Marisa Acocella | |
---|---|
Born | 1962 (age 61–62) New Jersey, U.S. |
Occupation | Author |
Nationality | American |
Notable works | Ann Tenna Cancer Vixen Just Who the Hell is She, Anyway? |
Spouse | Silvano Marchetto (m. 2004;div. 2017) |
Website | |
www |
Marisa Acocella (born 1962 in New Jersey) is an American cartoonist. She is the author of the New York Times best-selling graphic novel Ann Tenna, the graphic memoir Cancer Vixen, and Just Who the Hell is She, Anyway? She is also a cartoonist for The New Yorker and a columnist for W magazine's website. Her work has appeared in The New York Times , Glamour , and O, The Oprah Magazine . [2]
Marisa Acocella was born in 1962 in New Jersey. One of four children, she grew up in Scotch Plains, New Jersey. [3] She currently lives in New York City. [4] Her father was a pharmacist, and her mother, Violetta, was a shoe designer. In her first drawings, Marchetto drew copies of her mother's shoe designs. [4]
She attended the Pratt Institute in New York City, where she studied painting and eventually earned a degree from New York City's School of Visual Arts. [4]
In 2004, she married former restaurateur Silvano Marchetto. Three weeks before their wedding, Acocella was diagnosed with breast cancer. Despite her diagnosis, the wedding went as planned, and she began her treatments. [4] Her breast cancer diagnosis and early drawings about it inspired her popular graphic memoir Cancer Vixen. [4] While undergoing chemotherapy, surgeries, and radiation treatments, she chose to refer to herself as a "cancer vixen," rather than "cancer victim."
In 2016, she filed for divorce from Marchetto. The divorce was finalized in 2017, and she took back her maiden name. [5] June 2, 2017. Accessed February 13, 2024.
After graduating from the Pratt Institute, Acocella became an art director at J. Walter Thompson, a major Madison Avenue agency. There she met colleague Robert Kirshenbuam. After working together at J. Walter Thompson for four years, Acocella and Kirshenbuam left and founded Kirshenbuam and Bond, a boutique ad agency. After a few years there, however, Acocella moved on to become a senior vice president at Young & Rubicam.
While at Young & Rubicam, she began a comic strip entitled She. Its heroine served as her alter ego, and, beginning in 1993. the strip became a regular feature in the women's magazine Mirabella. The cartoon followed the heroine's struggles with what to wear and how to handle life choices. Acocella took a leave of absence from her job at Young & Rubicam to work on her graphic novel, Just Who the Hell is She, Anyway? The Autobiography of She, featuring the same character "She" from the Mirabella strip. But Acocella never returned to her job at Young & Rubicam after publication of the book, in 1994.
In the period spanning from 2000 to 2001, Acocella produced semi-regular comics journalism, a column called The Strip, for The New York Times , often on fashion topics. [6]
In 2006, Knopf released her graphic memoir, Cancer Vixen: A True Story, about her battle, in 2004 and 2005, with breast cancer. Details in the memoir include her seeking cancer treatment without health insurance, which she had let lapse. It was first published in Glamour magazine as a six-page cartoon. [7] Then, in 2006, the expanded graphic memoir was released as a book, depicting a woman with cancer, who chooses to live her life stylishly and fiercely, despite the illness. Acocella's story has been embraced by the breast cancer community and has inspired many, in the face of this disease, to become "vixens," rather than victims.[ citation needed ]Cancer Vixen was named one of Time 's top ten graphic memoirs. In 2013, HBO announced it was developing a Cancer Vixen film starring Cate Blanchett as Marisa Acocella Marchetto, [8] but, as of 2020, the film is still in development.
Her next book, Ann Tenna, released in September 2015 by Knopf, is a New York Times best-selling graphic novel about an influential gossip columnist who has a near-fatal accident. She is brought face-to-face with her higher self, who challenges her to change her life for the better. [9] Marchetto has said that her life-threatening breast cancer diagnosis informed the story arc of Ann Tenna. [10]
The Big She-Bang: The Herstory of the Universe According to God the Mother was published in 2020 by Harper Collins. That graphic novel shares a story about rediscovering the Divine Female in order to bring balance back to the world. [11]
Acocella is currently a cartoonist for The New Yorker. [12]
Acocella has donated a portion of her Cancer Vixen royalties to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation and is the founder of The Cancer Vixen Fund, which has funded free mammograms for uninsured women in New York City. The renamed Marisa Acocella Foundation funds free integrative therapies and free cold capping for women to prevent hair loss from chemotherapy at the Mount Sinai Dubin Breast Center and the Mount Sinai Beth Israel Comprehensive Cancer Center. The foundation also supports a complete empowerment program that includes yoga, Chi Qong, journaling, exercise, meditation, and nutrition. The Foundation's mission is: "No breast left behind." [13]
Alison Bechdel is an American cartoonist. Originally known for the long-running comic strip Dykes to Watch Out For, she came to critical and commercial success in 2006 with her graphic memoir Fun Home, which was subsequently adapted as a musical that won a Tony Award for Best Musical in 2015. In 2012, she released her second graphic memoir Are You My Mother? She was a 2014 recipient of the MacArthur "Genius" Award. She is also known for originating the Bechdel test.
Julie Delpy is a French and American actress, screenwriter and film director. She studied filmmaking at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts and has directed, written, and acted in more than 30 films, including Europa Europa (1990), Voyager (1991), Three Colours: White (1993), the Before trilogy, An American Werewolf in Paris (1997), and 2 Days in Paris (2007).
