Jill Godmilow
Jill Godmilow was born outside Philadelphia in 1943. She is a working independent film and video maker, primarily of non-fiction works.
Godmilow studied Russian literature at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
In 1974 her film, Antonia: A Portrait of the Woman, on the conductor Antonia Brico, received a nomination for Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and was selected for the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress in 2003.[1]
In 1984 she made Far From Poland,[2] a non-fiction feature about the Polish Solidarity movement.
She made a dramatic feature film called Waiting for the Moon, a biography of Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas played by actresses Linda Hunt and Linda Bassett. It was produced for PBS's American Playhouse series and released theatrically by Skouras Pictures, and won Best Feature Film at the Sundance Film Festival in 1987.
In 1998 she premiered What Farocki Taught at the International Film Festival Rotterdam. The film is a replica in color and in English, of Harun Farocki’s 1969 black and white German language film called Inextinguishable Fire,[3] on the Napalm production at Dow Chemical.
In 2000 Godmilow was featured in the Whitney Biennial.
Godmilow is an Emeritus Professor in the Dept. of Film, Television, and Theatre at the University of Notre Dame.[4]
She is a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship.[5]
References
External links
- New York Times Biography
- Profile on Video Data Bank
- "What's Wrong With the Liberal Documentary?", Jill Godmilow, Peace Review, March, 1999
- Un-Documenting History: An Interview with Filmmaker Jill Godmilow by Lynn C. Miller, Text Performance Quarterly, July 7, 1997, vol 7, number 3
- "How Real Is the Reality in Documentary Films?" Jill Godmilow in conversation with Ann-Louise Shapiro", History and Theory ,Vol 36, No. 4, 1997, Wesleyan University Press