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Publisher and editor: Michael Wade Simpson, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Mr. Simpson has a BA in Journalism from the University of Southern California and worked as an advertising writer in Los Angeles before moving to New York to pursue a different passion: dance. He danced professionally in New York and Boston before founding a community-based modern dance company, Small City Dance Project, in Newburyport, MA. His fiction has appeared in literary journals and anthologies. He was a teaching fellow at Smith College, where he received his MFA in choreography. While living in the Bay Area for 15 years, he wrote about dance for the San Francisco Chronicle and other periodicals. In 2005, he was a NEA Fellow at the Dance Critics Institute, American Dance Festival. For culturevulture.net, he reviews dance, theatre and film. He moved to Santa Fe in October, 2008. Contact:
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Contributing Writers
Karren LaLonde Alenier, Washington, DC Ms. Alenier is a swing-dancing poet whose opera, Gertrude Stein Invents A Jump Early On, with composer William Banfield and New York City’s Encompass New Opera Theatre artistic director Nancy Rhodes premiered in New York City in June 2005. She writes a monthly column for scene4.com entitled "The Steiny Road to Operadom." Read about her forthcoming book on opera—The Steiny Road to Operadom: The Making of American Operas at alenier.blogspot.com.
Theodore Bale, Boston, MA. Theodore Bale is dance critic and columnist at the Boston Herald. His writing has appeared in Dance Magazine, Dance International, Dancer, Bay Windows, Edge Publications, the Cambridge Chronicle, Contact Quarterly, and many Massachusetts weekly newspapers.
Josh Baxt, San Diego, CA. Josh Baxt has an MFA in creative writing from San Diego State University and writes for a local nonprofit. His play, Like a War, was produced for the annual Fritz litz. Josh's short fiction has been published in the anthologies Sunshine Noir and Hunger and Thirst, as well as the journal City Works.
Beverly Berning, Berkeley, CA. Ms. Berning attended film school at San Francisco State University in the 1980s, and has been writing about film for the San Francisco International Film Festival since 1992. She also writes about travel and the arts for various trade publications.
Joseph Campana, Houston, TX is a poet and a scholar of Renaissance literature. He is the author of a collection of poems, The Book of Faces (Graywolf 2005) and the recipient of an NEA fellowship with poems in Poetry, Slate, Conjunctions, and elsewhere. His reviews and other prose appear among other places in the Kenyon Review, Pleiades, and Shakespeare. He teaches at Rice University in Houston.
Harry Chotiner, New York, NY Mr. Chotiner teaches film at NYU's SCPS and coordinates the educational component of the Virginia Film Festival. He previously worked in Hollywood as everything from a script reader at Zoetrope to a Vice-President at Interscope and 20th Century Fox.
Nina daVinci, New York, NY Dr. daVinci is a retired Professor of English at Rutgers University, where she taught Shakespearean and other drama. She has published extensively, including five books of literary and dramatic criticism. Her books include Ariadne's Lives and Pirandello and Film.
Frances Dinkelspiel, Berkeley, CA Ms. Dinkelspiel has been a bookworm ever since she learned to read. She read and reread The Little House books by Laura Ingalls Wilder at least ten times growing up and secretly considers herself a prairie girl. Frances is a freelance writer in Berkeley, California whose work has appeared in the New York Times, People, the San Francisco Chronicle and The San Jose Mercury News. Her book about her great great grandfather, Towers of Gold: Isaias Hellman and the Creation of California, is forthcoming from St. Martin's Press
Jane Durrell, Cincinnati, OH Ms. Durrell writes because it's the only thing she knows how to do. She began in journalism, turncoated into public relations, and returned eventually to honest work as a free-lance journalist, writing about art, travel, or whatever an editor has in mind.
Sean Elwood, New York, New York Mr. Elwood is the Director of Grants and Services for the Creative Capital Foundation. Sean’s professional experience includes serving as Curator & Collections Manager for the Seattle Arts Commission; Director for Special Projects at Ronald Feldman Gallery in New York; and managing the Visual Arts Residency Program for the Centrum Foundation in Washington State. He founded SEEDITIONS Art Publishing Company and was co-owner of the Fuller/Elwood Gallery in Seattle. He received a Max Beckmann Scholarship for Painting at the Brooklyn Museum Art School and holds a M.A. in Visual Arts from Hunter College. He is an occasional curator, publisher, writer - and a Sunday painter. Bill Falik, Berkeley, California Mr. Falik is a land use and real estate lawyer, as well as a developer of master-planned communities throughout Northern California. He currently serves as a Visiting Professor at Boalt Hall teaching business and law students. In addition, Mr. Falik is on the Board of the Berkeley Repertory Theatre and is active in other philanthropic activities. He has a passion for travel and photography. Paula Farmer—New York, New York Paula is a New York- based freelance film/theater reviewer as well as being actively involved in video production projects as a producer and director, including her own pet documentary project. She began her film and journalism education and career in Michigan where she attended the University of Michigan and worked for media outlets such as CBS Radio and the Metro Times. She furthered her ambitions upon moving to NYC in 2000 where, among other jobs, she worked at the famed Evergreen Video. When Paula isn't pursuing her passions in writing and film, she's exploring the world of wine as a project coordinator and consultant at a boutique wine store on the City's Upper Westside. Elgy Gillespie: San Francisco Elgy Gillespie is a much-traveled freelance writer from Ireland who now lives in San Francisco's Mission district. She fell in love with movies at a very early age, and spent her college years helping to un film clubs. She is the author of several history books, travel guides, and cookbooks. She uses films in her classes and teaches American film history whenever she can.
