Rick Gore | |
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Citizenship | American |
Education | Master's in Journalism |
Alma mater | Northwestern University |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1969 | –Present
Employers |
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Known for | National Geographic articles |
Family | Christopher Gore |
Rick Gore (born Richard Gore) is a former American writer, science editor and Senior Assistant Editor for National Geographic. He is credited with nineteen cover stories with the magazine. Gore is also an executive producer of theatre and a playwright.
Gore was born to Jack Gore, a former Fort Lauderdale News editor, and mother Betty Gore.[1] He is the younger brother of the late Christopher Gore,[2] who wrote the screenplay for the 1980 musical film, Fame, receiving an Oscar nomination for the Best Original Screenplay.[3]
Gore attended Northwestern University and received his master's degree in journalism.[4] He also completed the John S. Knight Journalism Fellowships at Stanford in 1988[5]
Before working for National Geographic, Gore was a reporter for Life magazine from 1969 to 1972. He joined the staff of National Geographic in 1974, where he remained until taking an early retirement in 2001.[6]
Gore produced more than sixty feature articles, serving much of his career there as Science Editor and is credited with nineteen cover stories with the magazine.[7][4]
Multiple articles were written by Gore on topics such as human evolution, for instance the August 2002 article titled "New Find", about the early expansions of hominins out of Africa.[8] He also has written about several subjects on space such as the March 1981 article titled "When the Space Shuttle Finally Flies", about the first flight of the U.S. space shuttle orbiter.[9]
Following his brother's death in 1988 from AIDS, Gore diverted part time to theater, revising with composer David Spangler, Christopher Gore's 1977 musical Nefertiti.[6] Several productions of Nefertiti resulted, in Key West, Chicago, Dayton, and a large scale production in Fort Lauderdale, Florida at the Parker Playhouse in 2005.[10]
Throughout this period Gore and Spangler also worked on an original musical, Surviving the Moonlight, that was based on eight songs Christopher Gore had written for an unfinished musical based on the French film classic, Children of Paradise. Surviving the Moonlight was produced in 2022 at Short North Stage[6] where Gore is a founding member and executive producer. Short North Stage is a theatre in Columbus, Ohio.[4]
Gore was married to Mary Frances Whittier Gore in 1967.[11] In 1990 Gore met his life partner Peter Yockel in Washington, D.C.. They were married in New York City in 2013.[6]