Joe Tripician

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joseph Tripician
Occupations
  • Producer
  • writer
  • screenwriter
  • film director
  • playwright
  • songwriter
Years active1970–present
Spouse
Cecilia Tripician
(m. 1999)
Children2, Helena Tripician, Olivia Tripician

Joseph Tripician, also known as Joe Tripician and Joe Trip, is an American producer, writer,[1] screenwriter, film director,[2] songwriter, playwright and performer. He is best known for the documentaries Borders and Metaphoria and his memoir Balkanized at Sunrise, based on Tripician's journey to the Balkans in 1997.

Early life and education[edit]

Joseph Tripician was born in Atlantic City, New Jersey, to Nicoli and Dolores Tripician. He has two brothers, Bill and Carl. Tripician studied at the American University and has a MFA (Master of Fine Arts) from Columbia University.

1970s – Absolute Mania and Jim Henson[edit]

In 1970, while still in high school, Tripician formed a comedy group called Absolute Mania with Bob "Duggan" Hill and Morgan "Skip" Thomas. The group hosted a cable TV humor program in South Jersey entitled Absolute Mania that ended abruptly after a sketch about the renowned American musician Johnny Cash's alleged drug use caused controversy. In 1978, Tripician interviewed John Draper, aka " Captain Crunch," the "phone freak" and pioneer computer hacker. The original video of that interview is now part of the collection at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California. Between 1978 and 1979, Tripician also was employed by Henson Associates as a production assistant, where he worked closely with Jim Henson, the famous creator of The Muppets.

1980s – Music videos, borders and other documentaries[edit]

In 1980, Tripician worked as editor of the documentary Memories of Duke, directed by Gary Keys and based on the biography of the famous American composer, pianist, and bandleader of a jazz orchestra Duke Ellington. At the same time, he wrote and directed the short film Shrapnel Training Course, a parody infomercial satirizing the CIA. Later, Tripician produced and co-directed several musical videos included in a compilation called Danspak, which was distributed by Sony Video Software and released, in three parts (1982, 1984 and 1986). Some of the videos included were "Hip Hop, Be Bop (Don't Stop)," by Man Parrish, "Pointy Head Gear," by Shöx Lumania, "Jimmy, Gimme Your Love," by Michael Musto & The Must, and "Alien Girl," by Richard Bone, in 1982; "I've Got A Right," by The Lenny Kaye Connection, and "Sweet Jane," a cover of The Velvet Underground's song performed by The Jim Carroll Band, in 1984 (that video featured a cameo appearance of the late American songwriter Lou Reed); "Grace," by The Ordinaires, "Skintight Tina," by Prince Charles Alexander, and "Buttercup," by Stevie Wonder performed by Carl Anderson, both released in 1985. In 1984, Tripician and his partner Merrill Aldighieri were listed in the Rolling Stone Book of Rock Video as one of the twenty top video directors in the world.[3] In 1988, Tripician produced, edited and co-directed with Merrill Aldighieri, The Kissing Booth, a documentary starring Quentin Crisp, among others. In 1989, he wrote, produced, edited and co-directed, again with Merrill Aldighieri, the mixed genre television movie Borders, starring Steve Buscemi and Robert Anton Wilson, and directed The Gun is Loaded, a short film written and performed by Lydia Lunch.

1990s – Metaphoria, Aliens and Ozark Melody with Jeff Buckley[edit]

In 1991, Tripician wrote, produced, edited and co-directed with Merrill Aldighieri the video documentary Metaphoria, which was awarded an Emmy Award for Best Documentary of Cultural Significance (1992). The same year, Metaphoria won awards at the Chicago International Film Festival, the Montreal International Film Festival, the Sinking Creek Film Festival, and the Cyber Arts Festival in Los Angeles.

