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Emily Carmichael (born January 27, 1982) is an American filmmaker and animator.〔Planke, Mike. (May 18, 2009) (Emily Carmichael Interview ). Cinevegas Blog. Retrieved April 30, 2013.〕 She wrote, directed, and animated the Penny Arcade web series ''The Adventures of Ledo and Ix'' and has written and directed several live-action short films that have screened in competition at Sundance, Tribeca, SXSW, Slamdance, and other US and International film festivals.〔Sondhi, Jason. (February 4, 2011) (Q&A with Sundance Filmmaker Emily Carmichael ). Short of the Week. Retrieved May 1, 2013.〕 ''Filmmaker'' called her one of the 25 New Faces of Independent Film in its 2013 Summer issue.〔Bernstein, Paula. (July 18, 2013) ("Filmmaker Magazine Names 2013's '25 New Faces of Independent Film'" ). ''Indiewire''. Retrieved July 18, 2013.〕 == Early life == Carmichael was born in New York City and is a 2000 graduate of Stuyvesant High School.〔(Emily Carmichael ). KQED Blog. Retrieved May 1, 2013.〕 In 1999 she published two essays, "Fight Girl Power" and "Acid Torches of Doom", in the book ''Ophelia Speaks'', an anthology of works by adolescent girls which spent eighteen weeks on ''The New York Times'' Best Seller List.〔(Opehlia Speaks ). NPR Talk of the Nation. (May 6, 1999). Retrieved May 1, 2013.〕 ''Salon's'' review singled out "Fight Girl Power" as the best of the collection praising fifteen-year-old Carmichael's essay as a "sophisticated, painful, and amusing meditation on girl power."〔Quart, Alissa (September 16, 1999). ("Sells Like Teen Spirit" ). ''Salon''. Retrieved May 6, 2013.〕 She graduated from Harvard University in 2004 with a dual BA degree in Literature and Visual and Environmental Studies.〔Potier, Beth (December 12, 2002). ("Is That a Puppet I See Before Me?" ). ''Harvard Gazette''. Retrieved April 30, 2013.〕〔High, Emily S. (April 11, 2003). (Spotlight: Emily J. Carmichael ). ''The Harvard Crimson''. Retrieved April 30, 2013.〕 During her time at Harvard she wrote and directed two full-length plays and three short plays at the Loeb Experimental Theater and the Adams House Pool Theater.〔(Harvard Theater Database ). Retrieved May 1, 2013.〕 Her comic strip ''Whiz Kids'', which originated in her high school newspaper, ran in ''The Crimson'' over two years.〔("Programmer's Note: 2011 Sundance Film Festival" ) (January 6, 2011). ''Youtube''. Retrieved August 24, 2013.〕 Seth MacFarlane, reviewing student comics for ''Noise'' magazine, commended its execution, structure, and "Doonesbury rhythm".〔("Long Before Hosting Oscars, Seth MacFarlane Thought My Cartoon Was Pretty Cool" ) (February 23, 2013). Kid Can Drive Blog. Retrieved August 24, 2013〕 The citation for Carmichael's David McCord Prize—an undergraduate honor awarded by Harvard houses for excellence in the arts—referred to her as "...an artistic phenomenon. Or perhaps more accurately...a bizarre frightening mutant artistic freak."〔MacNeil, Lela Scott (January 19, 2011). ("Live From Sundance" ). Rooftop Films Blog. Retrieved August 24, 2013.〕〔("Harvard University Faculty of Arts and Sciences Prize Office: Prize Descriptions" ). Harvard University. Retrieved August 24, 2013.〕 She graduated from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts with an MFA in Film in 2012.〔Sherman, Miranda. (May 24, 2012). (2012 Film Graduates ). ''Cine City''. Retrieved May 1, 2013.〕 In her final year she was a finalist for Tisch's Wasserman Award.〔Jones, Kiara C. (April 2, 2012). ("2012 Wasserman Finalist Announced" ). ''Cine City''. Retrieved August 24, 2013.〕 Carmichael is the great-niece of the novelist Eleazar Lipsky, the granddaughter of historian Joel Carmichael, and the great-granddaughter of Louis Lipsky, an early leader in the American Zionist movement.〔("Louis Lipsky, Dean of American Zionist Movement, Dead" ) (May 28, 1963). ''Jewish Telegraphic Agency''. Retrieved May 6, 2013.〕〔("Joel Carmichael: Obituary" ) (February 12, 2006). ''The New York Times''. Retrieved May 6, 2013.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Emily Carmichael (filmmaker)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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