Windland Smith Rice

Sandra Windland "Wendy" Smith Rice (1970–2005) was an American nature and animal photographer.

Biography

Rice was the first child of Frederick W. Smith, founder of FedEx. FedEx's first plane in 1973 was named Wendy after her.

She graduated from St. Mary's Episcopal School in Memphis, Tennessee and studied drama at Duke University. She pursued an acting career in Hollywood; she had two minor movie roles and two roles television episodes over a span of about three years. Rice's sister, Molly Smith, dedicated the 2007 movie P.S. I Love You in her memory.

She was married to Jeffrey Scott Rice, a business executive. They had two sons, Mason Frederick Rice and Alden James Rice.

Rice became a nature photographer, completing commissions for organizations such as Fujifilm, the National Geographic Society, and Nature's Best Photography magazine. Her work won several awards and has been exhibited in the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. Nature's Best Photography's annual Windland Smith Rice Awards are named after her.[1] She served on the Nature's Best Photography board and was the Master of Ceremonies Master for Nature's Best Photography Awards events.[2] She was known for her encouragement of other photographers.

Her interest in working with wildlife was exemplified by her membership on the board of the Earthfire Institute, an organization "dedicated to protecting wildlife by creating a bridge between humans, and animals in the wild," by rescuing animals that can no longer live in the wild.

Windland Smith Rice died of Long QT Syndrome Type 2. The Mayo Clinic has opened the Windland Smith Rice Sudden Death Genomics Laboratory to study this and similar diseases.[3] Her family and friends established a memorial fund in her name under the Sudden Arrythmia Death Syndromes Foundation.

A portfolio of Rice's nature pictures of Yellowstone are featured in the Memphis Zoo's Teton Trek.

gollark: How exciting; I can't wait to communicate with spirits, then negotiate business deals involving having them look up random information on things in return for factory-farmed souls.
gollark: I can't, since I don't actually know what you're referring to.
gollark: Plants apparently have moderately complex responses to stimuli. Computers can classify images and beat humans at games and do logical reasoning and such.
gollark: Well, thinking is hard to define too.
gollark: If it's sufficiently random, and you sample it long enough, you'll eventually get Shakespeare plays and such!

References

  1. "Smithsonian Institution Exhibition Information". naturesbestphotography.com. Retrieved 2019-03-08.
  2. "Legacy". naturesbestphotography.com. Retrieved 2019-03-08.
  3. "Sudden Death Genomics: Michael J. Ackerman - About the Lab". Mayo Clinic. Retrieved 2019-03-08.
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