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TANNA FREDERICK'S VIRTUAL REALITY AND MORE

By Shirley Craig



Tanna Frederick is a multi-talented artist, actress and producer. We know her from her many stage performances here in Los Angeles and particularly, the award-winning play, Train to Zakopane, that sold out to record crowds last year. This year has been very busy for her so far as well. The 2016 Iowa Independent Film Festival, of which she is a founder, took place on the weekend of Sept. 16-18 at the Historic Park Inn Hotel in Mason City, she starred in Henry Jaglom's new film Ovation and is opening tonight as both the lead actor and director in A.R. Gurney's hit comedy, Slyvia, at the Odyssey Theater in LA.

Recently, we were lucky enough to talk to Tanna about her groundbreaking virtual reality film “Defrost,” which was shown at the Sundance and Cannes film festivals earlier this year. 

Did you choose to be a producer on this series, or did the production choose you?

Production chose me. I’m not a ‘waiter’, I’m a ‘doer’. If I get swept up in the passion of a role in a project I set my mind to making it and I’m fully immersed and do whatever I have to do to get it done. So finally I just gave up at denying the fact that I like to spin a lot of plates in the projects I do and just took on more and more responsibilities.

In your experience, what does it take to be successful in this field? 

Gosh. I think I’m the last person that has a healthy answer to that. I think I always am dabbling in the feeling of discontent and the feeling of not having accomplished enough that results in needing to do more, be more, discover more, learn more, and perfect more. The hunger to be better keeps me going. The active free-fall of taking more risks and trying out things to feed my soul as an artist and changing and being willing to admit that essentially, after acting for almost 30 years,I  feel sometimes I know less than I did when I was nine, is just where I’m at. So it’s not a choice to be ‘successful’, it’s just a life or death question of survival and needing to create the illusion for a search of meaning in my life. Though I do feel, having pursued ‘the road less traveled’, I’d like to think maybe buried in all this esoteric babble is a sign either I’ve lost it or am getting somewhere cool!

As a multi-genre actor, I imagine you have worked hard to multi-task in your career, balancing a hectic life and work schedules. How difficult is it to both produce and act in a virtual reality series like Defrost? 

It’s much, much easier. Or at least I trick myself into thinking that for now until I get on a set in which I can just sit back put my feet up and indulge in the amenities in my trailer.

Look, it’s exciting. We were, at that time to our knowledge, and still to our knowledge the first VR episodic narrative. Who wants to sit on the bench? When exciting stuff is happening it’s all about being in the game and breaking every metaphorical artistic bone in your body to stay in from the first quarter through the finish. There’s no better rush, no matter how stressful, frightening, impossible it is. No matter how many teeth you lose, as a producer you’re right out there managing and activating every play on the field. That’s living life to it’s fullest for me. If I go home at night and I’m mad as hell and want to spit, I still wake up the next morning and get in the shower and wonder how I’m going to get through the next day, who’s may be mad at me, who I need to make feel good on the ‘team’ and how I can do it, and most importantly how do I make the director feel safe and comfortable and give him all the tools he needs to get his job done, that’s a never ending equation that keeps me going.

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Let's talk about working on a VR set - Is working with the Garrison character any different than working on a live stage with an actual person?

Considering humans have two eyes and a VR camera has eight to fifteen ‘eyes’, it’s a little like talking to an alien. But if you substitute that alien feeling for a thawed mother then the acting actually is a bit more convincing hopefully. Randal Kleiser was a brilliant director on this set, and had us do most of the rehearsals with Kelly Desarla, playing Joan Garrison, sitting in the wheelchair so we could all develop a human connection with her. By the time we were shooting, we had that established.

Why is VR the best medium for this story?

Because conceptually even though this was Randal’s story meant to be turned into a film that he originated in film school in 1968, this is a prime example of “the enemy of art is the absence of limitations” as Orson Welles used to say…The equipment wasn’t available at that time or even conceived of so it was put up on a shelf. There are many, many gorgeous stories out there. The artist’s job is to figure out the most conducive and effective way to tell them. The 1968 script which was our pilot made it into Sundance. From there Randal branched off into 11 more episodes. Not every story should be told through VR, but not every short or script we write should be discarded because you never know where the gold is going to be mined from.

Do you consider the machine sit-in kit for Joan as a whole person when delivering lines or are you considering the personhood of the pending audience that will embody her?

