Cory McAbee (born August 29, 1961, Santa Venetia, California, US) is an American writer, director, singer and songwriter.[1][2][3]

Biography

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Cory McAbee was born in Northern California as the youngest of three children. His father was an auto mechanic and his mother was a preschool teacher. McAbee spent his summers living with his grandparents in the Nevada desert. McAbee's formal education ended with high school.

At the age of twenty, Cory McAbee learned how to write and perform music by forming a band. The band was never well received. It broke up after the first year.

For the next twelve years, McAbee worked as the head of security in bars and nightclubs throughout San Francisco. In 1989 he formed the musical group, The Billy Nayer Show. In 1990 McAbee completed his first animated short, Billy Nayer. The film premiered in its final form at the 1992 Sundance Film Festival.

Over the next couple of years, McAbee wrote and directed short films including The Ketchup and Mustard Man and The Man on the Moon. As a means of self-distribution, McAbee developed live musical performances that incorporated his short films. The show was called The Billy Nayer Chronicles. It was presented at the 1995 Sundance Film Festival as the festival's first multi-media event.

In 1996 McAbee wrote his first feature film, The American Astronaut. The screenplay was accepted to the 1998 Sundance screenwriters lab. The film premiered at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival.

In 2007 he wrote Stingray Sam with the intention of self-distribution on multiple platforms. Stingray Sam premiered at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival.

In 2011 The Billy Nayer Show released its final album and disbanded.

In 2012 McAbee released a non-budget experimental feature, Crazy and Thief.

In 2012 McAbee founded the international arts collaborative Captain Ahab's Motorcycle Club, with the goal of creating international solidarity between artists through the creation of a globally generated feature film, called Deep Astronomy. Beginning in 2012 and extending into 2017, McAbee performed concerts in support of this project throughout the US, Europe, and Australia. In 2015, McAbee recorded and produced his first solo album, Small Star Seminar, which become a catalyst for the film's narrative.

In 2017 McAbee developed a live performance entitled Deep Astronomy and the Romantic Sciences. The performances were created for the purpose of live entertainment and as events to be documented by collaborators for use in this feature film, and premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. Deep Astronomy was due to be completed in 2018 for festival release in 2019, but is now due in 2022.[4]

Filmography

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Year Title Director Writer Composer Actor Role Notes
1992 Billy Nayer Yes Yes Yes Yes Man in a bar
1993 The Man on the Moon Yes Yes Yes Yes Dejected husband
1994 The Ketchup and Mustard Man Yes Yes Yes Yes The Ketchup and Mustard Man
2001 The American Astronaut Yes Yes Yes Yes Samuel Curtis
2006 The Guatemalan Handshake Yes Spank Williams
Land of the Blind Yes Torturer / Mister Salty
2008 The Onion Movie Yes Man in suit
2009 It Came from Kuchar Yes himself
Stingray Sam Yes Yes Yes Yes Stingray Sam
2012 Crazy & Thief Yes Yes Yes Cinematographer
Butterfly Stories Yes himself
2019 Deep Astronomy Yes Yes Yes Yes Cory McAbee Filming / Post-production
2022 Deep Astronomy and the Romantic Sciences Yes Yes Yes Yes Cory McAbee Filming / Post-production

References

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  1. ^ Kaay, Kathleen Fernandez-Vander; Kaay, Chris Vander (2018-02-02). Indie Science Fiction Cinema Today: Conversations with 21st Century Filmmakers. McFarland. p. 207. ISBN 978-1-4766-3058-8.
  2. ^ Hurbis-Cherrier, Mick (2012-11-12). Voice and Vision: A Creative Approach to Narrative Film and DV Production. CRC Press. p. 524. ISBN 978-1-136-06766-2.
  3. ^ D'Angelo, Mike (5 September 2013). "The American Astronaut sets a bar for surrealist, cult-courting, musical B-Westerns". A.V. Club. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  4. ^ "Deep Astronomy and the Romantic Sciences, official site". Retrieved 2022-08-18.
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