|
Emmy Award winning Steve Thomas
has signed on with Planet
Green to host Renovation
Nation, which premiered June 4, 2008.
He also consults on residential building and renovation for clients all
over the United States. He celebrated his final year as host of television's
most popular home improvement series, This Old House, during the 2002/2003
television series. Over the course of his 14 years as host, Steve became
known as the "ultimate home enthusiast" and
helped catapult This Old House to the top of PBS's list of most-watched
ongoing series of all time. He also contributed to the successful debut
of Ask This Old House, the all-new series in which viewer questions are
addressed on-air, as host during its first year.
Steve was honored with a 1997-1998 Daytime Emmy Award and a total of nine
nominations for "Outstanding Service Show Host," Not surprisingly, Steve's enthusiasm for fixing up old houses was influenced by his father, whom he described as a "true weekend warrior - fearless and always ready to take on any project." Steve's
first project on his own was to renovate a run down 1920s residence in Olympia,
Washington. He then continued working in the field in the Pacific Northwest
until moving to Massachusetts in 1980.
In between projects, Steve's yen for adventure, which he attributes to his late grandfather, a missionary in the Alaskan Arctic, inspired him to combine his love of fine woodworking with his passion for the sea and sailboats. In 1977, Steve worked as a carpenter on a 75-foot ketch being built in Antibes, France. Over the next few years, he logged many blue-water miles sailing a 43-foot wooden sloop from England to San Francisco via the Panama Canal, Galapagos, Marquesas and Hawaii.
In the early 1980s, Steve journeyed to the remote Micronesian island of Satawal to learn the ancient technique of star path navigation under the master navigator Mau Piailug. Steve's research resulted in the critically acclaimed book The Last Navigator published in 1987. The next year Steve returned with a film crew to shoot a documentary of the same title for the PBS series Adventure. It was in 1989, in between research trips to the Alaskan Arctic for a second Adventure book and film, when Steve received a call from the Adventure series publicist, who also worked for This Old House. The show's producers were conducting a national search for a new host, and the rest is history.
An "expert in demand" on television
shows such as Oprah!, Today, CNN, Entertainment Tonight, and the CBS Early
Show, Steve describes This Old House as "one of the best adventures of my life." He
has contributed to the Homeowner's Manual, published by This Old House Books
in 2000, and has authored the best-selling books This Old House Kitchens and
This Old House Bathrooms, published by Little, Brown and Company in 1992 and
1993. His column for This Old House magazine, "House Calls with Steve" was
tremendously popular with readers.
Steve hosted and co produced the Save Our History
series on The
History Channel.
Steve received his bachelor's degree in philosophy from Evergreen
State College in Olympia, Washington.
Since
moving to Massachusetts, Steve has renovated a number of old houses, including
an 1846 Greek revival and the 1836 Colonial revival in which he currently
resides with his wife and son in a seaport town north of Boston. He is
about to build a green, energy-efficient cottage on the coast of Maine
using some interesting new technologies.
|
|