I have had a very good rapport  working and friendship-wise, with the woman who played Joan - Kelly DeSarla - for a number of years. I have done two stage productions and two films with her. So I didn’t play the camera as the audience, I played it to her with my attachment to her emotionally. That’s what I’m paid to do - fall in love with a toaster if I have to. And I really, really love toasters. See what I did there? You believed me, didn’t you. Bam. That’s what an Oscar looks folks.

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How do you train for a role like this?

Randal and I went down to 3ality, where Steve Schklair and his amazing team Bettina and Matt gave us a 20 minute run down on the Ozo camera I think a day or two days before shooting. I got a couple chances to futz around with the camera, figure out depth of field as an actor which was better for viewer visibility and which was better for emotional effect, and then after the eight or whatever takes we did, I watched the monitor and just learned from my own observation. So it was really fascinating, learning on the spot. There wasn’t much material to take and ‘train’ from because ours was one of the first narrative series of VR that contained ‘episodes’ and had experienced actors in it.

In the study of acting, many methods of extracting performance are used to hone the craft - working with an entirely new phenomenon called "Empathetic Immersion" changes everything! Is it fun working with the prop?

Our VR series is definitely one of the empathetic pieces out there. That’s why I wanted to be a part of it. No one knows how kids’ brains will be affected in fifty to two hundred and fifty years of evolution with the technology of today. Minecraft, gaming, ‘Call of Duty’…It’s a bit frightening personally how a sort of Cartesian ‘Brain in the Vat’ possibility could emerge where we utilize our bodies and emotions less and less and instead just have all of our sensory items fed to us through pieces of technology, it is alarming. So when I saw a chance to assimilate the potential VR or new tech into something which can be used to draw upon human emotion I thought, “Maybe I’m contributing to something good coming out of this tech”. And it became a way to be a part of the solution of presenting other options - other than the countering the minds of young people than alienation and isolation - created by technology through empathy (‘Are you Joan?’) and good first person POV storytelling.

What is it like to leave to chance the line of sight and direction of the main character's feelings and observations when shooting in VR because the audience is in more control of what they are going to watch than with a traditional film? 

We never left it to chance. We had complete control and need to keep complete control over the process in this new medium. It’s very, very calculated - the acting, the blocking, lighting, when we were out of range (of course we were never out of range for the most part because it’s 360 with a slight ever so tiny sliver of a blind spot right behind either side of the eight eyes), factor in on which of us the audio was on (in other words what information needed to be relayed and character was administering that information.

After working with modern technology as intimately as you have producing this VR film, what do you expect producing a series like Defrost will take your career in the future?

I am now creating VR narrative episodic content in the midst of my theatre and film work, but have to admit seeing ‘outside the box’ through VR/AR is giving me a whole new outlook on ideas and storytelling.

In the movie business, a producer's input during the actual movie depends on a relationship with the director. It is sometimes very hands on, sometimes, a sit back and watch the magic happen experience...how does it differ working in VR?

In such a new setting, being one of the first narrative VR’s and new actors, scripts, camera, etc., I was proverbially and literally screwed if I dropped the ball at any step of the way. I kept myself in the game the best I could, asked a lot of questions, worked hard to figure out the answers to problems with our top notch cast and crew, and just kept going and made sure our engine powered and running.

In film, a producers job may be more entrenched or locked down to in an idiom of the studio system or a particular player’s adherence to a particular filmic diatribe, but so far in narrative VR, filmic VR so to speak, is being exceptional, new, and unexplored.

New creatives coming onto the scene have little ego and are eager to show product they’re stoked about, so there’s not a lot of hubris attached to VR. Everyone feels that on set, the actors even vibe it. So the result is this really cool almost advanced media class or master acting class where everyone knows they’re experimenting and creating something really bad-ass for future historians; a group that doesn’t want to muck around because they’re doing it for the cool part of the project which is being lucky enough to be a pioneer of VR and sucking up the glorious unsatiated nature of an artist to reinvent themselves.

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Slyvia opens tonight at the Odyssey Theater in Los Angeles. The play is performed Thursday thru Saturday at 8pm with a matinee on Sunday.  For tickets click here.

For more information about the VR series DeFrost visit their website here.

