Sara Caldwell (born Sara Chapin Coover; 1961 in New York City) is an American author and screenwriter/filmmaker. She was founder and producer/writer of Amphion Productions from 1991 to 2006 and is currently[when?] a co-producer and writer for House of Gorey Productions.
Early life and education
editThe daughter of writer Robert Coover, and Spanish tapestry artist Pilar Sans Coover,[1] Sara Caldwell lived in many different locations when growing up, both small towns and large cities in Guatemala, Spain, England, and various parts of the United States. She attended the progressive boarding school, Dartington Hall School, in Totnes, England. Returning to America at the age of 17, she pursued a bachelor's degree in Communications from the University of Iowa, where she was a member of the undergraduate Iowa Writers Workshop.
Career
editAfter graduation, Caldwell moved to Chicago, Illinois to work as a producer/writer.
Whilst in Chicago, she became involved with an inner city tutoring program, resulting in the production of her first documentary, 'Cabrini Green... what you don't see' which aired on the Chicago PBS station. She eventually became an original founder and board director for the Tutor/Mentor Connection.
Caldwell moved to Washington, D.C. in 1989 to work for WORLDNET Television and Film Service, a division of United States Information Agency. Here, she was a writer/producer for live interactive broadcasts to Africa, East Asia, and the Middle East. She then worked at Motion Masters in Charleston, West Virginia for six months before returning to Chicago in 1991 to form Amphion Productions. She then worked as a freelance writer/producer on hundreds of projects and was a 1997 competition winner for the Chicago/Illinois Screenplay Contest. She moved her company to Los Angeles in 1998 and has since written three books on screenwriting/film production topics. She is also a professor of film/screenwriting courses at College of the Canyons[2] in Santa Clarita, California and the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandizing (FIDM) in Los Angeles.[3] In 2010, she partnered with her husband Walter Gorey to form House of Gorey Productions.
In 2018, she penned her first young adult novel, Raven Dock, to be published by White Bird Publications.[4] The novel is part of a series known as Dark Coven. She also co-wrote/produced/directed the YouTube comedy web series, BOOMERS.
Personal life
editCaldwell lives in Valencia, California.
Awards
editGorey Productions and Caldwell's screenplays have won awards including:
Screenplay awards
edit- Winner, Best Original Screenplay – Burbank International Film Festival
- Best Screenplay – Shivers International Film Festival
- 1st Place, Horror Category – Cannes Screenplay Contest
- Best Screenplay – Dazed4Horror Film Festival, Bay City, Texas
Short film awards
edit- Best Short Film – Indie Horror Film Festival, Gatlinburg, Tennessee
- Best Short Horror Film – Los Angeles Independent Film Festival
- Best Short Horror Film, Best Director – Creative Arts Film Festival
- Best Short Film – Los Angeles Thriller Film Festival
- Audience Choice Award – Haunted Horror Film Festival, Freeport, Texas
Selected works
editBooks
edit- Raven Dock: Dark Coven Series (Austin, TX: White Bird Publications, 2018)[4]
- Splatter Flicks: How to Make Low-Budget Horror Films (New York: Allworth Press, 2006)[5]
- Jump-start your Awesome Film Company (New York: Allworth Press, 2005)
- (with Maria-Eve Kielson) So You Want To Be A Screenwriter (New York: Allworth Press, 2000)
References
edit- ^ Williams, John (October 6, 2024). "Robert Coover, Inventive Novelist in Iconoclastic Era, Dies at 92". The New York Times. Retrieved October 7, 2024.
- ^ "Faculty". College of the Canyons. Archived from the original on 27 February 2019. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
- ^ "Bios- Sara Caldwell". Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
- ^ a b Bernal, Gilbert (14 September 2018). "COC Professor To Publish New Young Adult Novel 'Raven Dock'". KHTS Radio. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
- ^ "Book Review: Splatter Flicks – How to Make Low Budget Horror Films". Horror News. 27 December 2010. Retrieved 27 August 2018.