Artist

Vernel Bagneris

Genre: Jazz
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Born on 31 July 1949 in New Orleans, Louisiana, Bagneris grew up surrounded by Creole residents and a vibrant musical environment. After completing studies at Xavier University, he spent a short period instructing English at the high-school level, yet his deep connection to the city’s music and lively heritage remained intact. Leaving the classroom behind, he first performed at Amsterdam’s Mickery Theatre before channeling his focus into local stage projects back home, where he established the New Experience Players—an interracial ensemble devoted to conventional drama.

In 1978 he created One Mo’ Time, a production that revived the spirit of vaudeville shows popular long before his lifetime. Set both backstage and onstage at a New Orleans venue in 1926, the work enjoyed a six-month engagement locally before transferring to New York’s Village Gate for a three-and-a-half-year run, generating multiple touring productions and an 18-month West End presentation in London. Parallel to these efforts, Bagneris took screen roles in the 1981 film adaptation of Dennis Potter’s Pennies From Heaven and in Down By Law (1986), alongside various television appearances.

Additional theatrical works followed, among them the sequel Staggerlee featuring Ruth Brown, as well as Hoo-Dude and Further Mo’. The latter’s New York engagement coincided with the Gulf War and, despite receiving stronger reviews than its predecessor, faced reduced attendance. Jelly Roll, a two-hander performed with pianist Morten Gunnar Larsen, dramatized the colorful exploits and enduring compositions of Jelly Roll Morton. The production, its creators, and performers received Obie Awards, the Outer Critics Circle Award, and the Lucille Lortel Award for Best Off-Broadway Musical. The show was presented complete at the Oslo Jazz Festival and, by the mid-1990s, had transferred to Manhattan’s 47th Street Theatre.

Throughout his career Bagneris has remained a central presence in American theatre. Drawing consistently from the rich lineage of Black musical and cultural traditions, his distinctive method, technical command, and principled approach have drawn and sustained multiracial audiences across varied backgrounds.