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[Commlist] Women documentary directors event
Mon Nov 11 15:19:35 GMT 2019
This is the final call for registrations for these free workshops plus
ticketed screening. You can book the individual sessions separately if
desired:
*Making the Grade: Women Directing Documentary Past and Present*
*Friday 22-Saturday 23 November 2019, Plymouth *
Directors UK (2018) reports an almost 10% decline in the number of women
directing factual programming in recent years. What factors are driving
this and how have individual women managed to forge careers in this
sector? Using the career of Jill Craigie as a springboard, contemporary
women film-makers from the South West and around the UK explore how far
opportunities for women have changed since Craigie started as one of the
first female documentary directors in 1944.
She made a series of films in the 1940s including /The Way We Live
/(1946), a film which foregrounded women’s perspectives on the plan to
rebuild Plymouth after the war. After her success in the war and
post-war period, she had few opportunities to direct again, until,
propelled by anger at the fate of the people of Dubrovnik during the war
in Yugoslavia, she made /Two Hours from London /at the age of 84.
Further details and booking pages for events
here:https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/whats-on/making-the-grade-women-directing-documentary-past-and-present-film-weekend
_Programme_
*/Making the Grade /**(Lizzie Thynne): Film Screening and Discussion *
*Friday 22 November 6-9pm*
Jill Craigie Cinema, Roland Levinsky Building, University of Plymouth
Archival footage and Craigie’s own words from letters, diaries and
interviews present an intimate film portrait of the life and career of
this pioneering director whose work imagines a new place for women
post-World War Two. Craigie made the first film to feature living
artists at work, /Out of Chaos /(1944) and /To Be A Woman /(1951), a
forceful and witty argument for equal pay. /Making the Grade /explores
her unique contribution to documentary and her contrasting identities as
director, writer, early media ‘personality’ and wife of former Labour
leader, Michael Foot. *The film will presented as a work in progress for
your responses and feedback.*
With director Lizzie Thynne (Sussex University), Professor Yvonne Tasker
(University of Leeds) and invited filmmakers Rebecca Brand and Ruth
Grimberg. Followed by wine reception.
Registration is free. Please book your ticket
here:https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/whats-on/film-making-the-grade
**
*Workshop: Making Our Way*
*Saturday 23 November 10am-1pm*
Jill Craigie Cinema, Roland Levinsky Building, University of Plymouth
A workshop with directors Rebecca Brand, Ruth Grimberg, Anna Best and
Barbara Santi on the opportunities and obstacles women face now in
sustaining a career in documentary production. What avenues have they
found to fund and exhibit their films outside, and within, film and
television?
Led by Kayla Parker (University of Plymouth) and Lizzie Thynne
(University of Sussex)
Followed by complimentary buffet lunch.
Registration is free. Please book your ticket
here:https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/whats-on/workshop-making-our-way
*/The Way We Live /**(Jill Craigie, 1946): Film Screening*
*Saturday 23 November 2-4pm*
Arts Centre Cinema, Plymouth College of Art
Craigie’s provocative documentary on the plan to rebuild Plymouth
cleverly combines humour, melodrama and political polemic to stir up
support for the architect’s radical proposal to re-design urban space
and ensure housing meets the needs of families and young people.
Screening and discussion with Sadie Wearing (LSE), Stephen Essex
(University of Plymouth) and Hollie Price (University of Sussex).
Tickets are £4, and are available to book
here:https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/whats-on/film-the-way-we-live-1946
_Workshop speaker biographies_
Rebecca Brand isa documentary filmmaker and editor. She has made a
number of short films which have played at festivals around the globe,
including in London, Paris, New York, Edinburgh and Milan. Her debut
feature-length film - /Credible Likeable Superstar Role Model/
<http://rebeccabrand.co.uk/342/>/ - /which features performance artist
and activist Bryony Kimmings, premiered in Portland (USA) and won the
Audience Award at the London Feminist Film Festival. Rebecca loves
making films about captivating characters who are on a mission, and her
work is mainly concerned with gender, identity, activism and
family.http://rebeccabrand.co.uk/
Ruth Grimberg is a documentary filmmaker, photographer and part-time
lecturer living and working in London. Her short films focus on the
lives of ordinary people, exploring life in contemporary Britain whilst
making connections to our recent past. Most recently her documentary
/Learning to Swim /for BBC4 and the BFI was a commissioned response to
the 1942 film /Listen to Britain/. http://ruthgrimberg.com/
Anna Best is an artist film-maker based in rural Dorset. She made the
16mm film /Buddleia/ for a commission with Plymouth Arts Centre in 2007,
and has recently made a film /Plastic Water Stone/ filmed partly in
Croatia, supported through a KURS residency and an Artists International
Development Fund 2017. She runs an artist's residency in her studio -
The Mothership. An archive of past work can be found at
https://annabest.info <https://annabest.info/>.
Barbara Santi is a documentary maker using film as a creative tool for
social change. She has made documentaries for Channel 4 and Carlton TV
and is co-founder of awen productions CIC, a media social enterprise set
up in 2006 based in West Cornwall. Barbara recently completed /Home of
Springs, Trengwainton/, a 3-year collaborative project in partnership
with the National Trust culminating in an exhibition at The Exchange
Gallery, Penzance, a book and feature documentary currently touring
across venues in Cornwall. Her interest in collaborative documentary
film, creative storytelling and ideas around place, identity and culture
has further developed into a practice-based PhD with Exeter University
(Penryn campus) of which she is in her third year of
studies.https://barbarasanti.co.uk
Run in partnership with the Arts Institute, Plymouth as part of the
research project Jill Craigie: Film Pioneer
<https://www.jillcraigiefilmpioneer.org/>, funded by the Arts and
Humanities Research Council.
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