Abigail Tarttelin
English novelist, actress (born 1987)
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Abigail Tarttelin (born 13 October 1987) is an English novelist and actress. Her second book, Golden Boy, was described as a "dazzling debut" by Oprah's Book Club.[1] Published in 2013, the book was translated into several languages[2][3][4] and on the Evening Standard's 2013 "25 people under 25" list.[5] She is a 2014 recipient of the Alex Awards.
Abigail Tarttelin | |
|---|---|
| Born | 13 October 1987 (age 38) |
| Occupation | Author |
| Known for | Flick, Golden Boy |
| Website | www |
Early life
Tarttelin was born in Grimsby, Humberside (now North East Lincolnshire). At the age of 16, she trained with the National Youth Theatre and the New York Film Academy school in France, acting in over 20 short films.[6] One, La Geode by New York artist Theresa Hong, appeared in the Official Selection of the New York Short Film Festival,[citation needed] the LA Shorts Fest,[citation needed] and the Strasbourg Film Festival.[citation needed]
Career
Film and television
Her first acting role was Fenella in The Butterfly Tattoo. The following year she was the lead in independent sci-fi Schrödinger's Girl[7] (now titled Triple Hit) playing three versions of the same woman in parallel worlds.[8] The film premiered in 2009 at San Diego Comic-Con. She attended Comic-Con and Cannes Film Festival with The Butterfly Tattoo and Triple Hit, and in 2009 was one of two actresses listed in Moviescope magazine's "ones to watch" selection of British artists working in independent film.[9][10][11][12] She also appeared in the film Three Stags, directed by Mark Locke, and bilingual thriller Taxi Rider in 2010.[13] In addition her involvement with Equity (trade union) saw her elected as Chairperson for the inaugural Young Members' Committee.
She has directed trailers for Flick[14] and Golden Boy,[15] the music video for Michael Reeve's cover of "Flume" by Bon Iver,[16] and in 2016 a television pilot called The Danelaw.
She was a judge for the British Independent Film Awards 2016.
Writing
Tarttelin's debut novel, Flick, was first published by Beautiful Books in April 2011, then republished in 2015 by W&N. The story follows a disaffected teenage boy named Flick in a small factory town in northern England, where "bleak and sometimes treacherous circumstances make the taste of a love affair even sweeter." It was hailed "a slow-burn cult classic" by GQ who found it "both authentic and compelling"[17]
In 2013, she published her second novel Golden Boy, about an intersex teenager. It has since been published in Chinese,[18] Spanish[19] and Portuguese.[20] It won a 2014 Alex Awards from the American Library Association,[21] was one of School Library Journal's best books of 2013,[22] and was shortlisted for the 2014 LAMBDA Award for Best Debut LGBT Fiction.[23] The book has been well received by readers and the film rights are also in discussion.[24][25][26][27][28]
Her third novel, Dead Girls, was published in 2018. It is set in a small English village and is narrated in first person by eleven-year-old Thera Wilde, who takes matters into her own hands following the sudden disappearance of her best friend.
In addition to her three novels Tarttelin was a screenwriter for Academy Award short film shortlist[29] filmmaker Chris Jones.[30] as well as writing the screenplay for the television pilot of The Danelaw. She has also written for the blog Women & Hollywood[31] and founded and edits the publication I Hope You Like Feminist Rants.
Bibliography
- Flick, London, April 2011. ISBN 978-1907616181
- Golden Boy, London, W&N, 9 May 2013. ISBN 978-0297870944