Nate Lee

Nate Lee
Born 1956 (age 5960)
Nationality American
Education Andover
Alma mater Tulane
Occupation writer
Religion Christian

Nate Lee is an American author[1] and former senior editor at Chicago's Newcity weekly magazine[2][3] who advocated passionately for live theater.[4][5] At Newcity, Lee wrote features, a weekly column called Urbanitie, theatre and film reviews as well as stories on architecture and historic preservation, and at one point wrote a book which turned into a musical comedy revue entitled Speak of the Twenties.[6] Working with publishers Brian and Jan Hieggelke, he attracted top writers to write for Newcity including top theater critics who became prominent at other publications later, including Chris Jones of the Chicago Tribune and Rohan Preston of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.[2] He wrote numerous books published by Abingdon Press[1] and reviews for websites.[7] Lee attended Phillips Academy in Andover and graduated in the school's first co–educational class in 1974 along with classmates jazz Grammy–winner Bill Cunliffe, actor Dana Delany, poet Karl Kirchwey, editor Sara Nelson, and sculptor Gar Waterman; Lee and painter Julian Hatton were close friends and studied Latin at Andover. At present, he lives in California, writes and edits for Demand Studios, and works in advertising.

Publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "List of Books by Nate Lee". Paperback Swap. October 31, 2010. Retrieved October 31, 2010. 2010 – Words From the Cross and 5 Other Dramas for Tweens (Paperback) 2007 – What a Story!: And Five Other Dramas for Tweens (Paperback) 2006 – Don't Miss the Bus and five Other Dramas for Tweens (Paperback) 2005 -...
  2. 1 2 Staff writer (October 2009). "Performance Advertising: Theater, Dance, Comedy, Opera". NewCity Network. Retrieved October 31, 2010.
  3. "Bibliography". Rainer Spangl. June 2009. Retrieved October 31, 2010. Bibliography Nate Lee, "Little Triggers", Newcity, June 2009
  4. Brian Hieggelke (June 5, 2009). "Back through the Lookingglass". NewCity Stage. Retrieved October 31, 2010. ... Newcity's first senior editor Nate Lee penned a cover story that November, as the production moved from the confines of Chicago Filmmakers to the larger space inhabited by Remains Theatre. In the process of reporting, he insisted I see it and took me along. It was unforgettable, and probably had much to do with our growing and sustained commitment to theater coverage. (Though in fairness, Nate's passion for Chicago theater, or theatre, as he insisted, from our very first issues set the pace from day one.)
  5. Nate Lee (November 12, 2009). "Romper Room: Back flips, harem girls and the secret of life from the Lookingglass Theatre Company". NewCity Stage. Retrieved October 31, 2010. The critics agree, as they say. If I were to add my own voice to the shouts of praises for Lookingglass Theatre and their current hit play, "Arabian Nights," I believe I'd use ancient words like "kaleidoscopic phantasmagoria.”
  6. "CHORAL-VOCAL WORKS AND STAGE WORKS". anything sung. 1989. Retrieved November 3, 2010. Speak of the Twenties, A Musical Comedy Revue . Book by Nate Lee. 50' Commissioned by Barron Productions. Performed in 1989 at Holstein's and The Gaslight, Chicago, IL. Subsequent runs at various Chicago venues through 1991.
  7. Nate Lee (November 4, 2010). "Stanley Kubrick". MovieDirectors.com. Retrieved November 4, 2010. 2010 – An obsessive-compulsive auteur, Kubrick was purposely enigmatic with his work, yet disdained the many rumors about his eccentricity....
  8. Nate Lee (June 2006). "Don't Miss the Bus: And 5 Other Dramas for Tweens (Hardcover)". Amazon. Retrieved October 31, 2010. # Reading level: Ages 9–12 Hardcover: 48 pages Publisher: Abingdon Press (June 2006) Language: English ISBN 0-687-33098-X ISBN 978-0-687-33098-0
  9. Nate Lee (December 2007). "Sleep on It!: And 5 Other Dramas for Tweens (Hardcover)". Amazon. Retrieved October 31, 2010. # Publisher: Abingdon Press (December 2007) Language: English ISBN 0-687-49178-9 ISBN 978-0-687-49178-0
  10. Nate Lee (October 31, 2010). "The Invitation: And 5 Other Dramas for Tweens". Family Christian Stores. Retrieved October 31, 2010.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.