Stephanie Storey

Stephanie Storey is an American actress, producer, screenwriter, director, editor, cinematographer, and novelist. She is the author of Oil and Marble, which was followed by Raphael, Painter in Rome.[1] She is perhaps best known for producing the television series, The Writers' Room.[2]

Stephanie Storey
Born
Stephanie Storey

U.S.
EducationVanderbilt University (BFA)
Emerson College (MFA)
Washington University in St. Louis (PhD)
Occupations
  • Art historian
  • actress
  • producer
  • screenwriter
  • director
  • editor
  • cinematographer
  • novelist
Years active2000–present
Spouse
(m. 2004)
RelativesHannah (niece);
Summer (goddaughter);
Annaleigh (cousin);
Addie (cousin);
Katie (cousin);
Veronica Kinney (great-aunt in-law)

Early life and background

When she was a child, her parents drove the family from coast to coast in a motorhome. When she was eighteen, she went to Europe with a traveling choir. She has snorkeled the Great Barrier Reef and hiked to a glacier on the south coast of Iceland.[3]

She attended Lakeside High School in Hot Springs, Arkansas and graduated in 1993.[2]

Stephanie Storey achieved cum laude and received a Bachelor of Arts in Fine Arts from Vanderbilt University. While at Vanderbilt, she did a semester abroad at Universita di Pisa, studying art and Italian. Storey then went on to receive a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from Emerson College. She attended a Ph.D. program in Art History at Washington University in St. Louis. She has taken classes in screenwriting, fiction, and literature at UCLA Extension. She has been an acting student at Actors Workout Studio, Actors Creative Workshop, and the Elephant Theater. Storey has also studied improv comedy at the Groundlings and University of California, Berkeley.[4]

She has lived in Arkansas, Nashville, Tennessee, Boston, Massachusetts, and St. Louis, Missouri.

Career

For over 15 years, Stephanie Storey has produced over one thousand episodes of national television for networks such as, CBS, ABC, NBC, FOX, PBS, Comedy Central, Oxygen, Sundance, E!, MSNBC. The shows she has written have won NAACP Awards and she has been nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award. She has produced feature films, award-winning documentaries, and new media projects written by Emmy winners and starring talent from series and networks such as The Daily Show, MTV, and Comedy Central.[5]

She is best known as the producer of the first season of The Writers’ Room, with Jim Rash for Sundance, which was nominated for an Emmy for the Breaking Bad episode.[5]

Storey was also the Senior Producer at The Tavis Smiley Show on PBS for eight years. The show produced interviews with politicians, actors, writers, musicians, athletes, scholars, newsmakers, and other visionaries.[5]

She was the Coordinating Producer for the development and relaunch of The Arsenio Hall Show in 2013 for CBS. The premiere week had the highest ratings for any launch of any syndicated talk show in seven years.[5]

As a consulting producer for the first days of development, Storey was the producer of Will Gray’s award-winning documentary about the music industry, entitled Broke.[5]

In 2014, Storey wrote and produced a PBS documentary for narrator, Nick Clooney, in his journey across five classic Hollywood musicals.[5]

Recently, Storey produced and directed the web series Don't Make Me Sick, written by Emmy and Golden Globe Award-winning writer and also her husband, Mike Gandolfi. Other actors in the series include stars and talent from Gilmore Girls, The Daily Show, and The Office.[5]

For both seasons of the series, Storey was one of the producers on Lewis Black’s Root of All Evil, on Comedy Central, where she worked with comics such as Patton Oswalt, Paul F. Tompkins, Andy Kindler, Andy Daly, and Greg Giraldo.[5]

She was also the producer for the Remaking America and Made Visible symposiums, which were filmed at George Washington University and aired on C-SPAN and PBS. Featured panelists included Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis, documentarian Michael Moore, wealth expert Suze Orman, and the president of AFL-CIO, Randi Weingarten.[5]

She has produced projects on almost every lot in Hollywood including, Warner Brothers, Paramount, Sony, Fox, NBC Burbank, KTLA, Sunset-Bronson, Sunset-Gower, Raleigh, KCET, Tribune, Encompass, CBS Television City, CBS Radford, Hollywood Center, and Nick on Sunset.[5]

Storey has also produced segments at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, and from the International Space Station, Democratic and Republican national conventions and debates, and from downtown New Orleans just two days after Hurricane Katrina.[5]

As a news producer, she has covered such events as the death of Osama bin Laden, Shock and Awe, the election of President Barack Obama, the Great Recession, Arab Spring, Hurricane Katrina, the earthquake in Haiti, among countless others.[5]

She has produced live events at locations around the country, including LA Live in downtown Los Angeles, Lisner Auditorium at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., and the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia. She has produced interviews with politicians, actors, musicians, athletes, authors, artists, professors, CEOs, and newsmakers. She has developed and produced TV shows hosted by Carrie Fisher, governor Jesse Ventura, Candice Bergen, Meghan McCain, Jim Rash, Kevin Nealon, and Lewis Black among others.[5]

Most recently she has written personal pieces for the online news publication, Huffington Post.[6]

Personal life

Stephanie Storey is married to Mike Gandolfi, an actor, writer, producer, stand-up comic, and editor. They were married on Leap Day at Disneyland on February 29, 2004. They were engaged at the Dromoland Castle in County Clare, Ireland.[2] They now reside in Hot Springs, Arkansas.

When publishing her first novel, Storey considered using the pen name "S.G. Storey", partly as a nod to her husband's last name and partly as a way to mask that she was a woman.[6]

She has a niece named Hannah, a goddaughter named Summer, and cousins named Annaleigh, Addie, and Katie.[6]

Filmography

Film
Year Title Role Notes
2008 Extraordinary Proof Cinematographer/Editor/Writer/Director/Executive Producer Short
2009 Assassin Nation Mercenary Recruiter Video Short
2009 Thanksgiving Seconds Editor/Writer/Director/Executive Producer Short
2011 Broke* Consulting Producer Documentary
Television
Year Title Role Notes
2000 Exhale with Candice Bergen Researcher
2002 The Conspiracy Zone Segment Producer
2002 O2Be Associate Producer
2004-2011 The Tavis Smiley Show Producer
2008 Lewis Black's Root of All Evil Segment Producer/Secretary 8 episodes/Steroids vs. Boob Jobs
2009 Don't Make Me Sick Executive Producer/Director/Editor
2013 The Writers' Room Producer All 6 episodes of first season
2013 The Arsenio Hall Show Coordinating Producer 30 episodes

Awards and nominations

Year Ceremony Category Series Result
2013 Primetime Emmy Award Outstanding Informational Series The Writers' Room Nominated
2011 Philadelphia Film Festival Official Selection Broke* Won
2011 Nashville Film Festival Special Jerry Prize Broke* Won
2011 CMJ Film Festival Official Selection Broke* Won
2008 NAACP Award Image Award Outstanding Talk – (Series) The Tavis Smiley Show Won
2007 NAACP Award Image Award Outstanding News, Talk or Information – (Series or Special) The Tavis Smiley Show Won
2006 NAACP Award Image Award Outstanding TV News, Talk or Information (Series) The Tavis Smiley Show Won
2005 NAACP Award Image Award Outstanding Television News, Talk or Information (Series or Special) The Tavis Smiley Show Won

References

  1. "Raphael, Painter in Rome". Amazon.
  2. Storey, Stephanie (March 10, 2016). "Oil and Marble: About the Author". Wordpress. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  3. Storey, Stephanie (December 28, 2015). "10 Ways Travel Makes You a Better Writer". Huffington Post. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  4. Storey, Stephanie (July 2, 2014). "Stephanie Storey: Lifelong Student". Wordpress. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  5. Storey, Stephanie (February 2, 2015). "Stephanie Storey: Producer". Wordpress. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  6. Storey, Stephanie (December 8, 2015). "Should a Woman Use a Masculine Pen Name?". Huffington Post. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
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