Dear Readers, While the past few years have a yielded a bumper crop of box-office successes, the prospects of a brave new utopia for documentarians may not be quite as bright as previously bruited. There are only so many theaters and channels to go around, and while the combination of cost-effective technology and a more doc-friendly world has encouraged a new wave of storytellers, a troubling number of good documentaries still go homeless. What's needed beyond the artistry and craft is a dose of marketing savvy and chutzpah. We recruited a few seasoned veterans to share their sage counsel
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Dear IDA Members, As this organization continues to grow, so does our need for more help. You may not be aware that we accomplish our programs and events with a small staff. The IDA depends on our working board of directors to initiate and direct the many activities you read about in these pages. While most of our board is composed of filmmakers, we also need professionals from law, fundraising, multimedia, accounting, publishing, etc. This year we had 27 talented and experienced applicants vying for seven slots on the board. The seven newly elected board members I am pleased to introduce to
Dear Readers, When we were planning an issue devoted to women in documentary, we were prompted first by an article that appeared in the January 2004 issue—an editors roundtable, courtesy of Editors Guild magazine, that consisted entirely of men. We received our share of calls for a counterpart. Then, filmmaker/educator Nina Gilden Seavey sent us an unsolicited article about her personal experiences regarding motherhood and documentary filmmaking. The seeds were planted. The documentary community is one of the few in the entire media arts spectrum in which women play a prominent role both
Dear Readers, Making documentaries, as we all know, is a difficult profession, one with more psychic, spiritual and artistic rewards than monetary ones. The realities of paying the bills, supporting families and surviving prompt the need to cast one's net wider, expand one's portfolio, cast about for between-documentary, or even during-documentary, opportunities. And some of these opportunities have actually served to enhance one's documentary-making sensibilities. In this issue, we look at a few crossovers and sidelights that have kept documentary makers reasonably solvent, and have inspired
Dear IDA Members: Most of us involved in the nonfiction world must travel to accomplish our goals of production, research or sales. Travel today is easier in some ways than ever before. Yes, we all groan at the thought of long security lines and crowded airports, but being away from home is a lot easier than it used to be. Now when I check into a hotel room in France or Washington, I am provided with wireless Internet service; no more odd modem connections. E-mails are a snap—no more trudging down into the dungeon "business-office." Telephone service also has surprisingly improved for long
Dear Readers, A few weeks from now, the furious spate of political documentaries that has dominated the big and small screens will come to a crescendo with the latest "most important election of our lifetime." Or will it? The D-Word Community recently devoted a week to the subject of political documentaries, with Jehane Noujaim ( The Control Room; Startup.com) and Pamela Yates ( When the Mountains Tremble; Witness to War) leading the discussion, under the always capable stewardship of D-Word founder Doug Block. The panel inspired debates about the difference between social issue docs and
Jehane Noujaim, the co-honoree of the Jacqueleine Donnet Emerging Filmmaker Award, entered Harvard in the early 1990s with the intention of becoming a doctor. But the rigors of the pre-med program, combined with the lure of the photography and filmmaking courses that were offered there, compelled her to shift academic majorsand career paths. But not entirely. "The part about being a doctor that appealed to me was being able to have a job where you're needed in all parts of the world in some way," she reflects. "To be working with people and helping people. I guess the connection I found is
William Greaves is one of the most respected independents in the film and television production field. In addition, he is considered the dean of independent African-American filmmakers and through the years has helped to launch the careers of many young Black filmmakers. He has produced more than 200 documentary films, eight of which have won more than 70 international film festival awards, an Emmy Award and four Emmy nominations. Greaves was inducted into the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame in 1980; he won an Emmy for his work as executive producer of the classic public affairs TV series Black
The quest for freedom and the restraints of race are opposing themes that resonate in almost all of Ken Burns' films, from The Civil War to Baseball to Jazz. But in his newest work, Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson, a two-part documentary about the first African-American Heavyweight Champion of the World, these forces define a man who not only challenged the status quo, but was ahead of his time in demanding to live his life without any limitations, racial or otherwise. "Jack Johnson wished to live his life nothing short of a free man," says Burns. "And that was a