Kevin
Willmott
Associate
Professor


Department of Theatre and
Film
The University of Kansas
Oldfather Studios
1621 W. 9th Street, Room 218A
Lawrence, KS 66044
Phone: 785-864-1350
Fax: 785-331-2671
Email
Fall 2008 semester
Office hours:
Monday: 4:00-5:00 p.m.
Thursday: 9:00-11:00 a.m.
Courses:
- TH&F 384/884 History of African-American Images in Film
(#42822/42850)
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Kevin Willmott grew up
in Junction City, Kansas and received his BA in Drama from Marymount College
in Salina, Kansas. After graduation, he returned home and worked as a peace
and civil rights activist, fighting for the rights of the poor, creating two
Catholic Worker shelters for the homeless, and forcing the integration of several
long standing segregated institutions. He attended graduate studies at New York
University, Tisch School of the Arts, receiving several writing awards and his
M.F.A. in Dramatic Writing.
The play, T-Money
and Wolf, co-written with Ric Averill, which deals with the holocaust and
contemporary gang violence, was selected as part of the New Vision/New Voices
series produced by the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC. The play is published
by Dramatic Publishing.
As a screenwriter Willmott
co-wrote Shields Green and the Gospel Of John Brown with Mitch Brian.
The script was purchased by Chris Columbus’ 1492 Productions for 20th
Century Fox. He also co-wrote Civilized Tribes for Producer Robert
Lawrence and 20th Century Fox. Producer and director Oliver Stone hired Willmott
to co-write Little Brown Brothers about the Philippine Insurrection.
He also adapted the book Marching To Valhalla by Michael Blake for
Oliver Stone.
For television, Willmott
co-wrote with Brian House of Getty and The 70’s, both
mini-series for NBC. The 70’s aired in May of 2000.
Ninth Street,
an independent feature film starring Martin Sheen and Isaac Hayes, was written,
produced, and co-directed by Willmott. He also played the role of “Huddie”
one of the films main characters. Ninth Street is a comedy/drama based
on Willmott’s experiences growing up in the small town of Junction City,
Kansas that is adjacent to an army base. Set in 1968, the film deals with the
last days of one of the most notorious streets in the nation. It is distributed
by Ideal and was released in November of 1999 on video and DVD.
Most recently Willmott
authored Colored Men about the Houston riot of 1917. He also adapted “The
Watsons Go to Birmingham” for CBS, Columbia Tri-Star, and Executive Producer
Whoopi Goldberg. His current film, CSA: The Confederate States Of America,
is about the United States had the South won the Civil War.