Randy Weiner is an American playwright, producer and theater and nightclub owner. Weiner co-wrote the Off-Broadway musical The Donkey Show and, as one-third of EMURSIVE, produced the Drama Desk Award winning New York premiere of Punchdrunk'sSleep No More. He is co-owner of NYC "theater of varieties" The Box and The Box Soho. Weiner is the creator of Queen of the Night at the Paramount Hotel in New York City, and recently served as the dramaturge for Cirque du Soleil's Amaluna. Randy was named one of Modern Luxury Manhattan's 75 Most Influential People In The Arts.
Weiner and Paulus along with a few other theater school graduates established a small theater troupe in New York City called Project 400 Theatre Group. With Project 400, Weiner and Paulus specialized in creating avant-garde musical productions which married classic theater and modern music. These included a rock version of The Tempest, an R&B Phaedra and a hip-hop Lohengrin. In collaboration with Paulus, Weiner co-created The Donkey Show, a disco adaptation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream which ran off-Broadway from 1999 to 2005 and was revived in 2009 for Paulus' first production as director of the American Repertory Theater. Critics cited the production as an exemplary of a trend in which edgy avant-garde theater had become fashionably mainstream. In February 2007, Weiner cofounded the Box theater on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. The cabaret theater has drawn attention for its risque burlesque acts. In September 2009, Weiner and Hammerstein announced the opening of Purgatorio, a temporary Halloween-season nightclub with a macabre sex-based theme. In January 2014, Weiner and partner Aby Rosen unveiled the Diamond Horseshoesupper club in midtown Manhattan. Once presided over by legendary nightlife impresario Billy Rose, the venue has undergone a $20 million renovation and plays host to Weiner's latest immersive spectacle, Queen of the Night. Weiner has served on the Advisory Committee on the Arts at Harvard University. He has guest lectured on theater arts at Columbia University, Barnard College, New York University, and Yale.