About Me
Keith Robinson has always stuck out, literally. Standing 6’2” at the age of 13, Keith was used to being treated like a character long before he started acting. Growing up playing basketball in the Greater Boston Suburbs, Keith turned free-throws and bounce passes into Shakespeare and dance classes. He diligently studied and performed at Boston Children’s Theatre for four years before receiving a classical acting certificate from LAMDA and a BFA in Acting from Boston University. Keith is a passionate and determined actor. His most recent credits include: Legally Blonde (Warner) at Moonbox Productions, The Great Gatsby an American Musical (Nick Carraway) at Marblehead’s Little Theatre, Save the Whales (Todd) at Boston Playwright’s Theatre. Additional selected credits: Murder Ballad (Michael), Footloose (Ren McCormack), Glass Menagerie (Jim O’Connor), 1984 (O’Brien), The Drowsy Chaperone (Robert Martin). Keith has immense gratitude for the innumerable teachers and mentors who have helped him in his artistic path; thank you.
Reviews
1984 (O’Brien)
“The statuesque Keith Robinson nearly steals the show as O’Brien, winning Winston and Julia’s confidence with his supportive and affable manner before morphing into the embodiment of human evil as he turns on them, and coerces them into betraying one another.”
–Michael Hoban // New England Theatre Mirror
Legally Blonde (Warner)
“… she earns our sympathy when her snooty boyfriend, Warner Huntington III (played by Keith Robinson with spot-on hauteur), unceremoniously dumps her just when she thinks he is going to propose to her.”
–Don Aucoin // Boston Globe
“The relationship between Kelly and Robinson is solid enough to believe, especially as the story continues. Robinson distinguishes himself well in his performance as the smarmy, self-entitled Warner.”
–Kevin T. Baldwin // METRMAG
Great Gatsby: An American Musical (Nick Carraway)
“Robinson's standout portrayal gives Carraway a genuine charm, the observant eye through which the audience experiences the glittering world of excess and underlying moral decay that is the backdrop to Gatsby's tragic story.”
–William J. Dowd // Marblehead Current
The Glass Menagerie (Jim O’Connor)
“At a recent performance, Keith Robinson most fully realized his role as Jim O’Connor, the Gentleman Caller…
… the scenes between he (Jim) and Laura are the best of the production.”
–Rick Fahey’s // On Boston Stages
“16-year-old Keith Robinson plays Jim O’Connor, the gentleman caller, with the confidence and brio of an actor twice his age.”
–Christopher Ehlers // DigBoston