

Stacy Cusulos is a minister, designer, trainer, facilitator,
singer, songwriter, scriptwriter and producer. Clients in the
private sector include Hewlett Packard, Levi Strauss,
Sun Microsystems, The GAP, Inc., the Institute for Women’s
Leadership, California State Automobile Association, First
American Title Company and Charles Schwab & Company.
Other customized projects resulted in many productions
including:
- The Justice Curriculum for the United Church of Christ, including course content, 3-day training, leaders’ guides and participant handbooks
- Case of Janis and Case of Vanessa (Intercultural Press) focusing on issues of gender and race. Used throughout United States, Europe and Asia to promote authentic conversations on diversity. Inspired by methods of Anna Deavere Smith
- Case of Janis dramatized, filmed and made into training DVDs by production company, funded by large hospital chain
- TV Interview about a lesbian mom with African-American children in suburbia
- “This Love”, 16 songs about the first 10 years of my 35 year lesbian relationship, cassette produced and distributed through women’s music catalogues and later re-mastered as a CD and sold over the web
- West Coast Women’s Music Festival & women’s events: performed selections from cassette/CD
- Ariadne, a play written by Batya Podos, music written and performed by Stasia Cusulos; recorded and aired on KQED (PBS station in San Francisco Bay Area)
- Sappho, a musical rendering of her poetry for one time celebration in Mt. Tamalpais amphitheater, music by Stasia Cusulos
- Sabar, produced by Chike Nwoffiah (consultant to Steven Spielberg on Amistad); consultant & actor in this love story exploring connections between African-Americans and Africans, (premiered in California & Nigeria in March 2007)
- American Family: Things Racial with Barbara Waugh, my partner (and author of Soul in the Computer), about our experiences as 2 white moms raising our two African-American children, adopted at birth and now 23 and 21,
and beginning the next generation with our grandchildren, now six years and one year old.
