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Keram Malicki-Sánchez

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Keram Malicki-Sánchez
Born (1974-05-14) 14 May 1974 (age 50)
Occupation(s)Actor, musician, composer, producer, writer, new media consultant

Keram Malicki-Sánchez (born 14 May 1974) is a Canadian-born actor,[1][2] singer, writer,[3] futurist,[4] music producer, film producer[5] and film director.[6]

Early life

Malicki-Sánchez was born in Toronto, Ontario to a Polish father and Ecuadorian mother (a theater director). Keram studied ecclesiastical and classical choral music at St. Michael's Choir School in Toronto.

His debut in the world of music and acting began with musical theater at the age of 7 in the title role of Oliver! at the Limelight Dinner Theater in Toronto which performance was met with rave reviews by the local press, including the Toronto Star.[7]

He went on to create the role of Jason in the award-winning trilogy by playwright Jim Betts "The Mystery of the Oak Island Treasure," "The Last Voyage of the Devil's Wheel" and "The Haunting of Elijah Bones" at the Young People's Theatre[8] in Toronto, Canada.[9] It was at the same theater company that he starred in the role of the eponymous Jacob Two-Two Meets the Hooded Fang in the musical version directed by Peter Moss in 1984.[10]

In the early stages of his career he played a variety of roles for CBC radio dramas, and at the age of fourteen was nominated for a Dora Mavor Moore award for Outstanding Performance by a Male in a Principal Role - Musical [10] in a musical for his portrayal of Prince Edward in playwright Joey Miller's adaptation of Mark Twain's The Prince and the Pauper at the Young People's Theatre in Toronto (1988)[11] - one of the youngest actors ever to be nominated in this category.[citation needed]

Musical career

Malicki-Sánchez released a solo 45" on vinyl in Spanish at the age of thirteen through Fe Discos from Ecuador. In 1990, he founded the record label Constant Change Productions out of Toronto, Canada. He began his own band, Blue Dog Pict, aged fourteen. The band released three albums: The Picture Album (1990), Anxiety of Influence: a nodding into...? (1992), and Spindly Light Und Wax Rocketines (1995) that were distributed by Distribution FUSION III from Montreal, Canada. This final album was one of the first ever enhanced CDs[citation needed] released by a band, as it features a MAC/PC compatible Myst-style video game. Malicki-Sánchez worked directly with the CD manufacturer to create a method for putting the data on track 0 so that the CD would also play in a standard CD player.

In 1995, Keram released a cassette tape called "Automated Gardens: AN4" as part of an ambient electronic solo project. Keram later added Blue Dog Pict soundman and co-producer Joshua Miles Joudrie and Jason "DJ Shine Spanu" to the line-up, and the band played various shows and raves in Ontario, Canada, including sharing a bill with Richie Hawtin aka Plastikman at the E13 Network rave in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The electronica band later placed three music cues in the independent feature Irvine Welsh's Ecstasy. It was on the film Ecstasy that Keram also met guitarist and actor Alex Lifeson of the band Rush with whom he would later collaborate on his solo record.

Keram also performs music under his own name, and has songs on various original film soundtracks including MGM's Uptown Girls (released on Nettwerk Records), New Line Cinema's Happy Campers, and Broken (Fuel 2000) for which he performed opposite the film's star Heather Graham in a video for the song "The Hanging Tree" that he composed. Under the Automated Gardens moniker, he and DJ Shine licensed four more tracks to the film Irvine Welsh's Ecstasy whose soundtrack includes some of the top electronic musics artists of the decade.

Malicki-Sánchez moved to Los Angeles in the late 1990s where he continues to perform music live under the moniker "Keram". As the artist "Keram" he was a regular at Hollywood's Hotel Cafe. During this period he also collaborated on songs with singers Aimee Lynn Chadwick, Jordan Bridges, and Brittany Murphy with a side project called Blue Rose Harlots.

