Cindy Baer | |
---|---|
Born | Boston, Massachusetts, United States |
Occupation(s) | Actress, director, producer, entrepreneur |
Cindy Baer is an American actress, director, producer, and entrepreneur. She helms the production company Free Dream Pictures, located in Burbank, California. [1]
She directed and produced the independent feature films Purgatory House and Odd Brodsky, and frequently appears on filmmaking panels across the country, speaking as an expert on low budget filmmaking. [2]
Cindy Baer is a film and stage actress, director, and producer who resides in Los Angeles, California. She specializes in independent and often female-centric films.[ citation needed ]
Baer made her feature debut as both a director and producer with the groundbreaking, micro-budget, independent film, Purgatory House which was entirely written by 14-year-old Celeste Davis, [3] who Baer had been mentoring in the Big Sisters of Los Angeles program for several years prior. [4]
A postmodernist, art film revealed in four timelines, Purgatory House explores the themes of teen spirituality, addiction and suicide, as it chronicles the afterlife journey of Silver Strand, a troubled teen who abandoned her life of turmoil in search of unconditional love. Groundbreaking in 2001, [5] Purgatory House was one of the first features to be shot with digital cameras (in the mini-DV format), [6] [7] edited with home-based computers, and incorporate extensive blue and green screen compositing and visual effects. [8] It screened at 25 film festivals, won 12 festival awards, 2 PRISM Award Nominations, and appeared on 5 critics lists for "Best Films of the Year" [9] [10] It marked the beginning of the democratization of film, when it received distribution from Image Entertainment, one of the largest digital distributors in North America, in 2007. [11]
Baer's second feature Odd Brodsky, which was co-written with her cinematographer husband Matthew Irving [12] screened in 29 film festivals and won 20 festival awards. [13] A quirky, offbeat, comedy, the story line follows 30-something Audrey Brodsky aka "Odd Brodsky" (played by Tegan Ashton Cohan) who quits her dreary desk job to pursue her childhood dream of becoming an actress. [14] A departure in genre from her debut Purgatory House, many of the same themes prevail, such as isolation, media/TV influence, and the longing for a deeper connection. [15] It also dabbles in postmodernism, and has elements of magical realism. Odd Brodsky premiered on iTunes in November 2016.
Baer is also an entrepreneur who has founded four companies, including the two non-profit organizations The Mosaic Theatre company in 2000 and Patron of the Arts in 2009. She founded the production company Free Dream Pictures in 2001, and the children's entertainment company Daizy the Clown & Company at the age 22, which she later sold. [16]
She started her career as an actress at the age of 14 at the Boston Children's Theatre and has performed in over two dozen plays. She starred in and produced the 30th Anniversary production of the stage play Butterflies Are Free, which was written by Leonard Gershe, at the Matrix Theatre in Hollywood, California. [17]
Esther "Essie" Davis is an Australian actress and singer, best known for her roles as Phryne Fisher in Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries and its film adaptation, Miss Fisher & the Crypt of Tears, and as Amelia Vanek in The Babadook. Other major works include a recurring role as Lady Crane in season six of the television series Game of Thrones, Sister Iphigenia in Lambs of God, and the role of Ellen Kelly in Justin Kurzel's True History of the Kelly Gang.
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Ingrid Veninger is a Canadian actress, writer, director, producer, and film professor at York University. Veninger began her career in show business as a child actor in commercials and on television; as a teen, she was featured in the CBC series Airwaves (1986–1987) and the CBS series Friday the 13th: The Series (1987–1990). In the 1990s, she branched out into producing, and, in 2003, she founded her own production company, pUNK Films, through which she began to work on her own projects as a writer and director.
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Purgatory House is an independent film written by 14-year-old Celeste Davis and directed by Cindy Baer, who were paired in the Big Sisters of America program when Davis was 11 years old. It deals with the topics of teen suicide and drug addiction from a teen's perspective. Shot in Los Angeles in the summer of 2001, this movie marked the beginning of the Democratization of Film. A critical darling, it screened at 25 festivals, won 12 festival awards, 2 PRISM Award Nominations, appeared on 5 critics lists for "Best Films of the Year" and was then distributed by Image Entertainment.
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The 27th annual Sundance Film Festival took place from January 20, 2011 until January 30, 2011 in Park City, Utah, with screenings in Salt Lake City, Utah, Ogden, Utah, and Sundance, Utah.
Dylan Nicole Gelula is an American actress who is best known for her role of Xanthippe on Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, as well as her work in independent film. Gelula made her film debut as the lead actress in romantic drama film First Girl I Loved (2016) and has since acted in the films Flower (2017), Support the Girls (2018), Her Smell (2018), Shithouse (2020), and Dream Scenario (2023), and Smile 2 (2024).
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Cindy Evelyn Magara Amooti is a Ugandan film director and academic. She serves as a Lecturer of Film Studies and Literature at Makerere University. She has directed and produced several movies since 2006, such as Fate (2006), Fair Play (2010), Windows of Hope (2011), A Book for Every Child (2012) and Breaking the Mesh (2013). She also lectured Film Studies at University of Sydney and at the University of Technology Sydney in Australia.