Kay Armatage | |
---|---|
Born | 1943 Saskatchewan |
Nationality | Canadian |
Education | B.A. English Literature (Queen’s University) M.A., Ph.D. (English, University of Toronto) |
Alma mater | University of Toronto |
Known for | Filmmaking, Writing |
Kay Armatage (born 1943) [1] is a Canadian filmmaker, former programmer at the Toronto International Film Festival [2] and Professor emerita at the University of Toronto's Cinema Studies Institute and Women & Gender Studies Institute. [3] Though she attained a B.A. in English Literature from Queen's University, [4] her name is generally linked with the University of Toronto.
Hailing from Saskatchewan, [2] Armatage now lives in Toronto, Ontario. During her time as an international programmer at TIFF, Armatage worked hard to introduce audiences to female filmmakers [5] and showed an affinity for risk-taking films. [6] This tendency plays out in her films; Armatage makes feminist pieces that realist and experimental in form, [7] usually documentaries. As a feminist filmmaker, Armatage makes observational films that speak to women's issues [5] and challenges conventional filmmaking.
Kay Armatage was an international programmer for the Toronto International Film Festival from 1982 to 2004, [6] participating in a total of 23 TIFF’s. [2] She has been praised for sticking up for Catherine Breillat’s Fat Girl (2001) when the board wanted to cut many scenes from the film for the festival in the name of censorship. [6] Armatage has often argued for gender equality in filmmaking, and has stated that she believes that the goal for female filmmakers shouldn't just be to get to the halfway point, but to potentially exceed it. [8] Armatage is now on the Board of Directors of Women in View - an advocacy group for gender and diversity in Canadian media. [9]
Kay Armatage is also a professor emerita at the Cinema Studies Institute and the Women and Gender Studies Institute at the University of Toronto. [10] She has written a large body of scholarly work, including well known pieces such as The Girl From God’s Country: Nell Shipman and Silent Cinema and co-edited Gendering the Nation: Canadian Women’s Cinema. [2] Through her academic writing, Armatage has said she hopes to help close the huge gap in writing about feminist filmmaking. [10]
As a filmmaker, Armatage is known for her queer-friendly [1] documentaries that approach ‘women’s issues’ – according to Cameron Bailey's writing on Armatage's film Artist on Fire (1987). [11] Armatage's films have broached subjects such as "abortion in Speakbody (1979), objectification and economy in Striptease (1980) - from a grounding in theory" [11] and challenge other straight documentary conventions. [3] Her films also attempt to uphold the principles of feminist filmmaking through "flexibility of roles, collaboration and equality of participation," according to Armatage's own writing. [12] Her first two short films, Jill Johnston: October 1975 (co-dir. Lydia Wazana, 1977) and Gertrude and Alice in Passing (1978) are recognized as some of the first Canadian indie films to point to the political relevance of lesbian history and culture. [1] Striptease (1980) has been commended for its validation of sex industry workers by respecting their subject-generated performances. [13]
Armatage's films have been shown in art galleries and film festivals, such as the Art Gallery of Ontario [14] and the Chicago, Toronto and Edinburgh film festivals. [15] Her film Artist on Fire (1987) received a special citation for excellence in documentary filmmaking from the jury for the Toronto International Film Festival Award for Best Canadian Film at the 1987 Toronto International Film Festival. [16]
Kay Armatage's first film was a short, which she directed alongside Lydia Wazana. [17] The film is a documentary, which follows American author of Lesbian Nation and cultural critic [18] Jill Johnston during one week of interviews in Toronto. [19] The film's first showing at the University of Toronto's Innis College 'town hall' [17] would become a marked day in Armatage's career. Following the audience's applause after the end of the short film, Jill Johnston (the film's subject) stood onstage to announce that there was a conflict of interest between herself and the filmmakers. [17] She disagreed with how the film portrayed her, and claimed that she could not relate to the film and believed that the image it created would 'harm' her aspirations as a serious writer. [17] As a result, Johnston refused to sign a release for its distribution outside of Canada. [17]
Year | Title | Contribution | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1977 | Jill Johnston... October 1975 | Director, Producer | Short; Co-Director with Lydia Wazana |
1980 | Striptease | Director | Short |
1980 | Speak Body | Director | Short |
1983 | Storytelling | Director | |
1987 | Artist on Fire | Director | Documentary |
2015 | He Hated Pigeons | Associate Producer |
Nell Shipman was a Canadian actress, author, screenwriter, producer, director, animal rights activist and animal trainer. Her works often had autobiographical elements to them and reflected her passion for nature. She is best known for making a series of melodramatic adventure films based on the novels by American writer James Oliver Curwood in which she played the robust heroine known as the ‘girl from God’s country.'
