|
  
   

  |
|
About
G. Neri
I am a storyteller,
filmmaker, artist, and digital media producer. When I was in college, I
made an animated film with jazz legend Chick Corea called
A Picasso on the Beach, which became a student Academy Award
finalist and aired on HBO and Bravo for seven years. After that, I
decided to become a filmmaker for real, and I wrote, produced, and
directed my first independent feature film called A Weekend with Barbara und
Ingrid.
It opened in my favorite theater in Hollywood. Unfortunately, it also
opened on the day of the Northridge
earthquake of '94, making its release rather short.
I've taught animation and
storytelling to inner city teens in Los Angeles with the
ground-breaking group Animaction, producing over 300 films
dealing with issues like teen violence, gangs, and drugs. I also
co-directed the documentary Fa’a Samoa which followed a
15-year-old Samoan gangbanger through the mean streets of Los Angeles.
From 1993-2003, I helped pioneer
the internet business, as head of production in two successful
new media companies whose clients ranged from Disney, Mercedes, and
Motorola to Microsoft, Reebok, and General Motors. In this time, I was
also one of the founding members of the Truth teen
anti-smoking campaign.
In 1999, I started writing
and illustrating for kids, but it wasn't until I started writing for
teens around 2004 that things started to happen. Now, I have my first
three teen
books out, a new
agent, and a long list of projects to create. I couldn't ask for more.
I was also a member of the
Class of 2K7, a debut authors group that included the likes of Rebecca
Stead, Jay Asher, Melissa Marr, Carrie Jones, Sara Zarr, Cassandra
Clare, Ann Dee Ellis, Jo Knowles, Eric Luper, Elizabeth Scott, Sundee
Frazier, Julie Bowe, and way
too many others to recount, all newbies with their first books coming
out in 2007. How far we've come. Now that's class!
Some people are curious
about my ethnic background. Well, i'm Mexican, Filipino &
Creole (French, African, Spanish, Native American) or as we say Crefilican-American or more
accurately Nafranishafripinocan (go
figure).
Actually, I feel I am a great example of globalization. The Mexican
side covers the Hispanic countries, Filipino represents Asia, Creole
covers Europe, Africa and North America. My daughter is half German too...she's
gonna have to figure that out on her own.
I'm currently living off the Gulf Coast of Florida with my wife Maggie,
who's a professor of sociology, and our daughter Zola, who likes to
draw like her old man. I spend most of my time in my studio, but I do
like to troll the rivers by our house looking for alligators.
|
|
©
copyright 2008 g. neri
|