Duane Boutté's early career was managed by ''
Summer of '42'' actress
Jennifer O'Neill. In 1994, he played "Enoch Snow, Jr." in
Lincoln Center's TONY Award-winning revival of
Carousel, and was one of
Michael Hayden's "Billy Bigelow" understudies. Boutté returned to Broadway in 1999 in
Parade. Among his favorite roles performed, Boutté names "Mercutio" at
Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and opportunities to premiere works by playwrights like
Terrence McNally,
Eric Overmyer,
Charles Randolph-Wright, and
Robert O'Hara. Of note among his premieres are Kirsten Childs' Off-Broadway musical
The Bubbly Black Girl Sheds Her Chameleon Skin (
Playwrights Horizons), and Brian Freeman's play
Civil Sex in which Boutté played civil rights activist
Bayard Rustin (
Berkeley Repertory Theatre). In New York, Boutté has been listed among
Vineyard Theatre's esteemed "Community of Artists." Boutté stars in two films that have become landmarks in gay cinema. The first of these,
Stonewall (1995), was directed by
Nigel Finch (
The Lost Language of Cranes). In the film, Boutté plays "Bostonia," a fictional 'mother' of the
Stonewall Inn, whose imagined, first punch incites this film's version of the 1969
Stonewall riots.
Interview magazine profiled Boutté for his performance in the role, stating "a Stonewall star is born." He was the first of the film's actors to come out as gay in an interview with 4-Front magazine that year. Boutté later played "Bruce Nugent, young" in Rodney Evans' 2004 film
Brother to Brother. The film, also starring
Anthony Mackie and
Roger Robinson, presents circa 1920's
Bruce Nugent as an unapologetic homosexual accepted, and embraced by celebrated
Harlem Renaissance figures like
Langston Hughes, and
Zora Neale Hurston. Boutté has directed plays and musicals in regional theatres and universities, and has collaborated as composer on new musicals including ''Lyin' Up a Breeze
(presented by Good Company Players in 2002), and Caravaggio Chiaroscuro'' (performed at LaMama Etc. in 2007). He has taught acting at
Illinois State University), National Theatre Institute,
Ramapo College, and directed work at
Stella Adler Studio of Acting in New York. == Feature films ==