Elizabeth Guyton
- Actress
- Art Department
- Costume and Wardrobe Department
Elizabeth Guyton was introduced at the age of 13 to film making by cousin Ralph Clemente, who needed a water girl for "The Inning of the Week", a 1975 satire of American televised sports released in Europe. After receiving a BFA in Painting from The University of Colorado, Boulder, Guyton returned to her hometown of Miami in 1983 and crewed an untold number of TV commercials during the season, as well as many feature length films during the summers. Her work includes positions as Set Designer and Builder, Art Director, Costume Designer, Food Stylist, and Props Master. Notable among the feature length films was the post-Vietnam "Cease Fire", starring Don Johnson (before his interview for "Miami Vice"), also produced by Clemente.
In 1987, Guyton returned to academia after expressing a strong desire "to create permanent 3-D space, not just sets that dissolve at the end of filming" and pursued architecture at the University of Miami. Two subsequent degrees - Bachelor of Architecture, and Master of Architecture - complement her experience in film making while the drama of films informs her architecture and urban designs.
Guyton's film work today focuses on biographies and documentaries, including "La Muneca (Dolly)", a 2009 murder mystery of a Santa Barbara housewife, filmed on location in Baja, MX. Rough reports on politics depicted in the Oil Spill Trilogy (Oil Spill Crisis:Day 27, 34, and 76), filmed on location in and around New Orleans in 2010, have led to unceasing acts of police brutality that have followed Guyton from coast to coast since the Trilogy was posted on YouTube. On 26 and 27 OCT2014, while living in Mississippi, Guyton was shot five times by law enforcement after complaining of public corruption and national security racketeering. Her cabin was afterwards ransacked while all evidence she had been collecting since 2010 was stolen by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation.
In 1987, Guyton returned to academia after expressing a strong desire "to create permanent 3-D space, not just sets that dissolve at the end of filming" and pursued architecture at the University of Miami. Two subsequent degrees - Bachelor of Architecture, and Master of Architecture - complement her experience in film making while the drama of films informs her architecture and urban designs.
Guyton's film work today focuses on biographies and documentaries, including "La Muneca (Dolly)", a 2009 murder mystery of a Santa Barbara housewife, filmed on location in Baja, MX. Rough reports on politics depicted in the Oil Spill Trilogy (Oil Spill Crisis:Day 27, 34, and 76), filmed on location in and around New Orleans in 2010, have led to unceasing acts of police brutality that have followed Guyton from coast to coast since the Trilogy was posted on YouTube. On 26 and 27 OCT2014, while living in Mississippi, Guyton was shot five times by law enforcement after complaining of public corruption and national security racketeering. Her cabin was afterwards ransacked while all evidence she had been collecting since 2010 was stolen by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation.