Jane Hamsher
Jane Hamsher was born in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, United States on July 25th, 1959 and is the Blogger. At the age of 65, Jane Hamsher biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 65 years old, Jane Hamsher physical status not available right now. We will update Jane Hamsher's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Jane Hamsher (born Jane Murphy; July 25, 1959) is a film producer, writer, and blogger best known as the author of Killer Instinct, a memoir about co-producing the 1994 film Natural Born Killers with Don Murphy and others, as well as the founder and editor of the politically liberal website FireDogLake (2004 – 2015).
Apt Pupil (1998), Permanent Midnight (1998), and From Hell (2001), and Murphy co-produced the sequel Apt Pupil (1998).
She appears on liberal websites and political magazines, including AlterNet and The American Prospect, as a contributor to The Huffington Post.
Personal history and education
Hamsher is a Massachusetts native who lived in Fitchburg and then Attleboro. When she was eight years old, her family moved to Seattle. She went to Roosevelt High School. She went on to Mills College in Oakland, California, and then studied in London. Hamsher spent time in college as a reporter for the San Francisco Bay Guardian covering punk rock and politics. Damage, a punk rock fanzine, was also edited by her. After college, she travelled to Los Angeles, where she was accepted into the USC School of Cinema-Television's Peter Stark Producing Program. She received her M.F.A. In 1988, the United States was established in 1988.
Hamsher spent the majority of her time as a producer in Los Angeles. She sold her Nichols Canyon home in 2004 and then moved to Otter Rock, Oregon. She rented a tiny farmhouse in Guilford, Connecticut, where she and other bloggers and journalists could live while covering the campaign. A few months later, she raised funds for a similar rent in Washington, D.C., called "Plame House," which served as a base for reporting the Scooter Libby trial. She now has a home in Washington, D.C.
Hamsher has experienced breast cancer three times: 1993, 2004, and 2006. She insisted on returning to Washington, D.C., two weeks after her third surgery to blog the remainder of the Scooter Libby trial. Her illness has been handled at St. John's Health Center in Santa Monica, California.
Hamsher took her mother's maiden name. Murphy is the name of her family. Hamsher told Politico that she dated then-SEIU President Andy Stern for two years. Katie and Lucy, her poodles, live with her poodles. In 2009, Kobe, her third child, wrote a 5,000-word tribute.
Professional career as film producer
Hamsher met with Don Murphy, forming Jane and Don Productions, Inc., a not-known Quentin Tarantino-authored documentary. "The film, directed by Oliver Stone, deviated greatly from Tarantino's original screenplay, so much so that Tarantino's name was stripped from the screenplay credits." Woody Harrelson, Juliette Lewis, Thomas Lewis, Tom Sizemore, Rodney Dangerfield, Robert Downey, Jr., and Tommy Lee Jones appeared in the film. Stone, Dave Veloz, and Richard Rutowski co-produced Thom Mount and Arnon Milchan, and the film's credited screenwriters included Stone, Dave Veloz and Richard Rutowski. Hamsher was also involved in the film's co-production as a female demon, which was uncredited. Her JD Productions firm signed a first glance contract with Sony in 1996. Columbia Pictures.
Hamsher and Murphy produced two 1998 films, including Brandon Boyce's screen adaptation of the Stephen King novella and starring Ian McKellen, Brad Renfro, and Elizabeth Hurley, directed by Jerry Stahl and Richardson; and Permanent Midnight, based on Terry Hayes and Terry Campbell's adaptation of the graphic novel From Hell, starring Ben Stiller, Laura Bello, Ian Richardson, Ian Richardson, Jason Flemyng, 2001. Hamsher also produced or co-produced the 1990 dramatic feature film An American Summer and the 1994 live-action film adaptation of Double Dragon, a video game company.