Rebecca Harrell
Encyclopedia
Rebecca Harrell is an actress, producer, musician and environmental activist.
. She garnered a nomination for a Young Artist Award for Best Young Actress Starring in a Motion Picture. Movie critic Roger Ebert
highlighted Harrell's performance, saying "what really redeems the movie, taking it out of the category of kiddie picture and giving it a heart and gumption, is the performance by a young actress named Rebecca Harrell, as Jessica. She's something. She has a troublemaker's look in her eye, and a round, pixie face that's filled with mischief. And she's smart—a plucky schemer who figures out things for herself and isn't afraid to act on her convictions".
Harrell appeared in other films—most recently Sugar Creek
—before putting her acting career aside to focus on environmental activism. Harrell has been interviewed on The Today Show, by The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, and The Washington Post.
, Harrell educates people on different environmental issues, focusing on solutions, mainly algae-based biofuel
. Their production company, Green Planet Productions, makes feature length films and also specializes in video-centered campaigns for eco-minded companies and organizations.
Harrell produced Tickell's documentary film Fuel
, which won the 2008 Sundance Film Festival Audience Award for Best Documentary and was shortlisted for the Academy Awards. The film also won awards from the Sedona, Santa Cruz, Clarion, AFI Dallas, and Gaia film festivals. She also wrote and performed the song "Drive" for the film, which was shortlisted for a 2009 Academy Award for Best Original Song. In an interview about the film, Rebecca said: "...One great thing about FUEL is that we want to take people away from blaming others and stop [them from] saying one method is so much better than the others, and to encourage companies to partner."
Her book, "Hot, Rich and Green...The Secret Formula Women are Using to Get Rich and Save the Planet," gives a fresh perspective on the role women are playing in reshaping the environmental movement. "She may have penned Hot, Rich & Green, but Rebecca Harrell Tickell is her book’s message incarnate. Aside from working with hundreds of women (from CEOs of major nonprofits to entrepreneurs) to help them realize their green business aspirations, Rebecca is also half of one of Hollywood’s hottest green power couples with her husband, director Josh Tickell." Her book, Hot, Rich & Green, is described on her website as "offer(ing) profound value to its readers – it teaches women starting with only a desire to get into business for themselves and make a difference – exactly how to create and profit from businesses in the green space. The lessons in the book come directly from actual successes and failures of women who have lived the simple formulas presented in this book."
Acting career
Harrell had a starring role in the Christmas film PrancerPrancer (film)
Prancer is a 1989 family film starring Sam Elliott and Cloris Leachman. It was directed by John D. Hancock. It is set in Three Oaks, Michigan, where town exteriors were filmed...
. She garnered a nomination for a Young Artist Award for Best Young Actress Starring in a Motion Picture. Movie critic Roger Ebert
Roger Ebert
Roger Joseph Ebert is an American film critic and screenwriter. He is the first film critic to win a Pulitzer Prize for Criticism.Ebert is known for his film review column and for the television programs Sneak Previews, At the Movies with Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, and Siskel and Ebert and The...
highlighted Harrell's performance, saying "what really redeems the movie, taking it out of the category of kiddie picture and giving it a heart and gumption, is the performance by a young actress named Rebecca Harrell, as Jessica. She's something. She has a troublemaker's look in her eye, and a round, pixie face that's filled with mischief. And she's smart—a plucky schemer who figures out things for herself and isn't afraid to act on her convictions".
Harrell appeared in other films—most recently Sugar Creek
Sugar Creek (film)
Sugar Creek is a 2007 film. It is a supernatural western thriller, set in 1889 and filmed in Arkansas.-Plot summary:Sugar Creek follows Adam Stanton as he awakes, alone in a field and without his shoes...
—before putting her acting career aside to focus on environmental activism. Harrell has been interviewed on The Today Show, by The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, and The Washington Post.
Environmental activist and filmmaker
Traveling across the country with husband Josh TickellJosh Tickell
Josh Tickell is a professional speaker, author, filmmaker, and enthusiast on alternative fuels. His specific experience and focus is on biodiesel, a diesel engine fuel based in vegetable oil and electric vehicles....
, Harrell educates people on different environmental issues, focusing on solutions, mainly algae-based biofuel
Algae fuel
Algae fuel might be an alternative to fossil fuel and uses algae as its source of natural deposits. Several companies and government agencies are funding efforts to reduce capital and operating costs and make algae fuel production commercially viable...
. Their production company, Green Planet Productions, makes feature length films and also specializes in video-centered campaigns for eco-minded companies and organizations.
Harrell produced Tickell's documentary film Fuel
Fuel (film)
Fuel is a 2008 documentary film directed by Josh Tickell. It won the audience award at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. The DVD was released on June 22, 2010.-Editing:...
, which won the 2008 Sundance Film Festival Audience Award for Best Documentary and was shortlisted for the Academy Awards. The film also won awards from the Sedona, Santa Cruz, Clarion, AFI Dallas, and Gaia film festivals. She also wrote and performed the song "Drive" for the film, which was shortlisted for a 2009 Academy Award for Best Original Song. In an interview about the film, Rebecca said: "...One great thing about FUEL is that we want to take people away from blaming others and stop [them from] saying one method is so much better than the others, and to encourage companies to partner."
Her book, "Hot, Rich and Green...The Secret Formula Women are Using to Get Rich and Save the Planet," gives a fresh perspective on the role women are playing in reshaping the environmental movement. "She may have penned Hot, Rich & Green, but Rebecca Harrell Tickell is her book’s message incarnate. Aside from working with hundreds of women (from CEOs of major nonprofits to entrepreneurs) to help them realize their green business aspirations, Rebecca is also half of one of Hollywood’s hottest green power couples with her husband, director Josh Tickell." Her book, Hot, Rich & Green, is described on her website as "offer(ing) profound value to its readers – it teaches women starting with only a desire to get into business for themselves and make a difference – exactly how to create and profit from businesses in the green space. The lessons in the book come directly from actual successes and failures of women who have lived the simple formulas presented in this book."