Nancy Stricklin: Difference between revisions

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'''Nancy Tavon Stricklin''', known as '''Nan Lin''' (born c. [[1981]] in Arkansas; died [[July 3]], [[2012]] on [[I-459]] at [[Parkwood Road]] in [[Hoover]]) was an artist, writer and filmmaker.
'''Nancy Tavon Stricklin''', known as '''Nan Lin''' (born c. [[1981]] in Arkansas; died [[July 3]], [[2012]] on [[I-459]] at [[Parkwood Road]] in [[Hoover]]) was an artist, writer and filmmaker.


Stricklin moved to [[Birmingham]] with her family when she was 8 years old. She was inspired by re-runs of "A Different World" to attend college. She enrolled at [[UAB]] and majored in music with a concentration on vocal performance. Stricklin turned to writing seriously in [[2003]] with the novella ''[[Her Name is Deceit]]''. She has since published six books and written numerous songs and poems. She has also written and produced three short films. Her first, "[[Detour]]", debuted at the [[2010 Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival]]. She followed that a year later with "[[Time Calls]]", which screened at the [[2011 Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival|2011 Sidewalk Festival]]. She shot ''[[The Hop Off]]'', starring Kadeem Hardison, at [[Woodlawn High School]] as part of the annual [[On the Set Summer Film Camp]] for students and wrote a screenplay for a full-length feature entitled "Beautiful Disaster".
Stricklin moved to [[Birmingham]] with her family when she was 8 years old. She was inspired by re-runs of "A Different World" to attend college. She enrolled at [[Alabama A&M University]], but transferred to [[UAB]], where she majored in music with a concentration on vocal performance.
 
Stricklin turned to writing seriously in [[2003]] with the novella ''[[Her Name is Deceit]]''. She has since published six books and written numerous songs and poems. She has also written and produced three short films. Her first, "[[Detour]]", debuted at the [[2010 Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival]]. She followed that a year later with "[[Time Calls]]", which screened at the [[2011 Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival|2011 Sidewalk Festival]]. She shot ''[[The Hop Off]]'', starring Kadeem Hardison, at [[Woodlawn High School]] as part of the annual [[On the Set Summer Film Camp]] for students and wrote a screenplay for a full-length feature entitled "Beautiful Disaster".


In addition to writing and filmmaking, Stricklin was an accomplished artist. An selection of her paintings were exhibited at the [[Birmingham Civil Rights Institute]] in Spring [[2012]].
In addition to writing and filmmaking, Stricklin was an accomplished artist. An selection of her paintings were exhibited at the [[Birmingham Civil Rights Institute]] in Spring [[2012]].
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==References==
==References==
* Temple, Chanda (March 23, 2012) "Birmingham Exam: Nancy Stricklin, author, artist, filmmaker." {{BN}}
* Temple, Chanda (March 23, 2012) "Birmingham Exam: Nancy Stricklin, author, artist, filmmaker." {{BN}}
* Robinson, Carol (July 5, 2012) "Victim of deadly interstate crash in Hoover identified." {{BN}}
* Temple, Chanda (July 5, 2012) "Birmingham filmmaker and UAB graduate Nancy Stricklin is remembered for her talents." {{BN}}


==External links==
==External links==

Latest revision as of 11:08, 6 July 2012

Nancy Stricklin

Nancy Tavon Stricklin, known as Nan Lin (born c. 1981 in Arkansas; died July 3, 2012 on I-459 at Parkwood Road in Hoover) was an artist, writer and filmmaker.

Stricklin moved to Birmingham with her family when she was 8 years old. She was inspired by re-runs of "A Different World" to attend college. She enrolled at Alabama A&M University, but transferred to UAB, where she majored in music with a concentration on vocal performance.

Stricklin turned to writing seriously in 2003 with the novella Her Name is Deceit. She has since published six books and written numerous songs and poems. She has also written and produced three short films. Her first, "Detour", debuted at the 2010 Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival. She followed that a year later with "Time Calls", which screened at the 2011 Sidewalk Festival. She shot The Hop Off, starring Kadeem Hardison, at Woodlawn High School as part of the annual On the Set Summer Film Camp for students and wrote a screenplay for a full-length feature entitled "Beautiful Disaster".

In addition to writing and filmmaking, Stricklin was an accomplished artist. An selection of her paintings were exhibited at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute in Spring 2012.

Stricklin was selected for the 2010 edition of Who's Who in Black Birmingham and the 2011 edition of Who's Who in Black Alabama.

Stricklin was killed in July 2012 when her car left the interstate and struck a tree.

References

  • Temple, Chanda (March 23, 2012) "Birmingham Exam: Nancy Stricklin, author, artist, filmmaker." The Birmingham News
  • Temple, Chanda (July 5, 2012) "Birmingham filmmaker and UAB graduate Nancy Stricklin is remembered for her talents." The Birmingham News

External links