Nate Diana Stevenson[1] or simply ND Stevenson[2] (formerly Noelle Stevenson; born December 31, 1991) is an American cartoonist and animation producer. He is the creator, showrunner, and executive producer of the animated television series She-Ra and the Princesses of Power which ran from 2018 to 2020. He is also known for the fantasy webcomic Nimona, his work on the comics series Lumberjanes, and his autobiographical collection, The Fire Never Goes Out.
Stevenson's work has won multiple Eisner Awards as well as a Daytime Emmy Award and a GLAAD Media Award. Stevenson is non-binary and transmasculine and has written about being transgender in his webcomic I'm Fine I'm Fine Just Understand.
Early life
ND Stevenson was born on December 31, 1991, in Columbia, South Carolina, to Diana and Hal Stevenson.[3][4][5] He is the third of five siblings.[6]
Stevenson was homeschooled before attending A.C. Flora High School. During his senior year, he created picture books and won a local award in the Visual Literacy Book Production category.[6][7]
Career
Education and Nimona
See also: Nimona
Stevenson attended the Maryland Institute College of Art, graduating in 2013.[8][7] While there, Stevenson gained fame as a fan artist under the name "gingerhaze" for his "hipster Lord of the Rings" characters.[9] He also created cover art for Rainbow Rowell's novel Fangirl, which was published in 2013.
During his junior year, he created his soon-to-be popular character Nimona as part of an assignment in one of his classes.[10] In mid-2012, Stevenson began creating a webcomic around the character, also called Nimona, and soon signed with a literary agent who found the webcomic online. The agent helped him sign with HarperCollins to publish Nimona as a graphic novel.[10]Nimona would double as Stevenson's senior thesis in 2012.[8] For his work on Nimona, Stevenson won Slate Magazine's 2012 Cartoonist Studio Prize for Best Web Comic of the Year[11] and the 2016 Eisner Award for Best Graphic Album: Reprint.[10] Stevenson was also named a 2015 National Book Award Finalist for the graphic novel version of Nimona.[10] Stevenson said that the ability to create comics on his own and create Nimona was what got him a "writing job in animation," bringing him into the animation world.[12]
In the summer of 2012, Stevenson interned at BOOM! Studios, a comic publishing house in Los Angeles.[13]
Lumberjanes and Marvel Comics
After his graduation in 2013, Stevenson returned to BOOM! Studios to help develop, and eventually write, Lumberjanes.[13]Lumberjanes won Eisner Awards for Best New Series and Best Publication for Teens in 2015.[14]
In 2015, Stevenson wrote for Marvel Comics on the comics Thor Annual[15][16] and Runaways.[17][18]
She-Ra and other animation
Stevenson was part of the writing team of Disney's animated TV series Wander Over Yonder, beginning with Season 2 in 2015.[19]
Stevenson was the creator and executive producer of DreamWorks Animation's rebooted She-Ra and the Princesses of Power animated television series on Netflix, which ran for five seasons from 2018 to 2020[20][21]She-Ra received critical acclaim, with particular praise for its diverse cast and the complex relationship between She-Ra and her best friend-turned-archenemy Catra. In 2019, the show was nominated for a GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Kids & Family Programming,[22] as well as a Daytime Emmy Award at the 46th Daytime Emmy Awards. In 2021, the series was tied with First Day when it won the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Kids and Family Programming.[23][24][25][26]
Other work
Stevenson in 2015
Stevenson did freelance illustration for Random House, St. Martin's Press, and Label Magazine. He also worked with Ryan North on his book To Be or Not to Be (2013), a choose-your-own-adventure-book based on Shakespeare's Hamlet.[13]
In 2017, Stevenson appeared in two episodes of Critical Role's first campaign as Tova.[27] He has subsequently appeared in three Critical Role one-shot episodes between 2017 and 2022 as himself, Tova, and Peter Pan.[28][29][30] His character Tova will be featured in an upcoming line of Critical Role miniatures by WizKids.[31]
His autobiographical collection of drawings and journals, The Fire Never Goes Out, was published in March 2020. The New Yorker's review described it as "a memoir of sorts ... , a coming-out story, a love story, a tale of disorientingly rapid professional triumph, and a story about mental health and illness, showing the young artist figuring out what [he] must do-first to make art and then to get well."[32]
In October 2021, Stevenson started a Substack titled "I'm Fine I'm Fine Just Understand" which will explore topics such as mental health, gender identity, and more, with premium subscribers given access to comics which "reflect more personal/sensitive topics."[33][34] In August 2022, the Substack was nominated for a Digital Book of the Year Harvey Award.[35][36]
On February 4, 2022, Stevenson posted a fan comic of The Book of Boba Fett entitled "This Place Was Home" on Twitter.[37][38]
