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A
culturally-diverse, five-woman film crew, led by Los Angeles-based
director of photography Sandra Chandler, accomplished the
shoot. A total of thirty-eight hours of footage was shot over
a ten-day period using a professional SONY digital video camera
and state of the art sound equipment. Line producer Catalina Castillo
handled logistics, Stacy Hruby recorded sound, and production
assistance was provided by Wendy Bledsoe.

The
Seneca Falls production team with Feminist Majority President
Eleanor Smeal (third from left) who spoke at the 150th Celebration. From left to right Wendy
Bledsoe, Catalina Castillo, Smeal, Louise Vance, Sandra Chandler,
Stacy Hruby.
Director
of photography SANDRA CHANDLER has shot 16mm and Betacam
documentaries for the past twenty years for the BBC, HBO,
PBS, ABC, and the Discovery Channel, including the HBO theatrical
release, The Eyes of Tammy Faye. Sandy earned her M.F.A.
at the University of Southern California's School of Cinema/Television
Production in 1988, where she is currently a visiting instructor
in cinematography. Sandy's other credits include Born that
Way for Channel Four's Equinox series, Sea of Oil
for PBS's POV series, and Surfer Girl for National
Geographic Explorer. In 2002, Sandy was the only woman director
of photography nominated for a national Emmy for cinematography,
honored for her work on the HBO original documentary, Living
Dolls.
Director of Photography Sandra Chandler.
Line
Producer CATALINA CASTILLO has coordinated and produced
educational, corporate and feature projects for the past eighteen
years. Her entry into production came in 1989 as project coordinator
for Between Friends, an AIDS awareness dramatic film.
Since then Catalina has served as Assistant Director on several
other dramatic films, including Not Once But Twice,
The Pick, and director Rob Nilsson's film, Attitude.
She served as production manager on the educational documentary
Inside/Out: Real Stories of Women, Men and Life After Incarceration
in 2000, as line producer for A Passion for Justice: 21st
Century Feminism, completed in 2002, and as producer of
Action for Justice: Making a Difference for Women and Girls.
Editor
MIRIAM TELLES is a San Francisco native who has been editing
short and long form projects for the past three years. Her
academic background is in Anthropology and Ethnographic Film
which she studied at U.C. Berkeley. Recent film projects include
The Corrida and the Cross, a feature length documentary
about Portuguese bullfighting in California's Central Valley,
and a film for Alice Waters commemorating the 25th anniversary
of her legendary Berkeley restaurant, Chez Panisse. Miriam's
latest editing project is a documentary history of the A.C.L.U.,
directed by two-time Emmy award-winning filmmaker Eric Fournier.
PROJECT
ADVISORS
Dr. Sally Roesch Wagner Leading historical authority
on Iroquois inspiration to early feminists; Executive Director, Matilda
J. Gage Foundation
Molly Murphy MacGregor Founding Executive Director, National Women's History Project
Martha Richards, Co-Founder and Executive Director, The Fund for Women Artists/SWAN Day
Barbara Ludlum Grants Officer, KQED Television Former
Executive Producer, American Playhouse
Armistead
Maupin Novelist and screenwriter

The
crew with WOWER POWER in Seneca Falls. |