 

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Successful Actor To Respected Acting Coach…
In 3 Simple Steps

By Bridget Brady



Last week I sat down with one of the most respected acting coaches in Los Angeles, Mary McCusker.  She’s been an on-set coach for many of our favorite shows including, “Parenthood”, “Nip/Tuck”, “Malcolm in the Middle”, “The Bernie Mac Show”, and “Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants”, just to name a few.  She studied personally with one of the most iconic acting teachers of our time, Delightful, warm, and candid, Mary shares her true Hollywood story.

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What makes you successful?

I think if you love what you do, that can be infectious. I have been in this business for a long time.  I started as an actress and have been a coach for 20 years.  People are puzzles to me.  I am fascinated by what makes us different and what makes us the same.  When I coach actors I feel like I am the objective party whose job is to service the story and to honor the human condition presented in the story.  I try to help actors find where they connect and don’t connect with the story.

When I was an actress studying at the Boston Conservatory of Music and then at the Neighborhood Playhouse, I was taught to tell the truth. Meisner used to say “you act what you are…go out and live your life and bring that to the work”. I have tried to do that when I work with actors. You can feel immediately when someone is acting and when he or she is being truthful. There is no mistaking it.

How did your career start?

I started acting in my junior high school. I played Laura in the Glass Menagerie. My mother had just died suddenly and I was lost. I was so grateful that Mt. St. Joseph’s Academy had a theatre program (I am a big proponent of the Arts in Schools). The play and theatre program gave me a focus for my grief. After the Boston Conservatory, I moved to NY and studied with Sandy Meisner. I always loved do improvisational comedy and when my future husband was offered a job in San Francisco, we decided to move there. I joined an improv. group called The Pitschel Players. We brought the show down to LA and that was it. I was very ambitious and worked a lot in TV and film. I love Martin Sheen’s quote “Where else could I get paid to explore different sides of my personality”.

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How did you switch to coaching?

A friend of mine, Belita Moreno, recommended me to take her place on a movie called The Client starring Susan Sarandon and Tommy Lee Jones.  She had coached a young boy, Brad Renfro for the lead in the film with these stars.  The director, Joel Schumacher, who I had worked with several times as an actress, then hired me to coach Brad on location.  It just felt like a natural transition.  I loved sitting behind the monitor with him and helping to craft the roles with the actors.  It was exhilarating.

The film was a huge success and I was Brad’s coach on his next three films.  The last film was Sleepers with Robert de Niro and Brad Pitt.  Brad played a young Brad Pitt in the film.  The transition was so easy, as casting directors started calling me and I spent the next ten years primarily doing feature films.  I was working on a film with Todd Holland when he was offered Malcolm in the Middle and he asked me to do the pilot.   The show ran for seven years and that’s how I started working in TV. In TV, I did Nip Tuck and Parenthood.  In between, I would work on a feature and then go wherever the work was.  I worked on a film called Foxfire with Angelina Jolie.  I was hired to work with another actress, Jennie Shimitzu but ended up working with all of women.  Angelina only briefly.  She was 19 years old.  Very strong and incredibly focused.

How do you get a majority of your coaching jobs?

Through casting directors, directors who know me and from word of mouth. There are my favorite directors and producers, of course. Joel Schumacher, Barry Levinson, Todd Holland and Ken Kwapis. This last year, I have been working on a TV series called Instant Mom and the producer/writer Howard Gould is an incredible joy to work with. My job is to hear any concerns production may have with any given actor and to give the actor extra support. To work one on one with them in developing their character. Ultimately that saves time on set. Sometimes the directors are pulled to the overall production or to the stars on a set, and I help in giving the directors the vocabulary to use in directing the actor.

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You studied directly with one of the iconic  “founders” of acting technique, Sanford Meisner?

I studied at the Neighborhood Playhouse when I was very young.  It was a two-year program and after the first year, half the class was cut.  So, there were a hundred and fifty students the first year and seventy-five for the second year program.  It was almost a preparation for the real world.  Meisner was exact and demanding. The doors to the classroom was locked exactly at noon, if you were late, you missed the class.  That sort of discipline was prevalent throughout the school and set an atmosphere of focus and concentration. The first year, Meisner taught an exercise he created called the “repetition game”.  It teaches you to go moment to moment, to focus your attention on the other person and to stay present. It changed my life and was a foundation for life as well as for acting. Picking up behavior from another person while in a scene colors how you say the lines and keeps you present and alive.

How did you transition from acting to coaching and did you have any regrets about leaving acting?