Cynthia Scott is a Canadian award-winning filmmaker who has produced, directed, written, and edited several films with the National Film Board of Canada (NFB). Her works have won the Oscar and Canadian Film Award. Scott is a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Her projects with the NFB are mainly focused on documentary filmmaking. Some of Scott's most notable documentaries for the NFB feature dancing and the dance world including Flamenco at 5:15 (1983), which won an Academy Award for Best Documentary at the 56th Academy Awards in 1984. She is married to filmmaker John N. Smith.
Lynne Stopkewich is a Canadian film director. She attracted attention for her feature film directorial debut Kissed (1996).
Holly Dale is a Canadian filmmaker and television director. Over the course of her career, Dale has worked in the Canadian film and television industry as a director, producer, writer, and editor. Although she has completed solo projects, the majority of Dale's work has been in collaboration with her former classmate, Janis Cole. The Thin Line (1977), P4W: Prison for Women (1981), and Hookers on Davie (1984) are some of their most recognized projects. Dale's work has been featured in festivals around the world including North America, Europe, and Australia. She has also received award nominations and wins, including a Gemini Award in 1982 for the Best Theatrical Documentary for P4W: Prison for Women.
Sarah Gavron is a British film director. She has directed four short films, and three feature films. Her first film was This Little Life (2003), later followed by Brick Lane (2007) and Village at the End of the World (2012). Her film, Suffragette (2015) is based in the London of 1912 and tells the story of the Suffragette movement based on realistic historical events. Her most recent film is Rocks which she directed in a creative collaboration with the team and young cast. Rocks premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and opened in cinemas in 2020.
Anne Claire Poirier O.C. is a Canadian film producer, director and screenwriter.
Christine Welsh is a Métis Canadian filmmaker, feminist and retired associate professor at the University of Victoria.
Aerlyn Weissman is a two-time Genie Award-winning Canadian documentary filmmaker and political activist on behalf of the lesbian community.
Cameron Bailey is a Canadian film critic and festival programmer, who is the CEO of the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF).
Loretta Sarah Todd is a Canadian Indigenous film director. Todd has directed over 100 projects including documentaries, video games, animated media, and television shows.
Judith Rosemary (Sparks) Crawley was a Canadian film producer, cinematographer, director, and screenwriter. She and her husband Frank Radford "Budge" Crawley co-founded the production company Crawley Films in 1939.
Elle-Máijá Apiniskim Tailfeathers is a Blackfoot and Sámi filmmaker, actor, and producer from the Kainai First Nation in Canada. She has won several accolades for her film work, including multiple Canadian Screen Awards.
Evelyn Spice Cherry was a Canadian documentary filmmaker, director, and producer. She is best known for her work as the head of the Agricultural Films Unit at the National Film Board of Canada and as a member of the British Documentary Film Movement.
Michelle Mohabeer is a Canadian filmmaker and writer. Her films have received many rewards including the Isabella Liddell Art Award and the 5 Feminist Minutes Award. Her first work, Exposure (1990) was produced through the National Film Board's Studio D. During and after creating several films, she has also served as an adjunct lecturer at the following post-secondary institutions: University of Toronto, Trent University, University of Western Ontario, Ryerson University and Sheridan College.
Jennifer Hodge de Silva was a Canadian filmmaker. Her film, Home Feeling: Struggle for a Community, revealed tensions between and police and residents of the Jane and Finch neighbourhood of Toronto. The residents were mainly immigrants from Jamaica and Africa. She worked consistently with national organizations such the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). She was the first black filmmaker to do so.
Studio D was the women's unit of the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) and the world's first publicly funded feminist filmmaking studio. In its 22-year history, it produced 134 films and won 3 Academy Awards. Cinema Canada once called it the "Jewel in the Crown Corporation."
Brenda Longfellow is a Canadian filmmaker known for her biographies of female historic figures. Since 2007, Longfellow's focus in her films has been on environmental issues.
Artist on Fire is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Kay Armatage and released in 1987. The film is a portrait of Canadian feminist artist and filmmaker Joyce Wieland.
Madison Thomas is an independent film and television writer and director from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. She is most noted for her 2022 documentary film Buffy Sainte-Marie: Carry It On.
The history of women's film festivals begins in the early 1970s during the second wave of feminism. The first international women's film festival took place in New York in 1972, and the occurrence of female film festivals soon spread to the rest of the world with festivals happening in Canada and Germany in 1973, France in 1974, and Iran in 1975. During the 1980s and the 1990s, the amount of international women's film festivals increased and today there are over 100 worldwide.