Stacy Barton is a scriptwriter for the Disney Company and the author of Surviving Nashville, a book of short stories. She is also the author of three picture books, four one-act plays and an animated short film. Her work has appeared in various literary magazines.
Maybe it was the construction paper or the modeling clay. Maybe it was the picture books her mother read to her as a toddler, or the A. A. Milne her father read aloud once she started school. Maybe it was the dance classes or the macrame or the health food. Of course it could have been that her grandmother was a painter, her great-uncle a Juilliard pianist, her mother a dancer, and her father an unconventional minister. It could have been her brothers' antics over kick-the-can, or their Hobbit drawings or guitar songs, or the dozen or so dogs they had, or the absurd number of places she lived growing up. Maybe it was the ADD that they didn't have a name for in those days, or the manic depression that followed, or the struggle to find her own spirituality.
Whatever it was, Stacy was bound to end up as some kind of artist. She was performing professionally by the time she was nineteen and directing, writing and creating interactive theater by twenty-four. Her first published words appeared when she was twenty-five, but it wasn't until her thirties that she took writing seriously. After four kids, the theater turned out to be rough on family life, and so she began to keep the poems she scratched on the envelope backs that floated around on the floor of her minivan. She was thirty-five when a Mack truck totaled her Caravan, forcing her to give up theater and dance because of migraines and herniated discs. She turned to writing and promptly won a small pack of awards for her poetry and scripts and within a few years landed a job as a free-lance scriptwriter for the Disney Company. Since then she has published short stories, poems, plays, children's books and an animated short film.
Stacy lives with her husband, Todd, and their four kids-Whitney, Meredith, Taylor, and Olivia-in Maitland, Florida, where they've made their home for twenty years. When the house is quiet, she writes for Disney or works on her new novel or plays with construction paper for old time's sake.
Whatever it was, Stacy was bound to end up as some kind of artist. She was performing professionally by the time she was nineteen and directing, writing and creating interactive theater by twenty-four. Her first published words appeared when she was twenty-five, but it wasn't until her thirties that she took writing seriously. After four kids, the theater turned out to be rough on family life, and so she began to keep the poems she scratched on the envelope backs that floated around on the floor of her minivan. She was thirty-five when a Mack truck totaled her Caravan, forcing her to give up theater and dance because of migraines and herniated discs. She turned to writing and promptly won a small pack of awards for her poetry and scripts and within a few years landed a job as a free-lance scriptwriter for the Disney Company. Since then she has published short stories, poems, plays, children's books and an animated short film.
Stacy lives with her husband, Todd, and their four kids-Whitney, Meredith, Taylor, and Olivia-in Maitland, Florida, where they've made their home for twenty years. When the house is quiet, she writes for Disney or works on her new novel or plays with construction paper for old time's sake.
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