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Lou Fant

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Movies
  
Amy

Education
  
Baylor University

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Lou Fant


Lou Fant image1findagravecomphotos200921940435268124

Full Name
  
Louie Judson Fant Jr.

Born
  
December 31, 1931 (
1931-12-31
)
Greenville, SC

Known for
  
sign language education and consulting

Notable work
  
Ameslan: An Introduction to American Sign Language, The American Sign Language Phrase Book

Died
  
June 11, 2001, Seattle, Washington, United States

Spouse
  
Lauralea Irwin Fant (m. 1954–1988), Barbara Bernstein (m. ?–2001)

Books
  
The American sign language phrase book

People also search for
  
Lauralea Irwin Fant, Vincent McEveety, Jack Smight

Occupation
  
teacher, author, coach

IMPROVE YOUR ASL & INTERPRETING: VideoTutorial 101 (Lou Fant)


Lou Fant (December 13, 1931 – June 11, 2001) was a pioneering teacher, author and expert on American Sign Language (ASL). He was also an actor in film, television, and the stage. Natively bilingual in ASL and English, he often played roles relating to sign language and the deaf.

Contents

His life centered on advocacy and teaching for the deaf.

Personal life and education

Fant was born December 13, 1931 in Greenville, South Carolina. He was the only child of deaf parents Louie Judson Fant and Hazeline Helen Reid. Though hearing, he learned ASL as a native language from his parents. They moved to Dallas in 1944 where he graduated from Baylor University, and later received his M.A. in Special Education from Columbia University.

At Baylor, he met and married Lauralea Irwin. They moved to New York, and later to Washington D.C. where he taught at Gallaudet College. They had four children and remained married until her death in 1988. Fant later married Barbara Bernstein, and was married to her until his death in Seattle of pulmonary fibrosis.

Career

He began his career teaching at the New York School for the Deaf, then at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C.

In 1967, Fant helped establish the National Theater of the Deaf in Waterford, Connecticut and the Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf.

Fant was also a sign language poet, using creative alterations in space and time of ordinary signs to create a type of sign language performance art.

Fant led the Seattle Central Community College Interpreter Training Program from 1989 to 2000, until his retirement.

Hollywood career

In the 1970s Fant relocated to Southern California to pursue his acting career. Fant took part in numerous television productions, including General Hospital and Little House on the Prairie, and in film, such as Looking for Mr. Goodbar. He was also sign-language coach for some well-known actors, including Henry Winkler, Diane Keaton, Robert Young and Melissa Gilbert. He coached actors in the use of sign language for Children of a Lesser God. He also appeared in television commercials.

Publications

Fant published nine books, and contributed to eight films promoting use of sign language. His Ameslan: An Introduction to American Sign Language (1972) was the first book designed to teach ASL as a unique language rather than as a mere lexicon of signs.

References

Lou Fant Wikipedia