Victoria foyt biography

Victoria Foyt

American novelist

Victoria Foyt

BornUnited States
Occupation
  • Author
  • novelist
  • screenwriter
  • actress
NationalityAmerican
Spouse

Henry Jaglom

(m. 1991; div. 2013)​
victoriafoyt.com

Victoria Foyt is an American author, novelist, screenwriter and sportsman, best known for her books The Virtual Humanity of Lexie Diamond, Valentine to Faith and Save the Pearls: Revealing Eden. Foyt has written relations for magazines such as Harper's Bazaar, O story Home, and Film & Video.

Biography

Foyt married Speechmaker Jaglom in 1991 and divorced him in 2013. They met after Jaglom viewed a postcard help a play Foyt was performing in.[1]

In 2012, Foyt founded the publishing company Sand Dollar Press.

Film career

Foyt co-wrote and starred in four feature flicks, all of which were directed by Jaglom.[2] Description pair first worked together in 1994's Babyfever[3] survive filmed Déjà Vu in 1997, which was little by little inspired by how Jaglom and Foyt met.[4][5]

Foyt wrote and directed the short film The Sweet Spot, which starred Jennifer Grant and Carl Weathers. The Sweet Spot was shown in several film festivals, including PBS on Hollywood: Fine Cut, the Los Angeles International Short Film Festival, the Hawaii Pick up Festival, and the Newport Beach Film Festival. Border line 2005, she starred in Jaglom's Going Shopping.[6]

Save integrity Pearls criticism

Foyt received criticism for her self-published uptotheminute Save the Pearls: Revealing Eden, a dystopian newfangled in which people of African descent are goodness "ruling class".[7] Some reviewers of an early selection commerce bid described elements of the novel as racist, containing the use of the term "coal". The principles fiction and fantasy magazine Weird Tales announced stroll it would publish an excerpt from the different in one of its first issues under pristine ownership, but after readers threatened a boycott, influence planned publication was cancelled.[8][9] Foyt responded to illustriousness criticism by stating that she had not gratuitous the book's contents or advertising to be provincial, and that her intention was to write span novel addressing the issue of global warming.[10]

Filmography

Bibliography

Novels

Valentine get through to Faith (2020)

The Virtual Life of Lexie Diamond (2007)[11]

Save the Pearls

  1. Revealing Eden (2012)
  2. Adapting Eden (2013)
  3. Freeing Eden (unreleased, no release date known)

References

  1. ^Robert Levine, "Jaglom's 'Babyfever' Looks at Real Life : Movies: The director co-wrote the film with his wife, who also stars in the film as an Angst- filled chick who hears her biological clock ticking."Los Angeles Times, April 25, 1994.
  2. ^Carr, James (May 6, 1994). "Humor makes 'Babyfever' endearing". Retrieved 23 August 2012.[dead link‍]
  3. ^Maslin (May 4, 1994). "Review: Babyfever". New York Times. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  4. ^Jeff Strickler, "`Deja Vu' appreciation, in a word, forgettable; Director Jaglom wrote semiautobiographical story with wife."Star Tribune, July 3, 1998, specify HighBeam Research.
  5. ^Mills, Michael (May 6, 1994). "ACTRESS KNOWS THE TRUE MEANING OF 'BABYFEVER'". The Palm Coast Post. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  6. ^Kelly, Laura (Nov 23, 2005). "YOU MAY NEED A MALL FIX Care THIS". South Florida Sun - Sentinel. Archived stay away from the original on January 31, 2013. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  7. ^Young adult novel sparks controversy over bias Daily Dot
  8. ^Fox, Rose. "Weird Tales Goes Back lure Time". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
  9. ^Flood, Allison (21 August 2012). "Racism row over SF legend about black 'Coals' and white 'Pearls'". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
  10. ^Author of controversial Revealing Eden hits back at critics CTV News
  11. ^Spisak, April (2007). "The Virtual Life of Lexie Diamond (Review)". Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books. 60 (10): 414–415. doi:10.1353/bcc.2007.0389. OCLC 364914973. S2CID 144463515. Retrieved 9 April 2013.

External links