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21November

Social Mixer

March 26th 2021
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26March

Building Connections

Social Mixer

March 26th 2021

Film Fatales members gathered for a virtual social mixer with feature film and episodic television directors around the world. We had a community discussion around inclusive language, authentic authorship and ethical filmmaking practices as we continue to work towards decolonizing the film industry. We stand in solidarity against systemic racism and gender-based violence as we make space to listen to each other and build deeper connections within our community. 

We began with a grounding ritual and group conversation led by co-hosts Dewi Marquis (Ara Untamed), Chelsea Hernandez (Building The American Dream) Donna Wheeler (Death of a Saleswoman), and Rijaa Nadeem (Scandal Made me Famous), before dividing up into smaller discussion circles to deepen our relationships based on a series of guided prompts.

Details

Date:
March 26
Time:
12:00 am
Event Categories:
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Details

Date:
March 26
Time:
12:00 am
Event Categories:
, , , , ,

Panelists

Dewi Marquis is an independent film director and editor based in Boulder, Colorado. She was born in Bandung, Indonesia, in 1978 to a young Indonesian birthmother, adopted as an infant by white, middle-class American parents, and raised in Lexington, Kentucky, with multiple journeys back to Southeast Asia for her father’s work as a geographer and academic. As far back as she can remember, she’s seen the world through cinematic eyes, made sense of her life through music, and found heroes (and, often, films) in the shadow of the mainstream. Her love of nature and story led her to Washington, D.C., in 2000, where she honed her skills as a magazine editor for conservation nonprofits. In 2011, she made her first two documentaries on-set in Yosemite National Park, and two years later, she dove into filmmaking full time. Having spent years observing a conservation movement that’s disproportionately white, she founded and co-directed the award-winning National Park Experience film series, amplifying diverse cultural stories in documentary films— including her first feature— that appeared in national parks, film festivals, and on PBS and nationalgeographic.com. is an independent film director and editor based in Boulder, Colorado. She was born in Bandung, Indonesia, in 1978 to a young Indonesian birthmother, adopted as an infant by white, middle-class American parents, and raised in Lexington, Kentucky, with multiple journeys back to Southeast Asia for her father’s work as a geographer and academic. As far back as she can remember, she’s seen the world through cinematic eyes, made sense of her life through music, and found heroes (and, often, films) in the shadow of the mainstream. Her love of nature and story led her to Washington, D.C., in 2000, where she honed her skills as a magazine editor for conservation nonprofits. In 2011, she made her first two documentaries on-set in Yosemite National Park, and two years later, she dove into filmmaking full time. Having spent years observing a conservation movement that’s disproportionately white, she founded and co-directed the award-winning National Park Experience film series, amplifying diverse cultural stories in documentary films— including her first feature— that appeared in national parks, film festivals, and on PBS and nationalgeographic.com.

Chelsea Hernandez is a Mexican-American filmmaker based in Austin, Texas, recently named as one of Texas Monthly Magazine’s “10 Filmmakers on the Rise.” She is an 8-time Emmy winning director, producer and editor in the Texas region. Chelsea started her career in media at the ripe age of nine, hosting and co-producing a local children’s educational TV program with her mother (think Martha Stewart show but for kids!). Chelsea received a B.S. from the University of Texas, the first in her Latino family to achieve a college degree. She began her documentary career right out of college, as Associate Producer and Assistant Editor on PBS national broadcast special, Fixing the Future, hosted by David Brancaccio of NPR’s Marketplace, directed by Ellen Spiro (Body of War, Troop 1500) and national 6-part series Ancient Roads from Christ to Constantine directed by Hector Galan (Children of Giant, Chicano). From 2013 to 2016 Chelsea was the primary editor and co-producer of Arts In Context, a documentary series produced at KLRU-TV, Austin PBS and distributed by NETA. Chelsea has directed and produced various documentary films including See the Dirt (Austin Film Festival Short Documentary Winner) and most recently, An Uncertain Future (SXSW Texas Jury Winner, AspenShorts Youth Jury Winner, CineFestival Short Winnter). Chelsea is a NALIP Latino Media Market fellow, Firelight Media Doc Lab Fellow, Tribeca Storylab Fellow, Tribeca All Access Recipient and BAVC National Mediamaker Fellow.

Donna Bonilla Wheeler is a mixed race BIPOCLatinx writer + director of female and diverse film and TV projects, giving voice to marginalized sectors. Her original screenplays are Nicholl Fellowshi semi Finalists, Austin 2nd Rounders, Slamdance Lab selects, SundanceLab finalists, IFP NoBorders Selections, FIND Lab finalists, and DTLAFF Screenplay award winners, among others. She co-created the MIPTV 2020  Finalist Latinx TV Drama Series, CLASH, also being developed as a feature. She has been a producing director on streaming series COUPLETS for DaPoetry Lounge and Culture Genesis; an episode director for OWN Network’s TD Jakes / Jo Frost Supernanny series; a writer and director on short films THE GIRL NEXT DOOR, FUEGO, and MIND’S EYE; and the writer and director of the hybrid family dramedy feature, DEATH OF A SALESWOMAN, streaming on VOD/SVOD platforms domestically and internationally. Donna is a MIPTV Producer to Watch, IFP NoBorders Director, Alliance of Women Directors Executive Board Member, Career Advancement and Industry Support Fellow, JTC List #Startwith8Hollywood Mentee, #ReadLatinxWriters Mentee, Women In Film 2021 Mentee, and a Jurist at US and international film festivals. She also works as writer and director in branded and commercial content for companies including Neutrogena, Johnson & Johnson, Proactiv, TimeWarner Music, Kaiser Permanente, Mattel, and Westfield Malls. Her additional industry experience is in post production, editorial and post management for studios, cable channels, and networks, including A&E, The History Channel, PBS, POV, Paramount and Disney.

Originally born in Pakistan, Rijaa Nadeem is a producer and director whose work has aired on several cable networks across the United States along with internationally in several different countries such as Australia, Italy, France and the United Kingdom. She has produced and directed some of the highest rated series for Reelz network such as MURDER MADE ME FAMOUS, SCANDAL MADE ME FAMOUS and PRICE OF FAME. She has been part of several other series on networks such as Discovery, Cooking channel, HGTV and Food Network. Her short film PIECE OF NAAN which she wrote and directed has received critical acclaim at several film festivals around the globe such as Cannes, Kashish Mumbai International film festival, Dallas Video fest, Women Texas film festival and QCinema Fort worth film festival. Rijaa is currently in post production for her latest short film called MEET HIM AT NOON.