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Craig Chester

American actor, writer, and screenwriter


Summary

American actor, writer, and screenwriter

FieldValue
nameCraig Chester
birth_date
birth_placeWest Covina, California, US
occupationActor, writer, screenwriter
educationThe American Academy of Dramatic Arts

Craig Chester (born November 8, 1965) is an American actor, writer, and screenwriter.

Early life

Chester was born in West Covina, California, the son of Cecil, lead singer in the rock band "Whiskey", and Linda, a homemaker. He moved with his family to Carrollton, Texas at the age of twelve when his father accepted a corporate job with Nestlé. At age fifteen, Chester was diagnosed with the facial deformity long face syndrome. The condition's most striking symptom is an excessively long lower face height. At eighteen, Chester spent a year undergoing multiple reconstructive surgeries. Chester moved to New York City in 1985, with a new face, to study at The American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Following graduation, he performed in various stage productions in New York, including a play written by Joanne Woodward who, upon noticing his naturalistic acting style, encouraged Chester to pursue a career in film.

Career

Chester's acting debut was in the feature film Swoon, a contemporary re-telling of the infamous Leopold & Loeb murder case, which earned Chester an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Actor. Janet Maslin of The New York Times described the film as "dazzling". Peter Travers of Rolling Stone described Swoon as "a great film...haunting and visionary". Chester went on to act in a string of critically acclaimed independent films. He has been openly gay since the inception of his career, rare at that time.

As a result, St. Martin's Press approached Chester to write about his life and experiences. His memoir Why the Long Face?: The Adventures of a Truly Independent Actor was published in 2003. In 2009, Showtime optioned the book with Chester set to adapt it into a television pilot with Don Roos, Dan Bucatinsky and Lisa Kudrow as producers. Publishers Weekly described Why The Long Face as "witty, absorbing" with Chester an "engaging storyteller with a fresh voice". Kirkus Reviews described Chester's memoir as an "intriguing midpoint autobiography sure to rouse curiosity about what the next half has in store."

Chester transitioned into screenwriting with Adam & Steve, which he also directed and starred in with Parker Posey, Chris Kattan and Malcolm Gets. The film was released on April 24, 2005. Writing for The Village Voice, Melissa Levine described writer-director Chester's debut as "truly enjoyable", while Ronnie Scheib of Variety praised his performance: "Chester's Adam, effortlessly able to slide from bathos to pathos and back again with none of the smarmy schmaltz of sitcom humanism, is a marvel of nuanced comic timing." Chuck Wilson, writing for LA Weekly described the film as "something certain to make John Waters cackle with glee." Adam & Steve has since developed a cult following.

Since adapting his book for Showtime, Chester has been writing for television. He wrote for season seven of the hit HBO series, True Blood and has developed pilots with NBC and Ryan Seacrest for E! amongst others. On the June 5, 2013, edition of NPR's "Moth Radio Hour", Chester recounted how he has been haunted by the Academy Award-nominated actor, Montgomery Clift, who has been dead for over 40 years.

In 2021, Chester shared that he had experienced homelessness for several months, beginning in mid-2019.

In early 2024, Michael Musto announced that a sequel to "Adam & Steve" was in development and that Chester had penned the screenplay, titled "Adam & Steve 55+".

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1992SwoonNathan Leopold Jr.
1993GriefMark
1994Out of DarknessBillTV film
1995FriskHenry
1996I Shot Andy WarholFred Hughes
1997David SearchingMercedes Guy
1997Kiss Me, GuidoTerry
1998The Misadventures of MargaretRichard Lane
1998Shucking the CurveSteven
1999Charlie!
2001The Anniversary PartyParty Guest
2001CircuitWhite Party Customer
2001The Experience BoxRyan
2001Sex and the City
Hermes ClerkTV series
2002Bumping HeadsCraigshort film, 22 minutes; released in 2003 in Boys Life 4: Four Play
2002Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Thor
DerekTV series
2003The LookHenrik
2003QuintessenceThomasshort film, 25 minutes
2004AnonymousAuditor
2004Out on the Edgewriter
2005Adam & SteveAdam Bernsteinactor; writer; director
2007Save Mewriter
2007–2008The Big Gay Sketch Showwriter (9 episodes)
2008PedroCounselor
2013Kill Your DarlingsBusinessman
2021Cam BoyWegman

References

References

  1. Chester, Craig. (April 1, 2004). "Why the Long Face?: The Adventures of a Truly Independent Actor". Macmillan.
  2. Maslin, Janet. (March 27, 1992). "Review/Film Festival; A New Vision of Leopold and Loeb". [[The New York Times]].
  3. Travers, Peter. (September 11, 1992). "Swoon".
  4. Shapiro, Gregg. (June 25, 2003). "'Face' to Face: Gay Actor and Writer Craig Chester Windy City Times". Windy City Times.
  5. (February 18, 2003). "Agent provacateur". Here Publishing.
  6. Littleton, Cynthia. (October 22, 2009). "Kudrow, Bucatinsky feel 'Rapture'".
  7. "Nonfiction Book Review: Why the Long Face? by Craig Chester, Author L.A. Weekly Books $23.95 (288p) ISBN 978-0-312-28713-9".
  8. "WHY THE LONG FACE? by Craig Chester - Kirkus Reviews".
  9. "A Tangy Twist of Love & Humor: Funny Quotes About Love".
  10. (August 24, 2006). "An interview with Craig Chester".
  11. "Chemistry lesson: in Adam & Steve, Craig Chester and Malcolm gets explore a screen romance grounded in the chemistry of two actual gay actors! Hollywood, are you getting this? - Free Online Library".
  12. (March 21, 2006). "'Adam and Steve'". The Village Voice.
  13. Scheib, Ronnie. (June 22, 2005). "Adam and Steve".
  14. "TLA Releasing US - Adam & Steve".
  15. Andreeva, Nellie. (April 22, 2013). "E! Developing Scripted Projects From Diane Warren, Josh Schwartz, Kevin Spacey, Mark Schwahn, Ryan Seacrest & Gale Anne Hurd".
  16. "The Moth - Stories - Montgomery Clift: The Sequel".
  17. "Actor-writer Craig Chester opens up about homeless nightmare: "This was the defining experience of my life"".
  18. (February 25, 2024). "'Adam & Steve' sequel! Broadway tragedy! When Mary met Sally!".
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