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Josephine Musto, NP-C newyorkpaincare.com | Michael W. Gorum, M.D. columbusregional.com | Michael Covinsky, MD, PhD - Pathology and Laboratory Medicine dpalm.med.uth.tmc.edu |
Michael Musto (born December 3, 1955) is an American writer who began his professional career at The Village Voice, where he writes the weekly La Dolce Musto celebrity and gossip column. He is an Italian American and a graduate of Columbia University, where he was a theater critic for the Columbia Spectator.[1] He is the author of Downtown and Manhattan on the Rocks. A selection of his columns has been published as La Dolce Musto.
[edit] Early lifeMusto was born in Brooklyn, New York. He wrote movie reviews as a child, and acted in plays as a way to overcome his shyness.[1] He graduated from New Utrecht High School in Brooklyn in 1972 and from Columbia College of Columbia University in 1976, where he performed with the Barnard Gilbert and Sullivan Society.[2] [edit] Career
Musto began his Village Voice column in 1984, after having already written some feature stories for the publication.[4] He is a recurring guest on several TV shows including Countdown with Keith Olbermann and others on the E! channel. He is openly gay and is published regularly in several gay publications, including Out Magazine and ShowPeople. He appeared in drag in a blue dress in the all drag queen music video for Cyndi Lauper's single "Hey Now (Girls Just Want To Have Fun)", and as a reporter in the film Garbo Talks. Musto was named Best Gossip Columnist in a poll conducted by nycsidewalk.com,[citation needed] and in 2002, a UPI profile of Musto called him "one of the wittiest stylists in the English language".[5] Musto is also known as the author of articles in the Village Voice that cited rumours about the murder of Angel Melendez. The result of this and subsequent publications by Musto regarding the murder brought to attention a case in which police were otherwise uninterested and resulted in the trial and conviction of Michael Alig and Robert "Freez" Riggs. On the June 14, 2007 edition of Countdown with Keith Olbermann, Musto coined the word 'celebutard' (combination of the words 'celebrity', 'debutante', and 'retard') to describe celebutantes Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan. [edit] Published worksMusto has authored three books:
Musto has provided requested contributions to four published works:
[edit] References
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