25 January 2008, Keram released his solo debut acoustic album "Box",.[12][13] at Room 5 in Los Angeles.

In 2014, Malicki-Sanchez announced that he had completed work on his album "Come to Life, " after 7 years. The album features the contributions of over 30 musicians, including Alex Lifeson on guitar. The album was mixed by Rich Chycki and mastered by Andy Vandette at Masterdisk New York. The manufacture and promotional budget was raised through a successful IndieGogo campaign [2] that achieved 144% of its original goal. The album was launched at a record release event held at The Supermarket in Toronto's Kensington Market district on April 12. Alex Lifeson made a guest appearance, joining the band onstage for two songs. An American release party for the same album was held at Molly Malone's in Los Angeles on April 4, 2015.

That same year he licensed two songs in the style of Dubstep to the Lifetime Network film "Perfect High". Subsequently he went on to compose and or provide music for a variety of television movies of the week for Lifetime Movie Network.[14]

Filmmaking

In 2006, Malicki-Sanchez wrote, directed and produced a one-hour fictional film about this early online community and the Sky Pirates entitled "The Charge of the 08.ZIYA". The film is about a rescue mission from a marketing shell game, and is scored by Automated Gardens.

He was later a student in the first years of UCLA Extension's Film, Television and Digital entertainment, Cinematography and Film Producing programs. He graduated from the UCLA program in 2009. In 2012 he was one of 65 people invited to attend and completed Werner Herzog's Rogue Film School in Los Angeles.

His first short film was accepted into the Glastonbury, Atlanta Horror Film Festivals and was an award winner at the Accolade Film Festival[citation needed], and Shockfest[15] for Best Monster Creation. His subsequent short film Tulip Pink toured the film festival circuit and screened to sold out theaters at the Newport Beach Film Festival[16] among others. His third short How (Not) To Become a Vampire features motion graphics by John Watson who also worked as a compositor on Resident Evil: Extinction and made the festival rounds in 2011 including the Austin Film Festival winning various People's Choice Awards (Zero Film Festival - Toronto among them).[5][6][17]

New Media

In 2000 Malicki-Sánchez launched "freedom" - a highly customized phpnuke bulletin board, messaging and community building portal whose active community kept the site alive for six years, preceding such social media portals as Friendster , MySpace and Facebook , which perhaps it resembled most, even in its blue and white color scheme which it derived from the Constant Change Productions website where it was a subdomain. Many of the site's early code modifications were done by longtime friend Will Rowe whom Malicki-Sánchez originally met in the IRC chatroom for Internex Online - Canada's first and independent ISP.

Malicki-Sánchez has been invited to speak on various panels concerning technology and the arts by the North by Northeast (NXNE) music conference, the Toronto Sun, the 2007 NAB (National Association of Broadcasters) in Las Vegas, Cinegear Expo and Digital Hollywood[18] in Los Angeles and the Toronto Star.

In September, 2008, Keram launched the Keramcast - a podcast he hosts that is a digest for the topics discussed at his various blogs.

He also works as a social media and SEO consultant and runs a wide variety of online portals that include his current position as editor-in-chief at Indie Game Reviewer.

Virtual Reality & Immersive Technology

In 2015 he founded VRTO[19] - a Toronto-based virtual and augmented reality meetup that sold out its inaugural event[20][21] held at Ryerson University's Student Learning Center and Transportive Technology[22] - a virtual reality content production company which saw Malicki-Sanchez teaming up once more with Lee Towndrow to create one of the world's first 360 ASMR Immersive videos.[23] This led to the creation of FIVARS, which is an acronym for the "Festival of International Virtual and Augmented Reality Stories" which he co-organized with Joseph Ellsworth, the technical director.