Joanna Gewertz Harris, Ph.D, is a dance teacher, historian, reviewer, and lecturer. She taught dance and theater at UCB, UCSC, Cal State Hayward and Sonoma, and is a frequent contributor to scholarly journals and books, most recently to H'Doubler, and Legacy in Dance Education, both from Cambria Press. Beyond Isadora, Bay Area Dancing 1915-1965 , her book documenting Bay Area history (Price $40. + 2.00 shipping) is available from her web site Beyond Isadora.com and her e mail,
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. Patricia Humeau, San Diego, CA Patricia is a native of France and started acting in a local theatre group when she was 14. She later came to study theatre in California (Foothill Theatre Conservatory, Los Altos), where she met her husband Jay. She worked for Bus Barn Stage Company as a Production Manager and Assistant Managing Director and, after moving to San Diego, joined La Jolla Playhouse as Assistant Company Manager. Patricia now keeps busy raising her wonderful son, Luc.
Neil Ludwick, London, England Mr. Ludwick is a part time writer and full time teacher. He has had several plays for young people published and he annually tours Hungary with his students in productions of Shakespeare, American drama and his own adaptations of children's classics.
Gary Mairs, Los Angeles, CA Mr. Mairs tries to keep his job as a film teacher from interfering with his record collecting.
Michael McDonagh, San Francisco, CA Michael McDonagh is a San Francisco-based poet and writer on the arts, whose poetry has appeared in Stanford's Mantis 3, Poetry and Performance. His writings on the arts have appeared in The SF Chronicle, The LA Times, The Threepenny Review, In Tune, Antiques and Fine Art, California Printmaker, and The San Francisco Review Of Books. He writes on the arts for The Bay Area Reporter -- www.eBAR.com -- is the sole writer for www.alexnorthmusic.com; writes for www.classical-music-review.org; as well as www.21st-centurymusic.com; www.sequenza21.com and New Music Connoisseur ( both NY ).
Emily S. Mendel, Oakland, California Ms. Mendel is a writer and photographer, whose work has appeared in numerous publications. She regularly contributes to culturevulture.net, where, in addition to writing about travel, film and television, she is the creator of its electronic arts column. Ms. Mendel, recently retired from her law practice, is relishing the opportunity to pursue her love of travel, photography, film, theater, ballet, bicycling, and computer games…and to write about them.
Neila Mezynski, San Jose, California One time ballet dancer/choreographer turned abstract painter and free lance writer, Neila Mezynski offers critiques and articles on painters and musicians.Based in San Jose, Ca she writes for www.culturevulture.net and www.artsandopinion.com.
Harvey O'Brien, Dublin, Ireland Dr. O'Brien has a PhD in Film Studies, but he will review theater for culturevulture.net. His film reviews can be seen at his own site. He is the author of The Real Ireland: The Evolution of Ireland in Documentary Film and co-editor of Keeping it Real: Irish Film and Television.
Jesse Paddock, Chapel Hill, NC Mr. Paddock is a longtime student of cultural studies and film. He studied film grammar in graduate school and can still speak the language when his job demands it. He also writes film reviews for the Charleston City Paper.
Chris Pepus, St. Louis, MO Mr. Pepus is a contributing writer for Razorcake. His work has also appeared in such publications as The Progressive, Konch, and American Theatre. He confesses to an unhealthy interest in horror and kung fu films.
Renata Polt, Berkeley, CA Ms. Polt, a freelance writer and critic, is the translator and editor of A Thousand Kisses: A Grandmother's Holocaust Letters.
Dan Schneider, West Texas. Between surviving organized criminals (think Goodfellas) and dirty cops (think Serpico) in his youth, Mr. Schneider found autodidacticism and founded Cosmoetica, perhaps the most popular non-commercial literary site online. Rap sheet: poet, critic, fictionist, memoirist, dramatist.
Alyssa Schoeneman: Chicago, IL Alyssa Schoeneman is currently pursuing a BFA in dance at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is a featured columnist at the IUC’s buzz magazine and recently completed a marketing and communications internship at the American Dance Festival. Her work will be featured in upcoming issues of Dance Teacher and Dance Studio Life.
