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Greetings. I am a professional editor and have been asked by Jodie Markell to revise and expand her entry on Wikipedia. I have been told that the appropriate thing for me to do is to post my suggested revision on this page and request an experienced Wikipedia editor to review it. Accordingly, I will do so! You can find it in my "sandbox" here: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Julia_VanDevelder/sandbox/Jodie_Markell&action=edit I've posted the source code below. Please let me know if I am doing this incorrectly or if you need additional information from me. Thanks!

Extended content
Jodie Markell
Jodie Markell
Jodie Markell
Born (1959-04-13) April 13, 1959 (age 65)
Occupation(s)Actor, writer, filmmaker
Websitejodiemarkell.com

Jodie Markell (born April 13, 1959) is an American actor, writer, and film director.

An OBIE Award-winning actor, Markell has played starring roles in many productions--from Lincoln Center in New York City to The Mark Taper in LA--and has been featured in numerous films and television shows.

As a filmmaker, she directed the feature film Tennessee Williams' The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond, starring Bryce Dallas Howard, Chris Evans, Ann-Margret and Ellen Burstyn.


  • Career
  • Actor

Jodie Markell attended Northwestern University where she studied the adaptation of literature to the stage and screen with Frank Galati. After moving to New York, she studied acting at the Circle-in-the-Square Professional Theater School. She has since worked as an actress with theater directors such as John Patrick Shanley, Simon Curtis, John Malkovich, Lila Neugebauer, and Michael Greif and playwrights including David Lindsay-Abaire, Will Scheffer, David Marshall Grant, Theresa Rebeck, and Will Eno. She has performed at many theaters including Lincoln Center, Manhattan Theater Club, Circle Rep, The Public Theater, Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Playwrights Horizons, Naked Angels (company member), and the Williamstown Theater Festival.[1]

Markell helped rediscover Sophie Treadwell's Machinal and starred in the production at The Public Theater, earning an Obie Award for her performance. The play has since been produced in venues in the U.S. and abroad.[2] Markell was invited by Richard Eyre and the National Theater in London to be the creative consultant to Stephen Daldry on his award-winning production of Machinal with Fiona Shaw.

Markell has been featured in films by directors such as Woody Allen, Jim Jarmusch, Todd Haynes, Ira Sachs, Stacy Cochran, Ali Selim, and Barry Levinson. She has guest-starred in numerous television series and played the recurring role of "Wendy Hunt" on HBO's Big Love. [1]

  • Director/Filmmaker

Markell has directed several plays at Naked Angles including After the Deerhunter by Nicole Burdette, starring Logan Marshall-Green. She adapted and directed the award-winning short film Why I Live at the P.O., starring Robert Morse, based on Eudora Welty's classic story. The film played at various festivals including the New Orleans Film Festival where it was awarded the Lumiere Award and the Moviemaker Magazine Breakthrough Award, the highest award given to any film in any category at the festival. The film was also invited to screen at the National Museum of Women In The Arts in Washington, D.C. [1]

The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond is Markell’s feature film directorial debut which she adapted from an original screenplay by Tennessee Williams. The film stars Bryce Dallas Howard, Chris Evans, Ellen Burstyn, Will Patton, and Ann-Margret and premiered at the Toronto Film Festival before its theatrical release. In her review of the film, Betsy Sharkey for The LA Times called it "a film to savor, rich in ways that are all too rare today."[3]

Markell was interviewed by Melissa Silverstein for Women in Hollywood, and her interview is featured as a complete chapter in a volume that includes 40 women directors: In Her Voice: Women Directors Talk Directing.[4]

Markell has been a guest teaching artist at universities, high schools, film festivals, and literary events. She currently teaches "Directing Actors" to aspiring film directors, screenwriters, and producers at Columbia University in its MFA Film Program.[5]

  • Filmography

Film[6]

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
1988 Vampire's Kiss Joke Girl
1988 Me and Him Eileen
1991 Queens Logic Inez
1993 Point of No Return Female Student
1994 My Girl 2 Hillary Mitchell
1994 Jimmy Hollywood Casting Assistant
1994 Insomnia Veronica Treadwell
1994 A Worn Path Clinic Attendant
1995 Safe Anita
2000 Drop Back Ten Peggy
2002 Easter Wilma Ransom
2002 Hollywood Ending Andrea Ford
2002 Trapped Mary McDill
2004 Noise Margaret
2005 Twelve and Holding Teacher as Jodi Markell
2005 Sweet Land Donna Torvik
2007 Joshua Ruth Solomon
2008 The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond Director
2010 Veterans Diamond Short
2012 Keep the Lights On Jill
2019 The Rest of Us Maddie's Mom post-production
1987 Crime Story Waitress Episode: "Fatal Crossroads"
1989 China Beach Pam Klinger
1990 Monsters Sue Weatherby Episode: "Bed and Boar"
1991 The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd Lillian 2 episodes
1992 A Matter of Justice Sandra TV movie
1992 Brooklyn Bridge Phoebe Episode: "On the Road"
1994 Bakersfield P.D. Brenda James Episode: "The Psychic and the C-Cup"
1997 Law & Order Sondra Benton Episode: "Working Mom"
2002 Guide Season Maryann TV movie
2003 Law & Order Mrs. Hitchens Episode: "Identity"
2006–2007 Big Love Wendy Hunt 8 episodes
2009 Law & Order Lorraine Flockhart Episode: "The Drowned and the Saved"
2010 The Good Wife Sandy Gephart Episode: "Nine Hours"
2014 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Lisa Moore Episode: "Wednesday's Child"


References

  1. ^ a b c "JodieMarkell.com". {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  2. ^ "Obie winner Jodie Markell - Actress and Director talks with me about keeping your heart in the work". Retrieved 2019-03-08.
  3. ^ "`The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond'". The LA Times.
  4. ^ "WomenandHollywood.com". {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  5. ^ "Columbia University School of the Arts Faculty". {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  6. ^ "International Movie Database". {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  7. ^ "International Movie Database". {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)

Julia VanDevelder (talk) 20:01, 9 March 2019 (UTC)Julia VanDevelder[reply]

Reply 13-MAR-2019

[edit]

  Unable to implement  

  1. Large portions of text remain unreferenced. These portions of text require sourcing. For example, the first paragraph under the Actor section contains 4 sentences which collectively make over 22 separate claims, but the entire section contains only one ref tag.
  2. In addition to needing more sources, the draft version would benefit from references from reliable WP:SECONDARY sources before it can be implemented. Currently I see only one such reference, to the LA Times.
  3. I've placed some search suggestions at the top of this talk page. Click on the links found there to effect a seach of different engines in order to locate better sourcing.

Regards,  Spintendo  17:49, 13 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]