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Hannah Friedman

American writer, producer, musician and director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Hannah Friedman is an American writer, producer, musician and director.

Quick facts Born, Occupation ...

She is known for writing and producing roles in film and television.[1][2] Her writing has also been featured in Newsweek and Cosmopolitan. Her memoir, Everything Sucks, was published in 2009.[3]

Friedman has worked as a feature writer on the Pixar Braintrust and at Disney Feature Animation. She is a co-executive producer for Willow on Disney+.[4][5]

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Early life and education

Friedman was born in New York City. She is the elder of two children born to singer-songwriter Dean Friedman. Hannah's mother trained monkeys. While in this job, she adopted a capuchin monkey named Amelia, who has lived with the family for almost thirty years.[6]

Friedman studied theater at Yale.

Articles and books

In 2004 Friedman's article When Your Friends Become The Enemy was published in Newsweek Magazine. It described the difficulties of the college application process. Friedman remains one of the youngest people to have been published in Newsweek.[7]

Friedman's debut book, Everything Sucks, was a teen memoir released by HCI Books in August 2009. Everything Sucks was reviewed on Salon.com, concluding, "Not only is Friedman's writing striking for its blunt, unromantic realism; her prose also displays a self-aware wit that is all too rare in the genre".[8]

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Performance

Friedman has made appearances on Comedy Central's This Is Not Happening (2016),[9] Don’t Tell My Mother! (2016), The Moth (2017), Wet Hot American Summer: First Day Of Camp (2015) and I Do... Until I Don't (2017).

Musical career

Friedman is a musician and lyricist. She was a writer and co-composer with Benj Pasek, Mark Sonnenblick and Shaina Taub for StoryCourse's Saturday Night Seder.[10][11]

Friedman wrote the script for My Silent Night,[12] a musical, which premiered at the Salzburg State Theatre in 2018, a project with composer John Debney and songwriter Siedah Garrett.[13]

In October 2009, Friedman was asked to perform at the 35th Anniversary Celebration of the National Coalition Against Censorship, a charity benefit gala hosted by Judy Blume. Friedman wrote and performed an original comedy song called Party Like It's 1984.[14]

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References

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