Tassie Cameron
Tassie Cameron | |
---|---|
Born | Canada |
Language | English |
Nationality | Canadian |
Citizenship | Canada |
Genres | Television, screenwriting |
Tassie Cameron is a Gemini Award-winning Canadian screenwriter who has contributed to numerous television shows and films. She was the head writer and executive producer on the Global Television Network/ABC series Rookie Blue and creator of CBC Television and IMDb TV's Pretty Hard Cases.
Early life and education
[edit]Tassie Cameron is the daughter of journalist Stevie Cameron. She spent her formative years at Elmwood School an all-girls school in Rockcliffe Park, Ottawa.
Cameron has a Bachelor's degree in English from the University of Trinity College of the University of Toronto,[1] Master's degree in film from New York University, and is a graduate of the Canadian Film Centre in Toronto.
Career
[edit]Cameron was a story editor and writer on the CTV/Much (TV channel)/MTV Canada and The N/TeenNick teen drama series Degrassi: The Next Generation; an executive story editor and writer for two seasons of CTV's prime-time drama The Eleventh Hour (for which she co-won the Gemini for Best Writing with Semi Chellas); and a writer and story editor on CBC TV and Sony Pictures TV's Tom Stone television series. In 2007, she adapted Margaret Atwood's The Robber Bride into a television movie. Cameron also co-wrote with Esta Spalding the acclaimed CTV mini-series Would Be Kings, garnering them a Gemini nomination. She spent eight years in New York City working in independent film and at HBO television and has also worked as a screenwriting instructor at the Humber School for Writers.
References
[edit]- ^ "Alumni Portraits". University of Toronto.
External links
[edit]- Canadian television producers
- Canadian women television producers
- Humber College alumni
- Living people
- Tisch School of the Arts alumni
- York University alumni
- Canadian women television writers
- Canadian women screenwriters
- Canadian Film Centre alumni
- 21st-century Canadian screenwriters
- 21st-century Canadian women writers
- University of Toronto alumni
- Canadian Screen Award winning writers