Kane's original works include the award-winning Gothic at Midnight a Tribute to the Masters of the Macabre, his adaptation of the H.G. Wells' immortal classic, The Time Machine and A Force of Nature: or How I survived My Jewish American Family for the 92nd Street Y's Oral Tradition Series. Kane has created and performed works for major museums, arts centers and festivals, including the Jewish Museum, the Peabody Museum at Yale, the Ridgefield Museum of Contemporary Art, the Bruce Museum in Greenwich CT, and a community outreach program for the Crown Heights History Project at the Brooklyn Children's Museum, sponsored by the New York Times Foundation. He also offers dynamic creativity and voice workshops.
For more than a decade, Kane, an arts activist, served as a Touring Artist for the Connecticut Commission on the Arts (CCA) and was recognized as an exceptional performer and artist-in-residence when the CCA designated him a Master Teaching Artist. In appreciation of his work bringing cultural arts to university theatres across the country, the APCA named Kane its 1998 Performing Artist of the Year. At the 1998 Piccolo Spoleto Festival in Charleston, SC, Gothic at Midnight was a smash critical and popular success. Kane has also performed to great acclaim at the World Horror Con and Dragon Con in Atlanta, GA.
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