Paula Fairfield | |
---|---|
![]() Fairfield in 2017 | |
Born | Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada |
Occupation | Sound Designer |
Paula Fairfield is a Canadian American sound designer and sound artist, based in Southern California. She is best known for her work on the series Game of Thrones. She has a BAFTA Award for House of the Dragon (won 2023); and a total of fourteen Emmy nominations: one for Rings of Power, one for House of the Dragon, one for 3 Body Problem, six for Game of Thrones (won in 2015 and 2019), [1] three for Lost , [1] one for The River , and one for the series Lovecraft Country (won 2021). In May 2021, she was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts from her alma mater, NSCAD University. She also has 5 golden reel awards and 20 nominations for her work from the Motion Picture Sound Editors guild.
Fairfield was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1961 [2] and grew up in a nearby town called Bridgewater. She attended college at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design University (NSCAD) in the early 1980s studying art history and photography. After graduating with a BFA, [3] she moved to Montreal for two years where she worked as an artist and did a training program at the National Film Board of Canada (NFB)'s Studio D. [4] Fairfield then moved to Toronto where she co-managed Charles Street Video, a non-profit centre run by artists. Her video and film art was exhibited all over the world and resides in several collections including the National Gallery of Canada. [3]
Fairfield worked at SoundDogs, the Toronto-based post production sound company. She said, "I just wandered in one day and they had just lost their effects guy and they took a chance on me. I had a lot to learn, but I loved it." [5] This is where she learned how to edit sound and sound design for television and film. [6]
Fairfield moved to Los Angeles in 1998. [6]
She established her company, Eargasm, Inc, in 2014. [3] She has a studio in her home — a sealed garage with highly insulated walls. [7] The studio is set up for Dolby Atmos and uses PMC monitors and an Avid Pro Tools S6 console. [8] She left Los Angeles for the Coachella Valley after a divorce from her wife and losing her brother, sister and father to cancer. [7] According to The Desert Sun , "the desert’s spirituality and solitude keep her centered as an artist. After an intense day of sound editing, she simply steps out of her studio and into her home space, a quiet desert sanctuary she describes as 'Bliss.'" [7]
This section needs additional citations for verification .(August 2024) |