Who Was Who! The Multi-Talented Brian Lasser, Karen Mason’s Musical Director and More

Karen Mason and Brian Lasser
Composer, lyricist, musical director, arranger, pianist and actor, Brian Alan Lasser was born on February 8, 1952 in Chicago, Illinois. He died at age 40 on November 20, 1992 in New York, a victim of AIDS.

In Chicago, Lasser received his initial training in musical theater and returned to the Windy City to embark on a career as an actor/singer/dancer after studying at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. Lasser helped re-introduce cabaret as a vital entertainment form in Chicago, playing sold-out shows at the Park West, Old Vic and Ravinia. These successes led him to more theatrical pursuits in New York.

Lasser began working with vocalist Karen Mason in 1976, and was her musical director/arranger for fifteen years. Their partnership resulted in an album, Not So Simply Broadway and her one-woman show, One Tough Cookie, written with Gary Gardner.

Lasser’s first Off-Broadway musical, The Matinee Kids, won an ASCAP Popular Music Grant. His second, Bundle of Nerves, was produced at the Village Gate in New York and won the Village Critics Award for Best Musical Score Off-Broadway in 1984. His 1991 musical The Black Tulip, written with Tracy Friedman, received its world premiere at the Center Theater in Chicago. He contributed original songs to Martin Charnin’s No Frills Revue and to Eighty-Eights’ Here’s to Our Friends, with one of his collaborators, David Arthur. He also wrote He wrote music and lyrics for The Little Prince (1968-69), Aesop’s Fallibles (1969-70), Clever Things (1972), Wizard of Oz (1976) and The Mating Habits of the Urban Male.

In 1984 Lasser received an After Dark Hall of Fame Award for his lifetime contribution to entertainment in Chicago, a Chicago “Clio” Award for Best Musical Radio Spot and an ASCAP Award for Most Promising Composer.

In New York, he arranged, directed and wrote special material for a wide variety of performing artists, including Carol Lawrence and Larry Kert at the Rainbow Room, and, of course, Mason in Karen Mason Sings Broadway, Beatles and Brian at the Minetta Lane Theatre. He received two Manhattan Association of Cabaret (MAC) Awards for Best Direction and Special Material, and a special commendation award from the Gilman and Gonzalez-Falla Foundation.

His song “Hold Me” won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Original Song in 1998. Fourteen of his songs were recorded by Karen Mason on her 1996 album Better Days, and were published by Lasserations Music in 2000 under the title The Songs of Brian Lasser.

Among the songs he has written are: “Better Days,” “Carry Me Away,” “Come Share My Life,” “Favorite Son,” “Footprints,” “Getting So Old In New York City,” “Hold Me,” Hello, Tom,” “How Long Has It Been,” “I Haven t Got Time,” “I Made a New Friend,” “Living, Loving You” and many more.

At the time of his death, he was survived by his parents, Isador and Helen Lasser, and two sisters, Margo and Helen, all of Chicago.

With thanks to the author, Nurit Tilles The Estate Project for Artists with AIDS