As Sr.VP of Video, Digital and New Media for Breaking Records, Sherrie Fell is charged with branding and marketing the new Manhattan-based label imprint with all the tools available in an increasingly frenzied technology-driven media arena.
A Final Cut, pro-based editor with well-entrenched skills at putting music to video, she is also a tenacious creative talent in the areas of concept marketing and promotion.
In 2003, Fell launched multi-media outlet 7th Street Entertainment. Recent projects include editing the ESPN documentary “7th Inning Stretch” and assistant directing, producing and editing a music video for breakout band LOURDS (the first act signed to Breaking Records). Post production and onsite production work includes Comedy Central’s “Stella,” the NBA Basketball Hall of Fame, “Showtime at the Apollo” and the airing of premiere documtaries on TV networks A&E, E! and FUSE.
An avid music historian and practiced comedienne, Fell also hosts radio shows “Funny, Isn’t it?” and “Inside Music.” The latter features interviews with music industry executives, songwriters, producers, artists, remixers, nationally known journalists and radio veterans discussing current trends in the industry. She writes and produces these shows for WPS1 art radio, part of the MoMA, which broadcasts from the historic Clocktower building in New York (www.WPS1.org).
Born in Queens, N.Y., Fell grew on up on “All in the Family” and the Carpenters. She earned an BFA in Acting from the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University and attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. She has performed at many of the Northeast region’s premiere comedy clubs, including Carolines, Gotham Comedy Club and Boston Comedy club.
She also appeared in Wes Anderson’s film “The Royal Tennenbaums” and earned minor roles in HBO’s “Sex and the City” and in the TV show, “Get Fit To Go,” which she also helped create, write and produce. Fell has written two screenplays currently in development, “The Kiss” and “Adorable Illusions.”
Finally, Fell can be heard as the voice of Kyota in the Japanese
animated cartoon “Munto.”