Tanya Ryno is an American film and television producer,[1] director, and writer. She was Saturday Night Live 's film segment producer/head of production during the 1990s and produced many of the commercial parodies for which the show is noted along with the animated TV Funhouse segments. Ryno was one of very few women producing comedy sketches and animation shorts in the 1990s,[citation needed] with the organization Women in Animation originating several years after her career began.
Tanya Ryno | |
---|---|
Born | Tanya Lynn Grondin May 19, 1970 |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1992-present |
Spouse |
Jim Ryno (m. 1996) |
Children | 2 |
Website | www |
Early life
editRyno was born in Fort Lee (Virginia), at the Kenner Army Health Clinic, and is the daughter of Stephen Wayne Grondin and Donna Ruth Kitchen. Shortly after her birth, her father was transferred to the Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, the NATO headquarters in Belgium where they lived until 1972. From there her family moved to Bangor, Maine, where her parents were from. The next several years, Tanya's family would move to a new school district, almost annually, until she was a teenager where her parents settled in Hampden, Maine, so that she could attend all four years at Hampden Academy.
Tanya was an only child, until her parents divorced. She now has one half-brother, Wyatt Grondin, and three step-sisters, Naomi, Jodie, and Julie from their new marriages. After high-school, she moved to Florida to attend The Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale before transferring to the School of Visual Arts in New York City.
Career
editEarly career
editWhile attending college in Florida, Ryno began her career as a photographer and editor for a small publication in South Beach, Miami called Talent Times Magazine. When she transferred to the School of Visual Arts, in NYC, she continued as a photographer's assistant for several high profile fashion photographers.
Saturday Night Live
editIn the early 1990s, Tanya started working at Saturday Night Live. And in addition to the commercial parodies, Tanya was a producer for Robert Smigel's TV Funhouse series, including the award-winning Ambiguously Gay Duo, which was voiced by Steve Carell and Stephen Colbert, The X-Presidents, and Fun with Real Audio. She even produced the GoLords (Stop Motion) Puppet series written by Andrew Steele, which was short lived, but had a cult-like following. Tanya was also a producer for several prime time specials including The Best of Chris Farley compilation and The Best of Phil Hartman. The commercial parodies, she's best known for include: AM Ale, featuring David Koechner, Big Brawn Feminine Napkins, featuring Will Ferrell and Molly Shannon, Caribbean Essence Bath Oil, featuring Tracy Morgan and Cheri Oteri, Cookie Dough Sport, featuring Will Ferrell, and Martha Stewart's Topless Christmas Special.,[2] featuring Ana Gasteyer.
Tanya's most controversial segments were: One TV Funhouse segment, written by Robert Smigel that's claim to fame is that it only aired once. On the March 14, 1998 episode, featuring Julianne Moore and The Backstreet Boys. The segment titled "Conspiracy Theory Rock" was banned by Lorne Michaels immediately after it aired.[3][4] The other controversial segment Tanya was a producer on involved the Heaven's Gate Cult and mass suicide, where all the members were found wearing the same pair of Nike sneakers. Within days of the event, Saturday Night Live aired a satirical commercial parody that incorporated some of the actual news footage of the dead members, from their legs down, wearing Nike shoes. The tagline was: "Keds. Worn by level-headed Christians."[5][6]
Other film and video work
editRyno was a producer on New York at the Movies for A&E. A documentary hosted by Meryl Streep that included over 14 film legends (including: Martin Scorsese, Sidney Lumet, Spike Lee, Nora Ephron, Edward Burns, and John Turturro) giving their real-life experiences of making movies in New York City. With the tagline of "You can't fake New York".
Ryno also produced Coney Island Baby,[7] an award-winning romantic comedy that takes place in Sligo, Ireland and made its premiere television broadcast on the Sundance Channel. It was direct by Amy Hobby who won best first time director[8] for the film.
Throughout those years, she also worked freelance with the ESPY's, the American Music Awards, and several commercial productions including Levi Strauss & Co., American Express, Toys R Us, microsoft, and Lincoln. She produced and directed a segment of a behind-the-music piece for a collaboration[9][10] between Xbox 360 and 343 Industries featuring Soulja Boy, Xzibit, DJ Skee, Prodigy from Mobb Deep, and T-Boz aka Tionne Watkins all discussing the special relationship between music and video games while featuring the newest Halo franchise to be released that year, Halo4.
For Funny or Die Tanya, produced, co-wrote and co-directed with Motion Family the comedy film short "Big Tweet" featuring, Brandon T Jackson, Sydney Tamiia Poitier, DJ Skee and Jason Beghe.
She produced a couple music videos worth noting, in 2011 Tanya produced and directed a raw indie style music video [11] for blues dynamo Gina Sicilia's hit "Addicted" and in 2012 she produced "Rap'n'Rolla" for the popular Russian Rap Artist, Alexander Stepanov, aka ST, directed by Motion Family.[12][13]
Ryno also ventured into publishing and created the New Jersey Production Guide, claiming to be the first comprehensive resource for film production, commercial productions, and television production in the state of New Jersey. She published this 200 page guide in both 1998 and 2000.[14]
Selected filmography
edit- Coney Island Baby [15] (2003) is a comedy-drama in which Ryno made her producing debut for a feature-length film.
Also see:
Awards
editYear | Result | Award | Category | Nominated Work |
---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Won | Inspiring Filmmaker Award | Detroit Trinity Film Festival | Big Tweet |
2005 | Won | Best First Time Director | Newport Int. Film Festival | Coney Island Baby |
1998 | Nom | Annie Award | International Animated Film Association | Titey - TV Funhouse |
Publications
edit- Beyond the Ocean Waves 2021 ISBN 9798533038539 Based on a true story, Tanya's real life is included in this "truth is stranger than fiction" memoir written by her good friend T. Edwards Brown.
References
edit- ^ The Hollywood reporter, Volume 393. Hollywood Reporter Inc. 2006. p. lxxxii.
- ^ Entertainment Weekly, Ana Gasteyer says playing topless Martha Stewart on Saturday Night Live was when she knew she wouldn't be fired. 2021.
- ^ UPROXX, Robert Smigel Set The Record Straight On The Story Of A Kinda Banned Sketch From SNL's TV Funhouse. 2022.
- ^ VULTURE, Watch the Media-Conspiracy TV Funhouse Segment SNL Banned in 1998. 2012.
- ^ Oxygen, How Heaven's Gate's Choice Of Nikes For Mass Suicide Became A Cultural Touchstone. 2020.
- ^ ADWEEK, An Endorsement Nike Didn't Want. 1997.
- ^ Variety (film review). 2003.
- ^ IMDB, Newport International Film Festival, 2003 Awards. 2003.
- ^ Halo 4 Mini-Documentary featuring Xzibit, Soulja Boy, DJ Skee, Prodigy, T-Boz, Sick Jacken and Ephraim Salaam. 2012.
- ^ Tanya Ryno, Halo 4 - Mini Documentary. 2012.
- ^ Blues Blast Magazine, Featured Interview - Gina Sicilia. 2011.
- ^ The Strip, Alexander Stepanov Biography - Musical career. 2020.
- ^ Tanya Ryno, Rap'n'Rolla Music Video. 2012.
- ^ Variety, New guide to give the lowdown on Jersey. 1998.
- ^ Variety, Coney Island Baby. 2003.
External links
edit- Official Website at TanyaRyno.com
- Tanya Ryno at IMDb
- Coney Island Baby Clip on the Sundance Channel.
- Tanya Ryno at IRON HOUSE DESIGN