In 1992, Tripician also edited several segments of the television news show The Wall Street Journal Report. In 1993, Tripician produced, edited and co-directed with Aldighieri the short film Motel Blue 19, adapted from the play by Edgar Oliver, and worked as co-director of graphics and animation of the Oscar-nominated documentary The War Room, directed by Chris Hegedus and D. A. Pennebaker. In 1994, Tripician was nominated for the Intercultural Film/Video Fellowship in Media Arts by the Rockefeller Foundation. The following year, Tripician was the on-line editor of the awarded video documentary The Conspiracy of Silence, directed by Neal Marshad and Donna Olson. In 1997, Tripician's paperback book The Official Alien Abductee's Handbook was published by Andrews and McMeel. That book was the inspiration for Melodies for Abductees, a pop-music album which included the novelty song "Ozark Melody," composed by Tripician, Frederick Reed and American songwriter Jeff Buckley, who also sang and performed guitar and mandolin on it. Tripician also co-directed with Jakov Sedlar the feature documentary Tudjman, narrated by the American actor Martin Sheen and based on the biography of the Croatian president, Franjo Tudjman. Later that year, Tripician traveled to the Balkans, after being hired by the Croatian government to write Tudjman's official biography. The working title of that book was In Tito's Shadow. After granting Tripician editorial control of the book and receiving the complete manuscript, the content caused a controversy within the Tudjman government,[4] and the book was summarily banned. In May 2002, Joe performed his one-man play Balkanized at Sunrise at Dixon Place Theater in New York City. The play was based on his 1997 trip to the Balkans. Joe subsequently published his story in a memoir of the same name.

In 1998, Joe co-founded the company iStreamTV in New York City, which provided streaming video services to a number of corporate clients. Tripician worked in that company to 2001.

Tripician's films and videos were exhibited in various galleries and museums, such as The Guggenheim Museum, The Whitney Museum of American Art, and The New Museum of Contemporary Art, in New York; The Laforet Museum, in Tokyo, Japan; and The Museum of Modern Art, in Paris, France.

2000s – From Balkanized at Sunrise to Team Joy[edit]

In 2002, Tripician wrote and performed a one-man show called Balkanized at Sunrise at the Dixon Place Theater in New York City, directed by Gigi van Deckter. Balkanized at Sunrise is also the title of his memoir published on Amazon in 2010, with a second edition published in 2016. Also in 2002, New Riders Press published a book about Macromedia entitled Flash MX Magic and written by Matthew David, Glenn Thomas, Joe Tripician, et al.

From 2007 to late 2008, Tripician worked as the Director of Broadband Services at Medialink Worldwide, the public communications firm whose clients included companies such as Philips, Johnson & Johnson, Bank of America, General Motors, and Nokia.

In 2007, Tripician wrote, edited and directed the short video The Student, which premiered at the Big Apple Film Festival. In 2009, he wrote, edited and directed Kitchen Sink Stories, a three-part web series. In 2012, the e-books My Night with Sarah Palin and Other Disturbing Stories (a collection of short stories) and Immortality Wars (a science fiction detective novel dealing with nanotechnology and the concept of singularity proposed by Ray Kurzweil) were published. In 2013, the e-book Joe Tripician – Obras Seleccionadas: Volumen 1 (Joe Tripician – Selected Works: Volume 1), was published. It included Spanish translations of short stories and song lyrics written by Tripician, who collaborated on the book. Argentine teacher, researcher, writer and musician Pablo Martin Aguero made the translations. That year, Tripician wrote, produced, edited and directed A Pizza Chegou (also known as Pizza Run), a short film filmed in São Paulo, Brazil. He also began development on Moto Anjos, an action crime feature film, starring Brazilian actor Vinicius de Oliveira.

In June 2016 Truth Entertainment, the producers of the Oscar-winning film Dallas Buyers Club, announced that they would produce a new film written and to be directed by Tripician titled Team Joy. Production is scheduled to begin in early 2018.[5][6]

Personal life[edit]

In March 1999, Tripician married Cecilia Tripician. They live in São José dos Campos, São Paulo, Brazil, with their daughters Helena and Olivia.

Influences[edit]

According to Tripician, he is influenced by writers such as Terry Southern, Elmore Leonard, Edgar Allan Poe, J.G. Ballard, Robert Anton Wilson and Philip K. Dick; and films such as Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove or How I Stopped Worrying and Loved the Bomb, Luis Buñuel's Belle de Jour and Orson Welles' The Third Man.