David Sobelsohn, Washington, DC A recovering lawyer and law professor, Mr. Sobelsohn founded the Washington, DC theater-discussion group Footlights. For seven years he has sandwiched theater, music, and dance criticism among his myriad other activities. He now tries to model his life after his favorite play's eponymous godlike non-character, who does nothing and never arrives.
Roy Sorrels, New York, New York Mr. Sorrels is an award-winning and internationally produced playwright, a widely published freelance writer, and a writing coach with clients all over the world. He lives in New York City but also has a home in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico where he spends part of each year. His coaching web site is RoySorrels.com
Ryan Tracy, Brooklyn, New York Ryan Tracy is a composer, performer, and writer living in Brooklyn, NY. He is a contributor to culturebot.org (PS 122's arts blog) and has been the literary documenter for Chez Bushwick, an artist run studio at the forefront of Brooklyn's burgeoning performance scene. Prior to coming to NY, Ryan wrote music criticism for The Orange County Register in Southern California. Ryan holds degrees in music composition and conducting.
Pamela Troy, San Francisco, CA Ms. Troy is a freelance writer of both fiction and nonfiction. She has contributed to such diverse publications as The Nob Hill Gazette, Twilight Showcase, Space and Time and Night Terrors.
Nella Vera, New York, NY Ms. Vera works in the professional theater in New York City. An avid sports fan, she is also a fitness instructor and freelance photographer.
Gregory M. Vogel, Los Angeles, CA Mr. Vogel is a freelance writer with a personal passion for fine crafts. He studies glassblowing with artist Josh Gelfand and practices glass beadmaking, mosaic and jewelry design at his studio in Los Angeles.
Scott Von Doviak, Austin, TX Mr. Von Doviak is a film critic for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. His book, Hick Flicks: The Rise and Fall of Redneck Cinema is the first comprehensive study of the hixploitation genre.
Bob Wake, Cambridge, WI Mr. Wake is editor of the Cambridge Book Review and the author of Caffeine and Other Stories, a collection of short fiction.
Karen Weinstein, Los Angeles, CA Dr. Weinstein is a clinical psychologist who teaches in the medical school at UCLA. She also holds a master's degree in Urban Studies and has a strong interest in history and architecture, as well as the theater.
Suzanne Weiss, San Francisco, CA Ms. Weiss wanted to be a ballerina with all her heart, but the rest of her body was not equipped to go along with the program so she became a critic instead. Covering dance, theater and music for various papers in Chicago and the Bay Area has kept her on her toes for the past 25 years.
Lewis Whittington, Philadelphia PA Mr. Whittington writes about the performing and film arts for many publications. He is a renegade dance, theater and opera queen, a jazz-head and a civil activist.
Sura Wood, San Francisco, CA Ms. Wood is an arts journalist and film critic whose work has appeared in San Francisco Arts Monthly, Hollywood Reporter and other publications.
Joe Wozny, Houston, TX Joe Wozny is a college student who enjoys "arts", but not "crafts". He likes to perform various activities on his own accord. He also has an online blog about Houston based time traveling folk musicians (http://web.mac.com/woejozney).
Nancy Wozny is a Houston-based arts writer. She's a regular contributor to Dance Magazine, Dance Spirit, Goldrush, Artshouston, and is the dance editor for Dance Source Houston. She was a 2005 NEA Fellow at the Institute for Dance Criticism and a 2004 recipient of the Gary Parks Memorial Award for Emerging Dance Critics. She edits Dancehunter, Houston's only dance blog. www.dancehunter.blogspot.com
Les Wright, San Francisco, CA Dr. Wright is a (high, mass, and low) cultural studies scholar and intellectual historian, an essayist, photographer, poet, and incorrigible traveler who admits to a shameless fascination with eros and thanatos--in the cinema and elsewhere.
George Wu, New York, NY Mr. Wu holds a masters degree in cinema studies from NYU. He eats, drinks, and sleeps movies. Fortunately, he lives in New York City, the best place in the country for disorders of this type. He also works on the occasional screenplay when inspiration strikes, but his muses don't slap him around enough.
Matthew Yeager, Brooklyn, New York Matthew Yeager is a Brooklyn-based filmmaker and film critic, who studied film at NYU film school. In short, he likes film. He also works at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), and keeps his own blog, http://www.cinemastubble.wordpress.com/, for further ramblings about film.
Susan Yung, based in New York City, contributes regularly to Dance Magazine, The Brooklyn Rail, Ballet-Tanz International, and other publications.
Josh Baxt has an MFA in creative writing from San Diego State University and writes for a local nonprofit. His play, Like a War, was produced for the annual Fritz Blitz. Josh's short fiction has been published in the anthologies Sunshine Noir and Hunger and Thirst, as well as the journal City Works.
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™culturevulture.net took flight on the World Wide Web on September 21, 1998
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