Personal life
Stevenson married fellow cartoonist Molly Knox Ostertag in September 2019.[39] He began working on She-Ra and the Princesses of Power at the same time that he began dating Ostertag,[40] who was influential on the show "from the very beginning",[41] coming up with a major plot twist in the show's final season.[42]
In July 2020, Stevenson announced that he was "nonbinary, or something like it", and uses any personal pronouns.[43][44] In November 2020, Stevenson published a comic[45] about his top surgery.[46] On March 31, 2021, the International Transgender Day of Visibility, Stevenson stated that he is transmasculine and bigender.[47]
On October 11, 2020, National Coming Out Day, Stevenson wrote and illustrated his coming out story for Oprah Magazine. He described his journey to self-acceptance, his "battle against the gender essentialism of [his] Evangelical upbringing", and stated that he had become an atheist by age 23.[48]
In an August 2020 interview, Stevenson stated that he is bipolar.[49] In February 2021, he mentioned having ADHD in an interview and its impact on his work and life during the COVID-19 pandemic.[50]
In August 2021, Stevenson changed his first name to ND, as noted by CBR, Out Magazine, ComicsBeat, Xtra Magazine, and Bleeding Cool.[51][52][53][54][55] In October 2021, Stevenson said that he was "becoming increasingly aware of the practical need for a new, less gendered [name]... right now I don't really feel like I have one".[56] On June 30, 2022, Stevenson announced he chose the name Nate, which he had been using privately since 2021, while being addressed as "ND Stevenson" professionally, and said his personal pronouns are he/him. He also said that he accepted "Indy" as a nickname.[1][2]
Bibliography
Graphic novels
Nimona (HarperCollins, 2015)
Graphic non-fiction
The Fire Never Goes Out: A Memoir in Pictures (HarperCollins, 2020)
BOOM! Studios
"The Sweater Bandit" (in Adventure Time with Fionna & Cake #1, January 2013, collected in Volume 1: Mathemagical Edition, tpb, 160 pages, 2013)
"Desert Treasure" ( in Adventure Time 2013 Summer Special, July 2013)
Lumberjanes #1–17 (April 2014–August 2015)
Volume 1: Beware the Kitten Holy (collects #1–4, writer with Grace Ellis and Brooke Allen, tpb, 128 pages, 2015)
Volume 2: Friendship to the Max (collects #5–8, writer with Grace Ellis and Brooke Allen, tpb, 112 pages, 2015)
Volume 3: A Terrible Plan (collects #9–12, writer with Shannon Watters and Carolyn Nowak, tpb, 112 pages, 2016)
Volume 4: Out of Time (collects #14-17, writer with Shannon Watters and Brooke Allen, tpb, 112 pages, 2016)
Volume 5: Band Together (includes #13, writer with Shannon Watters and Brooke Allen, tpb, 116 pages, 2016)
"Doomed Youth" (writer with Sanford Greene, in #1–4, 2015)
"Thor" (writer with Marguerite Sauvage, in Thor Annual #1, April 2015, collected in Volume 2: Who Holds the Hammer?, hc, 136 pages, 2015)
DC Comics
"Wonder World" (artist with James Tynion IV, in Sensation Comics Featuring Wonder Woman #23–24, February 2015, collected in Volume 2, tpb, 144 pages, 2015)
Critical Role has no writers in the traditional sense as it is an actual play web series; it relies on improvisation and collaborative storytelling through Dungeons & Dragons and other role-playing game systems.
References
ND Stevenson(w,a)."Nate"I'm Fine I'm Fine Just Understand(June 30, 2022),Online (webcomic):Substack
McCauley, Tara (July 1, 2022). "She-Ra Showrunner Reveals His New Name, Pronouns With a Charming Mini-Comic". CBR. Retrieved July 1, 2022. In Stevenson’s comic, shared via Twitter, the artist reintroduced himself to fans as Nate, a name which he stated he’s been 'using privately with close friends for almost a year.' While Stevenson now uses he/him pronouns, he discussed gender as a more complex spectrum of which he’s been navigating. For this reason, he has chosen to keep the middle name, Diana. 'It is my way of paying tribute to the other side of me,' Stevenson, who will retain the professional moniker ND, said of his decision.
Puc, Samantha (August 11, 2022). "2022 Harvey Awards nominees". gamesradar+. Neworama. Archived from the original on August 12, 2022. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
Ostertag, Molly [@MollyOstertag] (May 14, 2020). "Big feelings today!" (Tweet). Archived from the original on May 14, 2020. Retrieved May 14, 2020– via Twitter. This text comes from her note attached to the tweet. A tweet following this says that ND began working on the "show bible" (likely meaning the show pitch and backstory) in 2016.
Wecht, Brian; Gray, Leighton; Stevenson, ND (August 14, 2020). "Episode 26: The Pudding Cup of My Brain (feat. Noelle Stevenson)". YouTube. Archived from the original on August 15, 2020. Retrieved August 15, 2020. ...I was really struggling with voicing a certain aspect of my brain and emotional state and that way that it was all rolled together and you know being bipolar and how that felt and I was struggling with how to say it. See 47:06-47:13 in this video.
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