Franklin Christenson "Chris" Ware is an American cartoonist known for his Acme Novelty Library series and the graphic novels Jimmy Corrigan, the Smartest Kid on Earth (2000), Building Stories (2012) and Rusty Brown (2019). His works explore themes of social isolation, emotional torment and depression. He tends to use a vivid color palette and realistic, meticulous detail. His lettering and images are often elaborate and sometimes evoke the ragtime era or another early 20th-century American design style.
Jules Ralph Feiffer is an American cartoonist and author, who at one time was considered the most widely read satirist in the country. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1986 for editorial cartooning, and in 2004 he was inducted into the Comic Book Hall of Fame. He wrote the animated short Munro, which won an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film in 1961. The Library of Congress has recognized his "remarkable legacy", from 1946 to the present, as a cartoonist, playwright, screenwriter, adult and children's book author, illustrator, and art instructor.
Yasmine Bleeth is an American actress and model. Her television roles include Caroline Holden on Baywatch, Ryan Fenelli on Ryan's Hope, and LeeAnn Demerest on One Life to Live.
Meredith Ann Baxter is an American actress and producer. She is known for her roles on the CBS sitcom Bridget Loves Bernie (1972–1973), ABC drama series Family (1976–1980) and the NBC sitcom Family Ties (1982–1989). A five-time Emmy Award nominee, one of her nominations was for playing the title role in the 1992 TV film A Woman Scorned: The Betty Broderick Story.
An autobiographical comic is an autobiography in the form of comic books or comic strips. The form first became popular in the underground comix movement and has since become more widespread. It is currently most popular in Canadian, American and French comics; all artists listed below are from the U.S. unless otherwise specified.
William Henry Jackson Griffith is an American cartoonist who signs his work Bill Griffith and Griffy. He is best known for his surreal daily comic strip Zippy. The catchphrase "Are we having fun yet?" is credited to Griffith.
Françoise Mouly is a French-born American designer, editor and publisher. She is best known as co-founder, co-editor, and publisher of the comics and graphics magazine Raw (1980–1991), as the publisher of Raw Books and Toon Books, and since 1993 as the art editor of The New Yorker. Mouly is married to cartoonist Art Spiegelman, and is the mother of writer Nadja Spiegelman.
Jane's World was a comic strip by cartoonist Paige Braddock that ran from March 1998 to October 2018. Featuring lesbian and bisexual women characters, the strip stars Jane Wyatt, a young lesbian living in a trailer in Northern California with her straight male roommate, Ethan, and follows her life with her circle of friends, romances, and exes. Shortly after celebrating its 20th anniversary, publication ended with Jane marrying Dorothy.
Ellen Forney is an American cartoonist, educator, and wellness coach. She is known for her autobiographic comics which include I was Seven in '75; I Love Led Zepellin; and Marbles: Mania, Depression, Michelangelo and Me. She teaches at the Cornish College of the Arts. Her work covers mental illness, political activism, drugs, and the riot grrrl movement. Currently, she is based in Seattle, Washington.
Miriam Linda Engelberg was a graphic novelist and illustrator, whose battle with metastatic breast cancer was chronicled in her bestselling comic memoir, Cancer Made Me a Shallower Person.
Confessions of a Video Vixen is a memoir written by Karrine Steffans which details the first 25 years of her life. Part tell-all covering her sexual liaisons with music industry personalities and professional athletes, and part cautionary tale about the dangers of the otherwise romanticized hip-hop music industry, it caused considerable controversy in some circles.
Mimi Pond is an American cartoonist, comics artist, illustrator, humorist, and writer.
Comics journalism is a form of journalism that covers news or nonfiction events using the framework of comics, a combination of words and drawn images. Typically, sources are actual people featured in each story, and word balloons are actual quotes. The term "comics journalism" was coined by one of its most notable practitioners, Joe Sacco. Other terms for the practice include "graphic journalism," "comic strip journalism", "cartoon journalism", "cartoon reporting", "comics reportage", "journalistic comics", "sequential reportage," and "sketchbook reports".
Graphic medicine connotes the use of comics in medical education and patient care.
Laura Zigman is an American novelist and freelance journalist who lives outside Boston, Massachusetts. She is the author of the novels Animal Husbandry, Dating Big Bird, Her, Piece of Work, Separation Anxiety, and Small World. She is co-author with professional matchmaker Patti Novak of the self-help book Get Over Yourself: How to Get Real, Get Serious, and Get Ready to Find True Love.
Teva Harrison was a Canadian-American writer and graphic artist. She was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer at age 37, and began to document her experiences with the terminal illness using illustrations and essays. Her works were compiled into a graphic memoir called In-Between Days. The book was a finalist for the 2016 Governor General's Award for English-language non-fiction, and put Harrison on the list of 16 Torontonians to Watch. Harrison won the 2016 Kobo Emerging Writer Prize, and was a finalist for the 2017 Joe Shuster Award for Cartoonist/Auteur.
Leslie Ewing is an American cartoonist, activist, and breast cancer survivor. Her comics highlight feminist and lesbian themes and her cartoons have been featured in prominent queer comics, including Gay Comix, Strip AIDS, and Wimmen's Comix. Ewing was the executive director for the Pacific Center for Human Growth from 2008 to 2019.