MV5BMTI4NjM0NzQxOV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwMTQ4MDEzMQ. V1 SY317 CR100214317 AL As I said, my first job coaching was The Client with Joel Schumacher directing. After that film, casting directors would call me and I made the transition very smoothly. I have no regrets. I worked a lot in my 20’s and 30’s as an actress doing TV and Film. I love doing readings of new plays and screenplays with friends but I don’t really miss acting. Since I work so closely with directors and producers, I feel very creative. I look at a bigger picture as a coach. It is really about: why is this scene in the movie/show and how does the actor help tell the story.

Don’t you think that possibly, the older you get, a lot of people give up?  They feel like they’re too old or they get married and have kids or just move on to other things.  Is it possible that the older actors or actresses get, there’s maybe more opportunity for them because there’s much less competition?  Or is that just wishful thinking?

If an actor gives up, then it got too hard, it wasn’t meant to be or they have other interests. I think that is a good thing or certainly can be. You have to have enormous drive to make a career work.

So, how do you create work?  Put play readings together, make your own web-isodes, stay creative.

It’s all about stories and the people who create the stories create the roles for women or men. I feel that women should fight to stay in the business because so many of the stories we see are a reflection of what are going on in society. So, if the women drop out, then we’re losing their stories. We baby boomers are tilting the demographic now and I would love to see women working so these stories could be told about aging and what it is to go through different life transitions. Reese Witherspoon’s film Wild is that kind of filmmaking.

Can you speak more to your coaching work?

People are puzzles to me and I get to, in a sense, be the psychiatrist for the character and with the actor we explore the life of the character’s point of view. When I talk with the directors and they tell me what they need, I can go to the actor and help them find that. The Meisner work taught me how important it is to be real, honest and to stay in the present moment.

Do you work primarily with children or adults?

I work with all ages. At Loyola Marymount University, I am working with college students, on set; I work with whomever production asks me to help with.  From children to seniors.

You worked on one of my all-time favorite shows, Parenthood.  Who did you coach on that show?

Primarily the kids, Tyree Brown. Larry Trilling, one of the producers, allows the actors to improvise into the scene and then improvise out of the scene.  It allows such a natural delivery.  I really loved it.

Teaching improvisation is a great love of mine, so I loved seeing that on the set and sometimes do improvisations when I am coaching to find the life of the character.

So what do you do when you work with an actor who is stuck?

I remember on the first season of Instant Mom, there was an actress – 20’s, who was very nervous. She kept freezing up and couldn’t remember her lines. Actors are very sensitive. So, it was a process of talking her down, going paragraph by paragraph. What did she want in the scene and reminding her that it is okay to make mistakes. All we need is one take and we move on. It all worked out and when the show aired her work was good.

When we finished shooting, she said that she hadn’t worked in a while and she just got scared. I know that feeling where the lines become more important because the fear has taken over. You know the lines, but suddenly you don’t know the lines because that’s where you placed your fear.  So, it’s being gentle and kind with our selves and going back to really listening and talking to the other person. This woman was hired for a reason.  She was a good actress, very pretty and then her nerves got the better of her.

Nerves can kill you?

It happens to everybody. I was on Malcolm in the Middle for 7 years and I will never forget the day that Bryan Cranston couldn’t remember his lines. It only happened once; it was just a bad day for him. Bryan, more than any other person on the set, always came 100% prepared with multiple ideas for delivery. I remember, Robert de Niro on Sleepers having a hard day with lines. We are human, it just happens.

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I read an article in Rolling Stone about Bryan and he said that he worked with a coach. And it made so much sense to me. He has someone to brainstorm with on character choices. As an acting coach, what would your number one or two pieces of advice be for actors walking into an audition?

Know your lines cold, but hold the script in an audition setting.  If you don’t have enough time to memorize it, make sure you are close to memorized. Be present. Go somewhat in character.  Now, if you’re going in on Orange is the New Black, you don’t have to go in crazy, but you have to maintain a certain mystery and LESS is more.  

One of my coaches said, “It’s your audition, your time, take charge of the room.”

There is a way of doing that where you’re in character for the role but you’re present and not apologizing for being there.

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Once you get a call back, if you are right for the role and give a good read. Enjoy that. You are being recognized. You are talented.  Call back land requires that you keep exploring with the casting director and the director on how to make this character come alive.  It’s not about pleasing them: it’s about being present, taking some risks.

