Kathleen Dougherty(II)
- Additional Crew
Kathleen began in theatre at the age of twelve on the island of
Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. Future study and work followed while
attending Georgetown University in Washington, DC; the prestigious
Eugene O'Neill Theater Center's National Theater Institute in
Waterford, Connecticut; the UCLA Summer Theater Workshop; and the
Zephyr Theater in Los Angeles, California.
In 1999, Kathleen moved to New York and pursued careers in both the non-profit and corporate worlds. She worked as an Associate in the Program Planning and Research department at Phoenix House Foundation, Inc. She then entered the world of advertising, working for renowned adman and visionary Peter Arnell of The Arnell Group, an advertising and brand-consulting agency. Kathleen served as Account Executive on Farmclub.com, an internet record label and television show, co-owned by Edgar Bronfman Jr., Doug Morris and Jimmy Iovine of Universal Music Group. With Jose Cuervo, a leading spirit brand, she managed the 2000 global launch of the Cuervo tequila campaign comprising of print and outdoor advertising, as well as national/international radio and television spots. Simultaneously, she also co-produced and general managed the original Off-Broadway production of "Tricycle" at New York's Classic Stage Company. Kathleen returned to Los Angeles in late 2002, where she began developing and producing a dark comedy feature with Dan Aykroyd attached, entitled "Getting the Dirt." By early 2004, she also partnered on the documentary "Huldefolk 102" (aka "The Hidden People"), based on a paranormal phenomenon set on the island of Iceland. In 2006, she appeared in Eve Ensler's "The Vagina Monologues," as part of Ensler's V-Day Worldwide Campaign 2006; a global non-profit that has raised over $80M to stop violence against women and girls. Further, she was also the marketing and distribution consultant for Riddle Productions' thrice Emmy nominated interactive broadband series "Stranger Adventures."
Finally, from 2006-2010, Kathleen was the Co-President of Codfish Entertainment, a creative production house that specialized in mobile content and new media creative properties, developing and producing original web, mobile and television content. In addition, from 2007-2009, Kathleen also produced a series of six documentaries for the National Endowment for the Arts' "The Big Read" - the largest literature program in US history, promoting popular American literature by bringing it back into the community through nationwide library and school initiatives. Prolific American authors Ray Bradbury, Amy Tan, Tobias Wolff, Ernest J Gaines, Rudolfo Anaya and Cynthia Ozick are the subjects of her films, directed by renowned commercial director and editor Lawrence Bridges of Red Car, Inc.
Kathleen resides in Los Angeles and is Creator and Executive Producer of the new television documentary series "Theory of Change," profiling iconic philanthropists, domestically and abroad, in an effort to promote and inspire service throughout our global community.
In 1999, Kathleen moved to New York and pursued careers in both the non-profit and corporate worlds. She worked as an Associate in the Program Planning and Research department at Phoenix House Foundation, Inc. She then entered the world of advertising, working for renowned adman and visionary Peter Arnell of The Arnell Group, an advertising and brand-consulting agency. Kathleen served as Account Executive on Farmclub.com, an internet record label and television show, co-owned by Edgar Bronfman Jr., Doug Morris and Jimmy Iovine of Universal Music Group. With Jose Cuervo, a leading spirit brand, she managed the 2000 global launch of the Cuervo tequila campaign comprising of print and outdoor advertising, as well as national/international radio and television spots. Simultaneously, she also co-produced and general managed the original Off-Broadway production of "Tricycle" at New York's Classic Stage Company. Kathleen returned to Los Angeles in late 2002, where she began developing and producing a dark comedy feature with Dan Aykroyd attached, entitled "Getting the Dirt." By early 2004, she also partnered on the documentary "Huldefolk 102" (aka "The Hidden People"), based on a paranormal phenomenon set on the island of Iceland. In 2006, she appeared in Eve Ensler's "The Vagina Monologues," as part of Ensler's V-Day Worldwide Campaign 2006; a global non-profit that has raised over $80M to stop violence against women and girls. Further, she was also the marketing and distribution consultant for Riddle Productions' thrice Emmy nominated interactive broadband series "Stranger Adventures."
Finally, from 2006-2010, Kathleen was the Co-President of Codfish Entertainment, a creative production house that specialized in mobile content and new media creative properties, developing and producing original web, mobile and television content. In addition, from 2007-2009, Kathleen also produced a series of six documentaries for the National Endowment for the Arts' "The Big Read" - the largest literature program in US history, promoting popular American literature by bringing it back into the community through nationwide library and school initiatives. Prolific American authors Ray Bradbury, Amy Tan, Tobias Wolff, Ernest J Gaines, Rudolfo Anaya and Cynthia Ozick are the subjects of her films, directed by renowned commercial director and editor Lawrence Bridges of Red Car, Inc.
Kathleen resides in Los Angeles and is Creator and Executive Producer of the new television documentary series "Theory of Change," profiling iconic philanthropists, domestically and abroad, in an effort to promote and inspire service throughout our global community.