Awards and nomination[edit]

Year Award For Result
1984 Top 20 Music Video Directors Worldwide Rolling Stone Book of Rock Video Won
1991 Chicago International Film Festival[7] Won
1991 The Montreal International Film Festival Won
1991 The Sinking Creek Film Festival Won
1991 Cyber Arts Festival Los Angeles Won
2007 Big Apple Film Festival
2007 Nevada City Film Festival
2007 Dallas VideoFest
2014 Williamsburg International Film Festival
2014 El Ojo Cojo Film Festival
2014 Dallas VideoFest

Filmography[edit]

Film
Year Title Role Notes
1980 Memories of Duke Editor
1980 Shrapnel Training Course Writer/director
1988 The Kissing Booth Producer/editor/co-director
1989 Borders Writer/producer/editor/co-director
1980 The Gun is Loaded Director
1991 Metaphoria Writer/producer/editor/co-director
1991 The Wall Street Journal Report Editor
1993 Hotel Room 19 Producer/editor/co-director
1993 The War Room Director of graphics and animation
1995 The Conspiracy of Silence On-line editor
1997 Tudjman Co-director
1999 Marty: The Martin Scorsese Story Actor
2007 The Student Writer/producer/editor/director
2009 Kitchen Sink Stories Writer/editor/director
2013 A Pizza Chegou (Pizza Run) Writer/producer/editor/director
2017 Team Joy Writer/producer/director

Discography[edit]

Song
Year Title Notes
1997 Melodies for Abductees

Books[edit]

  • 2016: Chats from Beyond: Stories to Amuse, Frighten and Disturb. Publisher: Amazon Digital Services LLC.[8]
  • 2016: Balkanized at Sunrise: A Memoir of A Reluctant Propagandist.[9]
  • 2013: Obras Seleccionadas: Volumen 1 (Joe Tripician – Selected Works: Volume 1).[10]
  • 2012: My Night with Sarah Palin and Other Disturbing Stories.[11]
  • 2012: Immortality Wars. Publisher: Smashwords Editions.[12]
  • 1997: The Official Alien Abductee's Handbook.[13]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Joe's first published work". Laugh-In Magazine. 1969.
  2. ^ "Joe Tripician". IMDb.
  3. ^ Shore, Michael (1984). The Rolling stone book of rock video. Quill. p. 319. ISBN 9780688039165.
  4. ^ Sven Milekic (May 3, 2017). "Propaganda Trip: Why Franjo Tudjman's Biographer Rebelled". Balkan Insight.
  5. ^ Ali Jaafar (June 28, 2016). "Truth Entertainment Finds Next Project In 'Team Joy'". Deadline Hollywood.
  6. ^ Hazelton, John. "'Team Joy' kicks off for Truth". Screen Daily.
  7. ^ "1992 to 1994 Chicago/Midwest Emmy Winners" (PDF). National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. April 2013.
  8. ^ Tripician, Joe (July 3, 2016). Chats from Beyond: Stories to amuse, frighten and disturb. ASIN B01HYI6TUU.
  9. ^ Tripician, Joe (June 12, 2016). Balkanized at Sunrise: A Memoir of A Reluctant Propagandist. Amazon Digital Services LLC. p. 114. ASIN B01H0ZSQZ8.
  10. ^ Tripician, Joe (February 3, 2013). Joe Tripician: Obras Seleccionadas, Volumen 1 (Spanish Edition). Smashwords. p. 51. ISBN 978-1301854233.
  11. ^ Tripician, Joseph (March 14, 2012). My Night With Sarah Palin ... and other disturbing stories. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-615-61207-2.
  12. ^ Tripician, Joseph (June 5, 2012). Immortality Wars. p. 214. ISBN 978-0615600581.
  13. ^ Tripician, Joe (April 1997). The Official Alien Abductee's Handbook. Andrews McMeel Publishing. p. 125. ISBN 978-0836227604.