Sisterhood_of_the_traveling_pants.jpgOn Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, I was fortunate to be a part of the final screen tests. Ken Kwapis, the director created a very relaxed atmosphere for the actors and all good directors will do that in screen tests.  But all the producers are hovering anxious about your look, hair, etc.  The other actors and the directors are your anchor.

Who are some of your favorite people to work with?

One of my favorite directors is Ken Kwapis.  The last project I did with him was called Big Miracle. It was shot in Alaska 3 years ago.  I coached all of these native Alaskan men who had never acted before.  I focused particularly on a young boy, Ahmao and John who was an elder in the community.  It was a life changing experience.  Meeting all these people who are so connected to the land and the project itself in the environment of Alaska was thrilling.  I loved it and go up there every year to teach.

Working on Next Best Thing with Madonna was an experience I won’t forget. She played a yoga instructor. She would get up at four am every day and do two hours of yoga before coming to the set. Incredibly disciplined. Unfortunately, she would periodically speak in a British accent. She was in a relationship with Richie and Rupert Everett is British but her character wasn’t. We did this long master shot at the climax of the film where her character breaks down crying. She cried all through the master and then when they came in for the close-ups she had dried up. An unfortunate mistake that all actors should understand. Save it for the close up…or at the very least, pace yourself.

I remember working with Mary Louise Parker and she had to cry for 5 days on the climax the film Red Dragon and she was really angry about it.  But she knew where the camera was and she knew how to pace herself.

FirstDoNoHarm-214x305-1I worked on a TV movie called First Do No Harm, with Meryl Streep.  I had worked with the director, Jim Abrams several times and this project was based on a true story. His son had had seizures and Meryl and he were friends for many years.

She wanted to support him in this project about children with this condition. So, I coached the boy who had to have seventeen tonic-clonic seizures in the film. I worked with doctors and studied tapes. It was a very intense experience. At one point the director got very emotional in a scene where Meryl has to watch her son have a seizure and then leave. He called me over and said “I need you to take over if needed. I am afraid I will start crying.” So there I was with Meryl and the boy making the scene work. That was exhilarating.

What are you working on now?

This last summer I worked on the sequel to Insurgent.  It is called Divergent and will be out in the summer of 2015.

How do our readers get in touch with you, to work with you?

I teach intensives once a month and do private coaching for actors whenever necessary for auditions or to work privately on camera. They can call my office directly to schedule at (818) 448-4860.

Thank you, Mary. 

To learn more about Mary McCusker, visit: Mary McCusker.net To learn more about the author, Bridget Brady visit: BridgetBrady.com

 

 

 

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Outta Your Head And Into Your Life

By Sharon Freedman



There’s nothing average about the life of an actor.  You rarely stay at a job for years or even decades and you’re continually building relationships so you’ll get your next job offer.  However, that doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t be fully engaged in your current project.  In fact, the more invested you are in your current project the more desirable you’ll be to perspective employers.  You’ll notice how a particular TV actor will all of a sudden start working in films.  People want to work with someone who is killing it in their current job because they know they will get the same dedication to their project.  Also, don’t you love the auditions that you do some focused prep work before and then move on to the next part of your day after you’re done?  This is easier said than done if you don’t have some simple yet effective tools to help you gracefully move from moment to moment.

The key to doing that is Mindfulness.  I’ve broken it down into three parts that will help you reduce stress and up your game. The first part is: OBSERVE.  This is the skill of simply noticing what’s happening right now.  I like to say, “Your breath has got your back” meaning that in every moment, you’re breath is there to touch base with and get grounded in reality.  Start noticing when you get lost in thoughts like, “I wonder what they want at this audition.” or “Ugh, I should have done that last take differently.” Those are the perfect moments to pay attention to your breath.  Our thoughts are just thoughts, but our breathing is reality.  No matter how hard we try we’ll never change the past or create the future with our thoughts so why spend all that frickin effort trying.  Lao Tzu, the founder of Taoism, once said,

“If you are depressed you are living in the past. If you are anxious, you are living in the future. If you are at peace, you are living in the present.”

Just like LeBron James shoots baskets every day when he’s not playing a game.  You will get more skilled at OBSERVING by practicing in your daily life so can easily do it when you’re on set shooting your first guest star or at your final callback for a Broadway show.  So, the next time you’re doing something as simple as taking a shower, walking down the street, or washing dishes notice when you get lost in thought and bring your focus back to what’s actually happening in that moment.  Notice your breath, feel the water, hear the street sounds.  Not only will you enjoy what you’re doing more but you’ll also have much more specificity in your work as an actor.