FIVARS debuted at the Camp Wavelength music festival in Toronto and showed the first full viewing of MansLaughter by Cinemersia - which claims to be the world's first virtual reality feature film.[24] FIVARS had its inaugural show in Toronto on September 19 and 20, 2015,[25] including 21 [26] virtual reality stories from around the world.[27] The second FIVARS continued in 2016.[28] September 16-18th and Malicki-Sanchez curated over 30 selections from around the world.[29][30]

Malicki-Sanchez then created the inaugural VRTO Virtual & Augmented Reality World Conference & Expo[31][32][33] staged the Mattamy Athletic Centre (formerly Maple Leaf Gardens) that featured director Brett Leonard, scientist Steve Mann, Canadian Film Centre's Chief Digital Officer Ana Serrano and USC's Philip Lelyveld as keynotes speakers.[34] It was at this inaugural conference that Steve Mann and Keram Malicki-Sanchez organized a launching via keynote, panel and town hall around the Code of Ethics for Humanistic Augmentation[35] also known as the "HACode"[36] or "Toronto Code."

Acting Filmography

TV appearances

References

  1. ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0539537/bio
  2. ^ https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/2013/01/04/texas_chainsaw_3d_review_manson_family_values.html
  3. ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1602002/?ref_=nm_flmg_wr_1
  4. ^ http://constantchangemedia.com
  5. ^ a b http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1946251/
  6. ^ a b http://www.nsi-canada.ca/2014/09/how-not-to-become-a-vampire/
  7. ^ http://www.gettyimages.at/detail/nachrichtenfoto/keram-malicki-sanchez-7-was-chosen-from-a-field-of-200-nachrichtenfoto/502488997
  8. ^ http://www.youngpeoplestheatre.ca/about-ypt/history/
  9. ^ http://www.canadiantheatre.com/dict.pl?term=Jim%20Betts
  10. ^ a b http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3428200124.html
  11. ^ http://www.youngpeoplestheatre.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/ALL-SEASONS-revised-Spring-2015.pdf
  12. ^ The Official Keram Malicki-Sanchez Music Site - Songs, Pics, Videos and More
  13. ^ NeuFutur Magazine » Blog Archive » Keram – Box
  14. ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0539537/#music_department
  15. ^ Shock Film Festival
  16. ^ Newport Beach Film Festival
  17. ^ Women In Film * Television
  18. ^ http://www.digitalhollywood.com/VR2016Spring.html
  19. ^ VRTO website
  20. ^ "VAR (Virtual + Augmented Reality) Showcase" on Eventbrite https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/var-virtual-augmented-reality-showcase-tickets-17507167409?aff=eandprexshre&ref=eandprexshre
  21. ^ Meetup
  22. ^ Transportive Technology
  23. ^ Snow Globe on LittlStar http://littlstar.com/videos/16f67f92
  24. ^ http://virtualreality.to/fivars-preview-show-at-camp-wavelength-festival-toronto-canada/
  25. ^ VRFocus.com
  26. ^ FIVARS.net Story listing
  27. ^ FIVARS.net Event listing
  28. ^ AR/VR Magazine
  29. ^ Business News Network
  30. ^ The Toronto Star
  31. ^ http://conference.virtualreality.to/
  32. ^ http://www.newswire.ca/news-releases/toronto-vr-expo-explores-a-canadian-wide-collaboration-with-montreal-technology-leaders-583385561.html
  33. ^ Huffington Post
  34. ^ UploadVR‘Lawnmower Man’ Director Brett Leonard and Meta’s Steve Mann Keynote VRTO Conference
  35. ^ Kurzweil AI
  36. ^ [1]
  37. ^ - The Christmas Switch 2014
  38. ^ - Model Home 2013
  39. ^ "Lionsgate releases official Press Release for Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3-D". Shocktillyoudrop.com. 19 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  40. ^ - Ecstasy Official Site
  41. ^ - HNTBAV on IMDB.com
  42. ^ - Tulip Pink on IMDB.com
  43. ^ - A Killer App on IMDB.com
  44. ^ - One Kine Day