Theresa Duncan
Theresa Duncan | |
---|---|
Born | Theresa Lee Duncan October 26, 1966 Lapeer, Michigan |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. East Village, Manhattan, New York |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Game designer Blogger Filmmaker Critic |
Partner(s) | Jeremy Blake |
Theresa Duncan (October 26, 1966 – July 10, 2007) was an American video game designer, blogger, filmmaker and critic.
Life
Theresa Lee Duncan was born in Lapeer, Michigan to Donnie and Mary Duncan. She had a sister, Deanna, and a brother, Scott.[citation needed] Duncan was a writer, filmmaker, and computer-game creator who became known in the 1990s for developing graphic adventure games for girls, notably Chop Suey. She lived with Jeremy Blake in Los Angeles until 2007, when she and Blake moved to Manhattan.[1]
On her blog, The Wit of the Staircase, Duncan listed her interests as "film, philology, Vietnam War memorabilia, rare and discontinued perfume, book collecting, philately, card and coin tricks, futurism, Napoleon Bonaparte, the history of electricity."
Works
Duncan produced three CD-ROM computer games: Chop Suey, Smarty, and Zero Zero. The games were designed to be alternatives to a traditionally male-dominated field. They are story-based and as such revolve around search and discovery. Chop Suey, created with Monica Gesue and narrated by then-unknown author David Sedaris, was named "1995 CD-ROM of the Year" by Entertainment Weekly.[1] [2] (In 2015, all three games were restored and made playable online by the Internet-based arts organization Rhizome.[3]) She wrote and directed an animated film, The History of Glamour, which was selected for the 2000 Whitney Biennial.[4]
Duncan's writing was published in Artforum, Slate, and Bald Ego.
Death
Duncan was found dead in the East Village, Manhattan apartment she shared with Blake on July 10, 2007. The official cause of death was suicide as a result of the combined ingestion of Tylenol PM—a combination of acetaminophen and diphenhydramine—and alcohol.[1] Blake is believed to have killed himself a week later, having been seen walking into the Atlantic Ocean near Rockaway Beach by an anonymous 911 caller. According to friends of the couple, Duncan and Blake believed that they were being followed and harassed by Scientologists up to the point of their deaths.[5] After her death, two posts appeared on her web log (presumably written prior to her death).[6] The last one appeared on New Year's Eve, 2007.
In popular culture
On November 30, 2008 the New York Post's Page Six reported that Bret Easton Ellis is writing a screenplay about Duncan and Blake. Director Gus Van Sant has signed on as a consultant for the movie, which is being produced by Braxton Pope and Kevin Frakes.[7]
The Law & Order episode "Bogeyman" in season 18 is loosely based on the deaths of Duncan and Blake.[8] In the episode, the body of the character paralleling Theresa Duncan has forensic evidence that calls into question her suicide, while the Jeremy Blake parallel character survives his suicide attempt. A legal case against him is disrupted by the cult group Systemotics, resulting in a near mistrial followed by a plea accepted after the ADA implies both he and the judge are connected to Systemotics.
The Dot Hacker song "The Wit of The Staircase" is written about Duncan and Blake. Josh Klinghoffer was quoted as saying “That song (The Wit Of The Staircase) is based on Jeremy Blake and Theresa Duncan. They were a couple that killed themselves one week apart from each other. Their story fascinated me. One of the lines in the song, “May it come, the time, we will fall in love with” is something Theresa said once. I love that. I heard Bret Easton Ellis was writing a screenplay based on their story. I should look forward to that!”
Baron von Luxxury (aka Blake Robin)'s 2012 full-length album "The Last Seduction" featured several songs about Duncan and Blake,[9] both of whom were friends of his.[10] Duran Duran's John Taylor[11] named Robin's song "The Lovely Theresa" among his top 20 songs of 2012.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Amsden, David. "Why Did Theresa Duncan and Jeremy Blake Commit Suicide?" New York Magazine, August 20, 2007.[1]
- ↑ Burr, Ty. "1995 The Best & Worst/Multimedia", Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved on May 27, 2009.
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External links
- Online exhibition about Duncan's CD-ROMs, Rhizome, April 2015
- The Wit of the Staircase, Duncan's blog
- Mimi Smartypants Takes On the Assassins The New York Times, May 25, 1997
- The opposite of silence Ghost of a flea, July 25, 2007
- From Girl Games to Glamour Salon, Sept. 24, 1998
- No Pain, No Gain Slate, July 8, 2004 by Theresa Duncan
- Twin Bills, Selected for Gale's Best Literary Criticism
- Interview LAist, February 6, 2006
- Theresa Duncan Has Signed Off The Washington Post, August 1, 2007
- The Theresa Duncan Tragedy LA Weekly, August 1, 2007
- A Letter to Kate Coe: How You Got the Theresa Duncan Story Wrong August 9, 2007
- How Well Did Beck Know Theresa Duncan and Jeremy Blake? New York Magazine, December 11, 2007
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- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Articles with unsourced statements from June 2014
- 1966 births
- 2007 deaths
- Alcohol-related deaths in New York
- American bloggers
- American filmmakers
- American film critics
- American video game designers
- Critics of Scientology
- Designers who committed suicide
- Drug-related suicides in New York
- People from Lapeer County, Michigan
- Women video game developers
- Women film critics