Comic Julie Goldman is blazing some new trails. The star of Logo's The Big Gay Sketch Show has recently relocated from New York to Los Angeles, started her own fashion blog, and has co-written a new lesbian romantic comedy, Nicest Thing, which she is currently developing for the big screen.
Goldman has been a fixture on the New York comedy scene and has already made memorable appearances in a slew of short and feature films, including Big Dreams in Little Hope, Out At the Wedding, Happy Birthday, and The D Word. When she's not busy being a television and movie star, Goldman is performing stand up comedy across the U.S., for which she has won the 2007 Mac award for Headlining Comedian in NYC and the New Now Next Award for Brink of Fame Comic in 2008.
We recently caught up with Goldman to talk about what she did last summer,...
Goldman has been a fixture on the New York comedy scene and has already made memorable appearances in a slew of short and feature films, including Big Dreams in Little Hope, Out At the Wedding, Happy Birthday, and The D Word. When she's not busy being a television and movie star, Goldman is performing stand up comedy across the U.S., for which she has won the 2007 Mac award for Headlining Comedian in NYC and the New Now Next Award for Brink of Fame Comic in 2008.
We recently caught up with Goldman to talk about what she did last summer,...
- 10/19/2009
- by karman
- AfterEllen.com
Being Arabic in America has been tough for a while now, but post-September 11 America brought out a lot of racism disguised as patriotism and this theme is nothing new. America goes to war with a country (or a region), and (some) of its citizens and leaders seem to forget there are Americans from that country, too.
Someone who knows this all too well is director Cherien Dabis.
The openly gay Dabis, who was raised in Ohio by a Jordanian mother and Palestinian father, experienced the sudden shift in how she and her family were treated first hand, during the Gulf War. Now, Dabis, who also penned a few L Word episodes, has released a film tackling the issue head-on, and it has already received a boatload of critical acclaim.
Her film, Amreeka, tells the story of a Palestinian single mother who flees the West Bank for a small Illinois town with her teenage son,...
Someone who knows this all too well is director Cherien Dabis.
The openly gay Dabis, who was raised in Ohio by a Jordanian mother and Palestinian father, experienced the sudden shift in how she and her family were treated first hand, during the Gulf War. Now, Dabis, who also penned a few L Word episodes, has released a film tackling the issue head-on, and it has already received a boatload of critical acclaim.
Her film, Amreeka, tells the story of a Palestinian single mother who flees the West Bank for a small Illinois town with her teenage son,...
- 8/25/2009
- by jen sabella
- AfterEllen.com
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