in
West Vancouver,
British Columbia Fox founded the film and theatre company International WOW Company in Chiang Mai, Thailand with a group of performers from New York City and Asia. He has written and directed over 30 plays with his ensemble. Works include
?WOW! (1996),
This is Not the Ramakian (1997),
Stairway to the Stars (1999),
HyperReal America (2001),
The Bomb (2002), Orphan on God's Highway (2002), Death of Nations Parts 1-4 (2003-6),
The Comfort and Safety of Your Own Home (2004),
The Expense of Spirit (2004),
Limitless Joy (2005),
Surrender (2008), and
Solutions Grassroots (2014). In addition, Fox has written, directed, and produced seven feature films, and over 25 short films, which have premiered in New York, Asia and Europe. The
New York Times has hailed him as “one of the most adventurous impresarios of the New York avant-garde” and
Time Out NY called him “one of downtown’s most audacious auteurs,” citing his “brilliantly resourceful mastery of stagecraft.” In addition, Fox has participated as an actor, director, designer and writer in international theater collaboration projects in Japan, Thailand, the Philippines and Germany. He starred as David Conde in
Yoji Sakate's
Emperor and Kiss performed by the Rinko Gun company, along with Kameron Steele, marking the first time that the company worked with a western performers. He was also the first western performer to work with Pappa Tarahumara dance/theatre company, creating roles for
WD (2001) and
The Sound of Future Sync (2002) which performed at the Setagaya Public Theatre and the New National Theatre in Tokyo. He created Heimwehen, Death of Nations Part V (2006) with Frank Raddatz, the former dramaturg of
Heiner Muller, for the Forum Freies Theatre in Düsseldorf. Fox was a collaborator of Filipino playwright, actor and screenwriter
Rody Vera in the early 2000s. In 2008, Fox directed his first narrative feature film,
Memorial Day, an examination of American party culture, the
Iraq War and torture which was executive produced by
Jim McKay and
Michael Stipe of
R.E.M. In 2010, he wrote, directed, and produced
Gasland, one of the first major films about the environmental impacts of fracking. Gasland premiered at the
Sundance Film Festival in competition, winning the critics poll and the Special Jury Prize for Documentary. The film is widely credited as galvanizing the anti-fracking movement worldwide, making fracking a household word. Fox later produced an
HBO sequel
Gasland Part II, which aired July 2013 and was released on DVD in January 2014. On October 1, 2015, Fox's mini-documentary
GasWork, which detailed hazardous working conditions in the hydraulic fracturing oil and gas drilling industry, debuted on
All In with Chris Hayes. In 2016, Fox directed ''
How to Let Go of the World and Love All the Things Climate Can't Change,
a personal take on climate change, the film features figures on climate change such as Bill McKibben, Michael Mann, Van Jones, the Pacific Climate Warriors, and Elizabeth Kolbert. Fox was awarded his third Environmental Media Association award for Best Documentary for his film How to Let Go of the World and Love All the Things Climate Can't Change'', which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2016, toured the world theatrically and was released on HBO in June 2016. ,
Frances Fisher,
Rosario Dawson,
Nomiki Konst at the Awake, A Dream from Standing Rock premiere at
Tribeca Film Festival( 2017) In 2017, he produced, co-directed and co-wrote AWAKE, A DREAM FROM STANDING ROCK with indigenous filmmakers Doug Good Feather and
Myron Dewey, which premiered at the
Tribeca Film Festival on Earth Day, launched on Netflix and toured around the world. In 2018 he co-founded the AWAKE MEDIA FELLOWSHIP for indigenous youth with leaders Stephanie Cassidy, Doug Good Feather and others. In 2018, Fox created
The Truth Has Changed, a solo performance, book and film about misinformation, propaganda and psycho-graphic targeting aimed at manipulating our current media and political ecosystem. In the performance he tells of his frontline reporting with an emphasis on the smear campaigns waged against him for nearly a decade by the fossil fuel industry. The project has toured to over 25 cities in the US and Europe and has been seen by thousands of people in support of dozens progressive, environmental and grassroots organizations.
The Truth Has Changed is Fox's first book, published by Seven Stories Press. In January 2020
The Public Theater abruptly ended Fox's run on
The Truth Has Changed following a dispute with the theater. Fox and International WOW Company staff including producer Diane Crespo alleged that
Public Theater staff had physically attacked Fox while preparing for a show. Fox also alleged that festival director
Mark Russell was verbally abusive to him before shows. Fox and the company submitted formal written complaints about code of conduct violations and while pursuing these complaints the show's run of three remaining shows was halted. Fox was asked to meet with Public Theater Artistic Director
Oskar Eustis and associate artistic director
Shanta Thake months later in hopes of finding a reconciliation wherein Ms Thake remarked "mistakes were made" by the Public Theatre staff. The feature film version of
The Truth Has Changed was released in 2021. In March 2020, during the covid lockdown Fox launched
Staying Home with Josh Fox a nightly interview program featuring guests from the world of politics, cinema, and music. Guests on the program included
Cory Bush,
Marc Ribot,
Kim Stanley Robinson,
Preston Reed, Jamie Margolin,
Rebekah Jones among others. The show ran for more than 200 episodes on
The Young Turks network in 2020 and 2021. In 2023 premiered THE EDGE OF NATURE, a feature film about the
anthropause, the moment during the covid lockdowns in 2020 where fossil fuel emissions decreased, having a measurable impact on the climate and pollution of the planet and the
Byron Bay Film Festival where it won best Environmental Film. In 2024 Fox premiered the project at
La Mama Experimental Theater Club as a performance and film that you watch at the same time. Fox performed the narration of the film live as well as playing the musical score by Dougie Bowne & Fox with songs by
Pete Seeger, with an ensemble of 12 musicians. The performances received rave reviews and support from notable people such as
Bernie Sanders,
Steven Donziger and
Sean Lennon == Activism ==