VINCENZO VACCARO
"This is a very funny production.  The eight actors who are performing live bring so much to the audience and they are
complimented by the gifted actors who are on the video recording.  One of the things that I really enjoyed about the
production was that the audience was exposed to the inner thoughts of the jury members.  I was in stitches to hear some
of the inner thoughts of the jury in the production because I could identify."          
  Nicole U. Hopkins, The Black Star News
"The jury is a wonderfully chosen cast of actors with expressive,
captivating faces that work well in extreme close-ups. . .One man
raps, "I gave her the benefit of the doubt. She's guilty, there's no
way out." A woman counters, "Hold on, big guy, not so fast. Maybe
he drove her to kill his ass." In between stanzas, the men rap,
"Stupid bitch," while the woman shake their heads and say, "Don't
let no man treat you like that.

One cannot help but marvel at the perfect coordination as the jurors
speak their dialogue in sync with the hip-hop song underscoring
their words. The beat pushes its way into your subconscious, causing
many a serious-faced patron to tap a foot while visibly swaying
shoulders to the rhythm."
Adrienne Cea, "Dinner With Felons", OffOffOnLine February 6, 2005
"Hankins turns a jaundiced eye and ear to the inside of the Jury
Room.  We watch them bicker, argue, even physically fight to
persuade one another.  Most troubling is that many of them
made up their minds before the trial began!  So that as the trial
proceeds one is actually thinking about the defendant's clothes,
another about going on vacation, and a third is worrying about
getting back to work."                  
Ernece B. Kelley, New York Beacon
Vincenzo Vaccaro (Juror Abe Johnson), his film credits
include participating in the 1993 film, "A Bronx Tale", as a
shoe shiner.  (Director, Robert DeNiro).  From 1995 to 2000,
he has actively taken acting classes with Sandra Lee acting
academy.  He also participated in "Saturday" as a bartender,
"Confessions" as a wiseguy/tough guy.  In addition to those
roles, he has also participated in comedic short film roles.

After a successful theater run in 2005, the filmed version of
A
WEAPON MOST UNUSUAL won 2006 Best Musical Film Short
two times in both the Spring and Fall Festivals at the New
York International Independent Film Festival, New York City.
(
www.nyfilmvideo.com)
In the role of "Abe Johnson, Carpenter, Juror"
setstats