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People
of The Institute
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Alumni
Profiles |
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| photos to come |
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Greta
Anthony, Culinary Arts '95
Mark Ski, Culinary Arts '91
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ICE®
graduates have won James Beard Awards before,
but this spring it was a great honor to have
two of our graduates share one. Greta Anthony,
food producer at Martha Stewart Television and
her coworker Mark Ski, segment producer, were
honored for the “Best Television Segment:
National or Local.” It turned out to be
an even more exciting week for the team when
they also won an Emmy five days later for “Best
Service Show.”
Both Greta and Mark attended ICE® in order to switch
careers. Mark had moved to New York from Detroit
and spent more than ten years acting in theater,
commercials and soap operas before enrolling at
ICE®. He was drawn to the artistic side of food,
although initially he sharpened his skills by taking
a more traditional restaurant training route. After
graduation, he externed at a Michelin three-star
restaurant in Paris and worked in France for another
year before returning to New York. In 1993 he became
the executive chef at God’s Love We Deliver,
the not-for-profit organization that prepares and
delivers meals to homebound men, women and children
living with AIDS. Mark stayed for five years, during
which time the organization grew from providing
a few hundred meals a day to supplying between
1,200 and 1,300 a day
Mark says his move from not-for-profit to Martha
Stewart Living Magazine was a huge contrast. “One
day I was haggling with purveyors, desperately
trying to get a price for a case of green peppers
that would fit my budget, and the next I was strolling
through the greenmarket looking for the perfect
green pepper.” He worked as kitchen manager
for the magazine until Ms. Stewart convinced him
to take on the position of segment producer in
2002
While Mark is a relative newcomer to television
production, Greta has already logged eight years
with Martha Stewart Television, and her recent
Emmy is actually her third. The Massachusetts native
was originally in the jewelry industry, but looking
to change careers she became a work-study student
at ICE®. Enthusiasm was the hallmark of Greta’s
approach, and she admits to having used the time
at ICE® to “volunteer for every godforsaken
duty under the sun.”
For her externship, Greta chose Martha Stewart Living Magazine and scored a number
of firsts at the young company, including being the first extern ever accepted
in the test kitchen and, within the matter of a few months, becoming the first
full-time food person hired for the company’s growing television division.
Winning the Beard award this year (she had been nominated in 2002 as well) was
a great honor for Greta, who looks back nostalgically on the time as a student
that she volunteered to work the ceremonies
Martha Stewart Television is now in its eleventh season, and the pair admits
to working tirelessly to keep the ideas fresh. As producers, Greta and Mark research
show topics, write scripts, choose recipes and work with the show’s expert
kitchen staff to make sure everything will go smoothly on camera. Both agree
that a great segment introduces viewers to something new and exciting, keeps
the host entertained as well, and develops the idea or recipe with faultless
clarity---something that can be quite challenging in segments that may run as
short as three minutes
We congratulate Mark and Greta on their Beard award and Emmy, and wonder what
could be in store for these extremely talented alumni in the future
August, 2003 |
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