This biographical article is written like a résumé .(December 2020) |
Holly Morris | |
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Born | Holly Marie Morris 30 September 1965 [1] |
Occupation(s) | Writer, film and TV director/producer, travel documentary host, |
Parents |
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Website | www.hollymorris.com |
Holly Morris (born September 30, 1965 [1] ) is an American author, [2] documentary director/producer and television presenter. Her articles have been published in The New York Times Book Review , More , O , Slate , The Daily Telegraph , The Week and other national publications.
Morris was born in Chicago, Illinois, US. She is the daughter of former professional football player Johnny Morris and Jeannie Morris, a sports reporter and writer. Johnny Morris was a Chicago Bears wide receiver [3] who became a long-time sportscaster for WBBM-TV in Chicago [4] and a football color commentator with CBS Sports. Jeannie Morris is the author of the best-selling book Brian Piccolo: A Short Season, [5] the story of an American National Football League player who died of cancer at the age of 26.
Filmmaker
Morris's newest film, Exposure, released in 2022, chronicles a group of women from the Arab world and the West who are making a bid for the North Pole, completely unsupported, in Spring 2018.
Morris's last film, The Babushkas of Chernobyl, premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival, where it won the Jury Award for Directing. The film has gone on to win nearly 20 awards on the festival circuit, and has broadcast around the world. The film’s story – of a defiant community of grandmothers who live inside Ukraine’s radioactive “Chernobyl Exclusion Zone” – also forms the basis of her popular TED Talk, and her award-winning and widely syndicated essay on which the film is based (“The Babushkas of Chernobyl” 2011). Morris' most recent documentary, Exposure (2022), [6] tells the story of ordinary women from the Arab World and the West who team up to attempt a harrowing over-ice expedition to the North Pole.
Author
She has written and directed several other documentaries that explore the lives of unlikely icons, including, Behind Closed Chadors (Iran), Holy Cow (India), Mana Wahines (New Zealand) and Paradox Found (Cuba) – all broadcast nationally on PBS and in more than 30 countries worldwide as part of the Adventure Divas series.
She is the author of Adventure Divas: Searching the Globe for a New Kind of Heroine (Random House), a New York Times Editor’s Choice, [7] and contributes to many publications, including “O,” The New York Times, The Week and The Independent. Her story about a subculture of illegal ‘Stalkers’ inside the Chernobyl’s Dead Zone appeared in SLATE.
In 2010, her article "A Country of Women" was published. [8] It chronicles a community of "self settlers" who live inside the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.
Creative Activist
Morris is a longtime host of several television documentary series’ including Globe Trekker, for which she has filmed in dozens of countries including Zambia, Malawi, Niger, Syria, Peru, Bangladesh, Paraguay, Gabon, Uruguay, Ukraine, and Iran.
Morris founded PowderKeg Writers' Residency in Brooklyn, New York, New York.
Morris is the former Editorial Director of the book publishing company Seal Press, [9] where she edited the Adventura series – ground breaking books about women explorers, travelers, and environmental issues. As an editorial director, she acquired and edited fiction and non-fiction on diverse topics including third wave feminism, health, international politics, and travel.
Morris lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her partner Michael Kovnat and their daughter.[ citation needed ]
As director/producer
As travel host
As author
As editor
As Documentary Subject
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Can't Help Singing is a 1944 American musical western film directed by Frank Ryan and starring Deanna Durbin, Robert Paige, and Akim Tamiroff. Based on a story by John D. Klorer and Leo Townsend, the film is about a senator's daughter who follows her boyfriend West in the days of the California gold rush. Durbin's only Technicolor film, Can't Help Singing was produced by Felix Jackson and scored by Jerome Kern with lyrics by E. Y. Harburg.
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Mary Morris is an American author and a professor at Sarah Lawrence College. Morris published her first book, a collection of short stories, entitled Vanishing Animals & Other Stories, in 1979 at the age of thirty-two and was awarded the Rome Prize in Literature by the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. She has gone on to publish numerous collections of short stories, novels, and travel memoirs. She has also edited with her husband, the author Larry O'Connor, an anthology of women's travel literature, entitled Maiden Voyages, subsequently published as The Virago Book of Women Travellers. Her recent novel The Jazz Palace has been awarded the 2016 Anisfield-Wolf Award in fiction. This award goes to work that addresses issues of cultural diversity and racism in America.
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Jeannie Morris was an American sports journalist and author. Primarily based in Chicago, she covered various sports, including baseball and football, during a time in which women were not permitted in certain areas of sporting events. As an author, she wrote biographies on Brian Piccolo and Carol Moseley Braun, the latter of whom she followed as a reporter.
Morris, 39