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Jill Morley is a writer/filmmaker/actress and the director of the critically acclaimed
documentary, STRIPPED. STRIPPED will make its cable debut on the Sundance Channel in August,
2003. STRIPPED premiered at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival and toured Australia
and New Zealand as the only feature selected for the Women In Film tour. It went on to screen
at several film festivals. Theatrically, STRIPPED played at the Screening Room in New York
city and was held over for a week. It also played at the Sunset Laemmle Theater in Los Angeles.
Vanguard Cinema has released STRIPPED on video/DVD nationwide. (Amazon.com) For the DVD, Morley
directed her first music video, "Take It Off," featuring rocker Debra DeSalvo.
Previously, Morley wrote and performed the play, True Confessions of a Go-Go Girl, which is
published in The Best Women's Plays of 1998. True Confessions was produced in Manhattan; San
Francisco's "Solo Mio Festival," along with John Waters and Eric Bogosian; The "Texas Fringe
Festival"; LA's HBO Workspace; and opened Women's History month at NYU.
As a writer and performer, Morley received rave reviews from The New York Times, Village Voice,
Backstage, New York Newsday and Time-Out New York. She has been interviewed for EXTRA, both in
the U.S and Germany; A Current Affair, WKTLA, City TV (Canada), New Jersey's Talking, Partytalk,
Unsolved Mysteries, Shout magazine and various webzines. Besides being published periodically in
The Village Voice, Gear Magazine, The New York Press, Playgirl, Penthouse, and Shout magazine,
some of Morley's newest monologues are included in More Women's Monologues for Women, by Women.
She co-produced two radio documentaries for The World and This American Life, which aired on NPR.
Highlights of Morley's acting career include a role in Hal Hartley's Henry Fool, and working as
a correspondent in Michael Moore's The Awful Truth. She also enjoyed being directed by Paul
Sills, founder of Chicago's Second City, in an original story theatre production; playing
Jackie Kennedy for Japanese television, and playing Queen of the Goggleheads for the Sci-Fi
channel.
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