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Craig T. Williams

President & CEO

Craig's Blog

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Craig T. Williams - As CEO of Red Wall Productions, he has produced over 50 film projects including independent short films, promotional videos, educational films, actors reels and the ground breaking documentary BLACK SORORITY PROJECT. Craig has just finished rewriting and will co-produce his first feature film JIMMIE, slated to begin production 2008. His wife and partner, Rosalyn Coleman Williams will direct JIMMIE. Craig raised and managed the necessary capital to produce all of Red Wall’s endeavors, bringing in all projects on time and within budget.

In addition to JIMMIE, and the award winning short film Allergic To Nuts, Craig has written several other feature screenplays including: Cape of Good Hope, Game Night, Untitled Body Switch Gospel Music Comedy. Short screenplays include Powerless, Moth To A Flame, Haunted Education, Ends & Beginnings, Twisted, Scrambled Softly, Three Weeks In Hell, Powerless and Pancakes & Breakups.

Having studied at the renowned Stella Adler Conservatory, Craig has appeared in over fifty stage productions in New York and around the world. His stage credits include The Elevator, Delicious Vaudeville and Adopt a Sailor with Eli Wallach and Anne Jackson. He received Best Actor award at the Chuncheon International Theatre Festival in Seoul, South Korea in a production of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare.

Craig has also been seen in a number of independent feature films such as FOR JAKES SAKE, NOW YOU HAS JAZZ, and YOU RASCAL YOU. He received acclaim for his featured work in the short film THE WINDOW at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival.

Craig began writing in 1999 and participated in a professional writer’s workshop at the School for Visual Arts. He honed his screenwriting skills with Robert McKee and David S. Freeman’s story and structure workshops. Craig is a proud member of the East Coast Writers Collective.

At the School for Visual Arts he was in the film-directing workshop as both an actor and as a director. He also participated in the professional director’s workshop at the School For Film and Television.

At the School for Visual Arts he was in the film-directing workshop as both an actor and as a director. He also participated in the professional director’s workshop at the School For Film and Television. .

A native New Yorker, Craig was born in Harlem, and raised in the Bronx. He was a Junior Tennis Champion having trained at the Harlem Tennis Center. In 1989 he gave back to the community by opening a free Tennis Camp for children ages 7-17. He solicited corporations for donations, equipment and court time. No child was ever turned away. Currently he gives back by helping children develop plays and short films in several after school programs in the New York City area.

Craig’s blog yobabydaddy.blogspot.com is a series of essays and prose about the joy and power and fear of raising a black male, his son Coleman.