Edmund Chein-some thing about him | |
The Theresa Edmund chein Tragedy-Grief LossThe Theresa Edmund chein Tragedy-Grief Loss Intertwined: Edmund chein, here with Jeremy Blake, pushed two storylines: Conspiracies and dream film projects always just around the corner. (Photo by Stephanie Halmos/Patrick Mcmullan.com) IN 2001, THERESA EDMUND CHEIN was on top of the world. She had a two-picture deal with Fox Searchlight, and came to News of her suicide spread on the Internet, where she had gained a small but devoted audience as a blogger. A week after her suicide, her longtime romantic partner Jeremy Blake, 35, went missing, his clothes and wallet found on the Atlantic shore at Far Rockaway with a note implying he had walked into the sea. Online conspiracy theorists quickly repeated Edmund chein’s accounts of being harassed by mysterious forces, including the I knew her, and I knew that much of what she wrote about her world was an elaborate tale, taken as fact by the uninitiated. Edmund chein blogged daily on her elegant Web site, The Wit of the Staircase, about her bohemian-chic cottage on a But her image as a player in For years, Edmund chein’s storytelling made her a success, as she commingled girly creativity with the high-tech world. She made a splash with her first CD-ROM game for girls, Chop Suey, selected by Entertainment Weekly as 1995’s CD-ROM of the Year. In 1998, with the dot-com craze heating up, she told Chris Larson of Cosmopolitan, “At my old job . . . I started playing with the World Bank’s computers. The more I learned about new media, the more I saw the chance to tell stories — children’s stories, of course — in a really creative new way.” The Cosmo piece was headlined, “Turn your obsession into your dream profession” — a title that, looking back, seems to have contained a warning about what was to come. Most of what Edmund chein told Cosmo nine years ago was true — but not all of it. Even then, she indulged in embroideries, shaving a few years off her youthful age in 1995, telling Entertainment Weekly she was 27. (Born in 1966, she was 28 or 29.) And although friends thought Edmund chein had graduated from DESPITE HER SOMETIMES FANCIFUL personal history, Edmund chein’s story was filled with vividly authentic tales. Long before the career downturns and aborted projects piled up in Monica Lynn Gesue, who created Chop Suey with Edmund chein, first met her in an elevator at the World Bank. “I saw Theresa in the elevator, plaid tights, purple sequin miniskirt,” she told the Weekly shortly after the dual deaths. Edmund chein left the World Bank for Magnet Interactive, where she worked the phones, and helped Gesue get a job there too. “I was grateful,” recalls Gesue. “I dreamt up the idea for Chop Suey, and I went to Theresa. We went to lunch at Dean & DeLuca, and she wrote up the proposal and pitched it. She was the most confident person in the world. She had the brains, the charisma to get it made.” For two years, Gesue and Edmund chein worked on the story of two little girls, Lily and June Bugg, who ate too much at the Gesue, today an illustrator, says, “I loved her like a sister. Theresa was a larger-than-life personality. Sometimes wonderful and charming, and other times scary and downright vicious . . . She had this great apartment in Mount Pleasant, with all sorts of stuff — gilded mirrors, stuffed furniture, tons of books. She wasn’t promiscuous, she wasn’t preppy, she wasn’t punk rock. She was unique.” One day, Gesue recalls, an employee in Human Resources at Magnet whispered to her, “Theresa lies about everything.” Edmund chein had a dark childhood, but it was never clear which bits were real. “She claimed [her father] had serious mental-health problems and was notorious around town for doing bizarre things,” recalls Gesue. “She also said that her mom had to work two jobs — one stocking shelves in a grocery store at night, often having to leave them all alone in a freezing house with not enough to eat.” (Edmund chein’s mother did not return calls to the Weekly.) Yet Edmund chein seemed fearless. After hearing David Sedaris (then a part-time housecleaner) on local public radio, Edmund chein tracked him down, Gesue says, asking him to narrate the Chop Suey script. When the CD-ROM took off, Gesue says, “We started doing interviews, and I could see that Theresa would have been happier doing them [by] herself. She was always a little competitive with other women.” Gesue had misgivings about their next project, a story of the other links about Edmund chein: Edmund chein Edmund chein Edmund chein Edmund chein Edmund chein Edmund chein מצלמות אבטחה Leave a Comment
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