Duane Boutté was born and raised in Fresno, California where his mother (Velda Neal Boutte) taught piano. Boutté's father, Alfred Boutte, is an Air Force veteran and was regional administrator for California's Employment Development Department.[5][6] Boutté's parents were active in community programs, particularly those advancing opportunities for Fresno's black citizens,[7] and are honored in Fresno's African American History Museum.[6][8] Duane Boutté is the youngest of the couple's seven children.[9] Though coming to California from east Texas, Boutté's paternal family has its Creole roots in Louisiana.[10] Boutté began taking piano lessons from his mother when he was a toddler, and started composing music at age 4 that his mother would then transcribe.[11][12][13]
In 1979, Boutté's parents took him to Roger Rocka's Music Hall in Fresno to see Anything Goes performed by Good Company Players (GCP).[14] The musical was preceded by a 15-minute pre-show of song and dance by the troupe's "Junior Company." Boutté auditioned and was accepted into Junior Company later that year. Boutté, then 13, would perform six shows each week for the next three years, taking just two weeks off each year for family vacation. He calls GCP the place where he learned "important...life lessons [like] commitment, responsibility, showing up on time ready, really ready, to work."[15] In GCP's Junior Company, Boutté worked alongside youngsters who would later become his Broadway colleagues (Audra McDonald, Heidi Blickenstaff, Sharon Leal, Andrea Chamberlain, and Sarah Uriarte Berry).[16][17] Boutté also performed in plays and musicals with the senior company, mostly under the direction of company founder, Dan Pessano, and gained his first television experience in Junior Company's local Saturday morning variety shows, and holiday specials.[14]
Boutté stars in two films that have become landmarks in gay cinema.[24][25] The first of these, Stonewall (1995), was directed by Nigel Finch (The Lost Language of Cranes).[26] 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."[27] He was the first of the film's actors to come out as gay in an interview with 4-Front magazine that year.[28] 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.[29]
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).[14][30] He has taught acting at Illinois State University),[10] National Theatre Institute, Ramapo College, and directed work at Stella Adler Studio of Acting in New York.[11]
^ abHale, David (July 16, 1989). "All jazzed up, Boutte returns to GCP stage, this time with his own songs". No. Spotlight section page F15. The Fresno Bee.
^Moverman, Oren (July 1996). "Boutte Camp". Sandra J. Brant. Andy Warhol's Interview magazine.
^White, Skip (June 12, 1996). "Stonewall: The Movie Actor Duane Boutte Takes Us Behind the Scenes". 4-Front Magazine. 1 (21): 73.
^Ehrenstein, David (October 26, 2004). "Props to a Gay Hero: Duane Boutte Talks about Bringing the Harlem Renaissance to Life in the Person of out Poet Bruce Nugent". The Advocate (October 26, 2004): 56.