One of my favorite tools to cut through nerves in those important moments is called square breathing.  Everything is on a count of four.  You breathe in for four, hold for four, out for four and hold for four.  If you do this three times in a row you’ll easily be able to get out of your head, disconnect from your nerves and kick a*% at whatever you’re doing.

There’s no time like the present to start incorporating OBSERVE into your life and next month we’ll dive into the second part of Mindfulness, DESCRIBE.

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LA Femme Film Festival Awards – 2014

By Bridget Brady



Open on a dingy Hollywood street outside the LA Film School.  Pan in on a long line of producers, directors, editors, writers and actors; dressed in their finest, all waiting their turn on the red carpet.  The beautiful Madeline Zima (soon to win the “Rising Star” award) arrives and scurries to the front of the line.  This is the scene at the 10th Annual LA Femme Film Festival Awards night.  After red-carpet photos, we enter to find a stream of excited hopefuls, shimmying up to the bar for free drinks, munching on catering, and swarming around each other, chatting, laughing and waiting for the ceremony to begin.  With a vodka-gimlet in hand, I worked my way through the room, talking to excited women who were hoping their film would be chosen for an award.

The LA Femme Film Festival, “By Women, For Everyone”, focuses on women in film.  Not just female actors, but empowering women in every possible way in the film industry.  Founded by Leslie La Page who says, “I created this film festival to empower the Artist and to give a safe place to exhibit growth creatively and promote their personal vision in the medium of film.  There is no better place to start than by creating a film festival that breaks down barriers of distribution, prejudice, and conventional thoughts.”  The LA Femme Festival is currently in it’s 10th successful year

Ann_LeSchander.jpgI had a chance to talk to Ann LeShander, (Writer/Director) before she knew she won the award for Best Feature.  Looking stunning in red, she was incredibly excited, and we chatted about how proud she was to have her film, “The Park Bench”, included among so many other fantastic films.

Denise Carlson, Producer and LA Femme board member says, “This is a fantastic film-festival that celebrates film that are by and about women.  We are so proud to be doing this.”

Watch Bridget's video from the Red Carpet here!

After everyone had a chance to mingle we were ushered into a beautiful theatre for the awards ceremony.  Included in the evening were swag bags for everyone, filled with fun goodies like Pez candy, Epsom salt, body oil and the 25th anniversary edition of the “Creative Handbook”.  The Master of Ceremonies, Sandra Valls, kept us laughing all night with her brash comedy.  We saw a short dance performance from “The Show Off Dolls” and heard two original songs from Singer/Songwriter, Maggie McClure.

All of the evening’s award winners talked about empowerment for women and encouraged all of us to hire more women for our films.  Holly Weirsma (Executive Achievement Award) said, “I fell in love [with LA Femme] and it’s now my favorite film festival.  I’ve been inspired to do two more films with two other women directors.”  Two of the standout acceptance speeches of the night were given by Sheryl Lee Ralph (Lupe Ontiveros Image Award) and Marion Ross (Lifetime Achievement Award).  Sheryl started her speech with a powerful song, “I am a woman, I am an artist, I am an endangered species, but I sing no victim song.”  She talked about following our dreams, and being willing to accept that “Now is our time, we deserve success.  No matter how long we’ve been in the business, we are in the right place.  Stop waiting for someone to choose you, and choose yourself.”  Acting legend, Marion Ross, most fondly known for her role of Mrs. Cunningham on “Happy Days”, spoke of “the incredible blessing to spend my life doing what I love.”  And “back in the day the only roles for women were mothers,” and how proud she is to see that changing now.

We saw some incredible clips of the films made by the women in the festival, and simply enjoyed celebrating the beautiful artistry of film-making.

Some of the big wins of the night included:

Lupe Ontiveros Image Award
Sherly Lee Ralph Lifetime Achievement Award
Marion Ross Rising Star Award
Madeline Zima Executive Achievement Award
Holly Weirsma Humanitarian Award
Moran Atias Best Feature – Ann LeSchander

To learn more about the LA Femme Film Festival visit their website here.

To learn more about the author, go to:  http://BridgetBrady.com, http://TheVoiceGenius.com, http://MoreOnlineIncome.com

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