Russian-American writer and filmmaker
Wes Hurley is a Russian-American writer and filmmaker. He has collaborated with many theater, drag , and cabaret performers in Seattle and raised awareness of human rights violations in Russia.
Early life and education
Born and raised in Vladivostok , Russian SFSR , Soviet Union (present-day Vladivostok , Russia ), Hurley moved to Seattle in the 1990s at the age of 16 with his mother when she married an American.[ 1] [ 2]
Career
Hurley's films, many with gay themes, include Waxie Moon , Waxie Moon in Fallen Jewel ,[ 1] [ 3] Zolushka ,[ 4] Rusalka ,[ 5] and the web and later TV series Capitol Hill , which premiered in 2014.[ 5] [ 6] [ 7]
He has also collaborated with theater, cabaret, and drag performers including Waxie Moon , Sarah Rudinoff , Jinkx Monsoon , BenDeLaCreme , and Jackie Hell, and raised awareness of human rights violations in Russia.[ 8]
In 2020, Hurley filmed Potato Dreams of America - a dark autobiographical comedy starring Dan Lauria , Lea DeLaria , Jonathan Bennett , Sera Barbieri, Tyler Bocock, Marya Sea Kaminsky, Hersh Powers, Lady Rizo, Sophia Mitry Schloss and Lauren Tewes .[ 9] The film premiered at SXSW on March 16, 2021.[ 10]
Hurley has been a regular contributor to Huffington Post .[ 11]
Private life
Hurley realized he was gay before leaving Russia;[ 8] he came out to his mother when he was 16. His autobiographical film Little Potato , co-directed by Nathan Miller, tells the story of their migration, his adolescence, and his mother's relationship with her spouse, who ultimately came out as transgender .[ 2]
Honors
In 2013 Hurley was chosen as one of the Artists of the Year by City Arts magazine, along with Megan Griffiths , Macklemore , Ryan Lewis , and Jinkx Monsoon .[ 12] He was chosen as a Person to Watch in 2015 by The Advocate .[ 5] In 2019 he won a Creative Capital grant.[ 7] Little Potato won over two dozen awards from around the world including Jury Awards at South by Southwest , Oslo Fusion, Sarasota Film Festival , Annapolis Film Festival, USA Film Festival and Audience Awards at Outfest , Ashland Independent Film Festival and Mardi Gras Film Festival . Little Potato had its online premiere on Topic and was later picked up by The Atlantic .[ 7] The short is also a Vimeo Staff pick, was short-listed by The Wrap and nominated for Best Short by Cinema Eye Honors . The companion VR piece Potato Dreams premiered at American Film Institute Film Festival and International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam .
References
^ a b Leah Baltus, "Pivotal Scene" [usurped] , City Arts , April 25, 2012.
^ a b Natasha Lipman, "'I hated my homophobic stepdad, then he came out'" , BBC News , February 21, 2020.
^ Jason Miller, "Everybody’s talking about Waxie Moon In Fallen Jewel!" , Central Cinema, April 18, 2013, archived on December 15, 2013.
^ "CineKink: Best of 2015" , The Clinton Street Theater (Portland, Oregon), retrieved February 24, 2010.
^ a b c Matt Baume , "People to Watch in 2015" , The Advocate , January 2, 2015.
^ Leah Baltus, "Seattle Soap" [usurped] , City Arts , March 24, 2015.
^ a b c Brangien Davies, "After growing up gay in Russia, a Seattle filmmaker wins big" , Crosscut , January 18, 2019.
^ a b Wes Hurley, "Growing Up Gay in Russia" , Huffington Post , February 2, 2016.
^ "Potato Dreams of America" . March 16, 2021 – via IMDb.
^ "SXSW Film Review: Potato Dreams of America" . SLUG Magazine . March 16, 2021.
^ Wes Hurley
^ "Shine On: 2013 Artists of the Year" [usurped] , City Arts , November 25, 2013.
External links