Lamar Earle
I trust my intuition and nurture an environment of deep devotion, patience, and intense passion. I mirror my hearts desire and am never too busy to connect to those who trust, love and need me. ""It's the thought that counts."" Many can say "I would die for them"-- only I can live for them -- spoken with sincerity by a true Drama King. I am empowered by embracing my emotions as a gift and unconditional love is my Holy Grail or gift
Lamar Earle has enjoyed captivating large audiences from a very early age. Lamar’s passion for entertainment stems from his early years as a dancer in the early 90’s with Kate Foley Dance Company out of San Francisco, CA.
Lamar Earle graduated from Phillip and Sala Burton Academic High School in San Francisco, CA. It is here that Lamar Earle traveled and performed internationally with the Touch of Class Choir (T.O.C.C.), a world renowned show choir that intertwined his passion for singing, dancing, and acting. He learned and performed with perfection all genres of music including Classical, Spiritual, Jazz, Hip-Hop, R&B and Gospel.
In June 2008, he received a Bachelors of Arts in Mass Communication with an emphasis in Public Relations with two minors in Ethnic Studies and Criminal Justice.
This Renaissance Man began to immerse himself back into his passion for performing. Lamar Earle tackled two supporting roles in two small independent projects entitled “Outer Twilight,” written and directed by Pamela Canada. Under the direction of Michael Shahani Lamar lent his tenor range to help carry the operatic ensemble in Gertrude Stein’s" Dr. Faustus Lights the Lights,” in November 2008. In April of 2009 in a small yet pivotal role Lamar brought Mr. Tackleberry to life unconventionally in the Tony Award winning musical “How to Succeed in Business in Without Really Trying,” under the direction of Deborah Shaw. In the 2009 San Francisco Carnival Lamar danced and sang with the Afro-Haitian dance company Ra-Ra Toulimen led by Portsha Jefferson and Daniel Brazil for three miles in front of a massive crowd of nearly 20,000. In the fall of 2009 he was the man of many roles in the romantic farce “A Funny Thing Happened o