrek and William Steig's 1990 book Shrek! It was nominated for 8 Tony Awards including Best Musical. On July 19, 2013, following the closure of the national tour and West End productions, Amazon.com confirmed that the filmed performance would be available for instant viewing on September 17, 2013. A DVD, Blu-ray, and digital download was also released on that day.The performance is an edit of several live performances as well as a performance shot without an audience. The original principal cast appear, as well as various alumni across the show's Broadway run. Also, it keeps the song "Donkey Pot Pie" instead of the replacement, "Forever."