2024 Fellowship Class

Kristen Angonese

Kristen is a disabled, LGBTQ+ writer originally from a small town in Michigan who has lived several lives, ranging from engineering design for Swiffer/Mr. Clean to market research for the video game FarmVille. (Yes, that FarmVille). Realizing corporate life was killing her, she pivoted into screenwriting, and the rest is history. She loves creating  immersive worlds or embellishing reality to make it more interesting. Yet, her stories are emotionally grounded, centered on strong women learning to embrace their best selves with the support of a found family.

Matthew Charles

Matthew Charles is a Black, disabled storyteller with over a decade of experience across a variety of mediums. Raised in snowy Minnesota, he came to California for film school. Shocking to no one, he did not miss the winters. Since then, he's written for film, television, podcasts, video games, tabletop gaming books, and later this fall, comics. His goal is the same as it's always been - to create worlds equal to the comics, video games, and fantasy works that inspired him, and to tell the stories of the colorful outcasts he has been, known, and loved all his life.

Sessen Mengist

Sessen is an Eritrean-American writer still reeling from the culture and, more importantly, temperature shock of emigrating from East Africa to the suburbs of Minnesota. Inspired by the sci-fi and fantasy stories that helped her escape from reality during those early years in the US, her writing often explores morality and relationships in hypothetical, fantastical worlds. Her ideas usually start like 2000s film trailers: “in a world where…” She also enjoys adding African elements to her stories, taking inspiration from African cultures, languages, and mythologies. Gratefully, she now resides in sunny LA.

Taylor Stuckey

Taylor Stuckey is a writer-director graduate of USC's School of Cinematic Arts who combines her illustrious career of being too online with an eclectic taste for trash and pulp to make art about the pain and humor of desire. To her, concepts like "representation," "the self," and "wearing clothing in public" are soul-sucking traps. Her mission is to discover and create wholly original kinds of disgusting, off-putting stories. Like, just really upsetting overall.

Gilani Sumida-Moiseff

Gilani Sumida-Moiseff is a screenwriter from Honolulu, Hawaii. She is a graduate of Carnegie Mellon University (Bachelor of Humanities and Arts) and New York University, Tisch School of the Arts Asia (Master of Fine Arts). She began her career as a Location Department production assistant on the O’ahu, Hawaii sets of Kong: Skull Island. She then continued her career in episodic television and feature films on shows like Hawaii 5-0, Snatched, God Friended Me, FBI: Most Wanted, Only Murders in the Building, Feud: Capote vs. The Swans, and The Night Agent. She is a member of the International Brotherhood of Theatrical Teamsters 817 as a Location Department Coordinator, and is currently based out of New York City.

Peter Vicaire

Peter Vicaire is First Nations (Mi’gmaq) and grew up in Listuguj, a reservation in Quebec, Canada. He’s an honorably-discharged U.S. Marine Corps veteran who served with the 8th & I Presidential Honor Guard in Washington D.C. as well as an infantry squad leader with 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines, 1st Marine Division. He has a Master’s Degree in Military History and wields two law degrees - one Canadian (University of Ottawa) and another, American (Michigan State University). Upon graduation, Peter was also selected as the Fellow for Michigan State University’s Indigenous Law and Policy Program. He has been published in several academic journals on Indian law topics. He now works for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs on behalf of Native American veterans, servings as a liaison with 74 Native American tribal governments across 14 states.