- Born
- Joseph Strickland is an American film director, screenwriter, producer, and author. A Writer's Guild of America West Coast member, Strickland got his start in music videos featuring well-known blues and jazz artists, industrial videos, and television programs for cable TV, as well as live productions.
Enrolled in Columbia College of Chicago - with a strong interest in art and writing - during the 1980s, Strickland was drawn to working on various student film projects with any number of his fellow alumni, including Tim O'Neill, with whom Strickland co-produced and co-directed a short feature titled Daily Mass in 1988. The film would later receive a spotlight in the 24th Chicago International Film Festival, respectively.
After writing an original screenplay titled The Epidemic in 1985, Strickland began working on another script in 1992 after having watched the Jeffrey Dahmer trial on television. He would eventually title his new treatment Dual Mania, which would be a psychological thriller centered around an African American psychiatrist who takes on a White male patient deeply disturbed by childhood issues.
As an emerging filmmaker, Strickland was invited to participate as a judge on the feature film panel in the 32nd Chicago International Film Festival in 1996. Many of the notable films present that year included Twilight of the Golds, Sling Blade, The Fugitive, etc. Moreover, Strickland was personally invited to serve as a judge on the adult jury panel in the 14th Annual Chicago International Children's Film Festival in 1997. And In 1998, Strickland would return to the 15th Annual Chicago International Children's Film Festival to perform as Chair of the Features Jury on the adult jury panel. A few of the showcased films that were awarded with Strickland's endorsement included The Island on Bird Street, Hands Up, and Bavel's Book, the latter a children's feature that the filmmaker would later praise in an interview with the Chicago Tribune.
Joseph Strickland is the co-author of The Making of Dual Mania: Filmmaking Chicago Style, a collaborative effort between himself, author and theater critic B.J. Patterson, and author Cat Ellington, to whom Strickland is married.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Cheryl Brown
- SpouseCat Ellington(December 31, 1994 - present) (3 children)
- Children
- Former Chicago First Lady, the late Maggie Daley, personally invited director Joseph Strickland to serve as a judge on the adult jury panel in the 14th Annual Chicago International Children's Film Festival in 1997.
- In 1994, Joseph Strickland worked as the lighting designer for the theatrical production of Jade Monkey King, which starred among others, former Miss Illinois 1994 and Pretty Rosebud actress, Chuti Tiu.
- The first screenplay Joseph Strickland ever wrote was titled The Epidemic.
- Joseph Strickland founded Innovative Music, a music video/cable TV program, in 1987. The company was dissolved in 1989.
- Joseph Strickland produced and directed the first Asian Human Services festival for Chicago Access Network Television (CAN-TV) in 1989.
- Cat Ellington is the Bo Jackson of the creative arts. Everything she does, she does extremely well. And I'm proud of her. I'm proud to say that a woman as beautiful and gifted as she is has a solid place in both my personal and professional lives.
- Spike Lee was the voice depicting the ills of social issues. Joseph Strickland will depict the spiritual issues (or ills) from within.
- I know that there is a distinction between Black filmmakers and White filmmakers by Hollywood and by America as a whole. Black filmmakers have different obstacles, different markets, different expectations, different industry standards in expectations.
- There are four hundred and fifty films written by Black screenwriters/filmmakers every year. Sadly, of these, only three will ever see the light of day.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content