Carrie Rickey (born November 26, 1952) is an American Film criticism. Rickey was a film critic for The Philadelphia Inquirer from 1986 to 2011, and has contributed to The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and Village Voice.
Her essays are collected in many books including The American Century and American Movie Critics. Rickey was an early champion of female filmmakers. During her tenure as a movie reviewer, she covered technological evolutions in the industry from the video revolution to the rise of digital film, and has profiled artists and filmmakers from Clint Eastwood and Sidney Poitier to Elizabeth Taylor and Nora Ephron.
In 1986, Rickey became the film critic at The Philadelphia Inquirer, a position she held for the next 25 years. She has written essays on many artists such as Leon Golub and Philip Guston and wrote the Criterion Collection essays for Broadcast News and Videodrome. She has also taught courses at the University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences.
Rickey contributed chapters to The Power of Feminist Art, The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll, among many other collections. She is included in the book Feminists Who Changed America for her role in chronicling the work and the progress of women artists and filmmakers in articles and catalogue essays.
In 2018, she won the award for Best Commentary (Film/Television) from the L.A. Press Club for her serve, "What Ever Happened to Women Directors?" and won a regional Emmy (Mid-Atlantic division) for best Documentary for the film, "Before Hollywood: Philadelphia and the Birth of the Movies."
A Complicated Passion
|
|