Vanessa Schulz | |
---|---|
Born | 1969 (age 54–55) Johannesburg, South Africa |
Nationality | South African |
Occupation(s) | documentary filmmaker, director, producer, writer, editor, photographer and political activist |
Known for | Award-winning films |
Notable work | Cull of the Wild Cost of Freedom |
Vanessa Schulz (born 7 August 1969) is a South African born documentary filmmaker, director, producer, writer, editor, photographer and political activist. In 1998, she established 21paradigm.com; her projects include the award-winning Cull of the Wild and Cost of Freedom.
Schulz was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, to German immigrant parents. [1] Schulz's father had defected from the German Democratic Republic (GDR). Her family travelled to the former East Germany during the 1970s, where some of her relatives still lived behind the Iron Curtain and the Berlin Wall. She attended primary and secondary school in Rivonia, and graduated from Inscape Study Centre with a Diploma in Graphic Design.
Schulz qualified as a NAUI scuba diving instructor in Durban, South Africa in 1991. She worked as a dive instructor on the Indian Ocean island of Grand Comore Island from 1991 to 1993. She later qualified as a deep diving instructor and instructor of underwater photography. Schulz studied at Cape Town Film & Television School in Cape Town, South Africa in 1994.
In 1995, Schulz emigrated to the United States, where she got her first job in television as a production staffer at a local affiliate in Ketchum, Idaho. Schulz worked as assistant producer for two years on Wolves at our Door, which won two Emmy awards for the Discovery Channel. She worked freelance as a camerawoman and producer for NBC, National Geographic and Fox Television.
In 1998, to follow her interest in filmmaking related to conservation and animal rights, she incorporated 21st Paradigm, an independent, non-profit documentary film company. [2] The first 21st Paradigm production was the independent film Sabi Sabi: Adventure for the Soul. The production was filmed on the Sabi Sabi private game reserve in South Africa and explores human fascination with the predatory behavior of carnivores. In 1999, upon seeing Schulz's show-reel, Bertram van Munster, Executive Producer of Fox Television's “Wild Things,” hired Schulz to work as the show's field producer and camera operator.
In 2000, Schulz began volunteering her film-making skills to the animal welfare movement, including a collaboration with the Animal Legal Defense Fund on a project examining otter trapping in Missouri. This led directly to Cull of the Wild: The Truth behind Trapping, in concert with the Animal Protection Institute. Next she made Cost of Freedom, [3] which garnered a number of film festival awards, including a gold Remy award at the 37th Worldfest Houston International Film Festival and a special jury award at the 2003 Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival in Wyoming “for a filmmaker with the courage to pursue a difficult and controversial topic.” [4] [5]
Schulz was unable to raise funds for her next production about Captain Paul Watson and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. Her short film, Sea Shepherd , was the precursor for several documentaries about Captain Watson, including “Whale Wars” on Animal Planet.[ clarification needed ] Schulz returned to her native South Africa in 2004 where she worked as producer, writer, editor and camera operator for Aquavision Television Productions.
Schulz moved to the United States in 2007 to devote full time to 21st Paradigm. She produced and directed Permaculture: A Quiet Revolution, a documentary about the 8th International Permaculture Convergence in Brazil. In 2009, after watching the “Hero Dog” video] on YouTube, [6] Schulz went to Chile and created a feature-length documentary Lost Dogs, about street dogs in a global, industrialized culture. [7] [8] [9]
Active in the world of dog rescue, [10] Schulz freelanced for Animal Balance to document the destruction of natural heritage on the Galapagos Islands by cats and dogs and to advocate for spaying and neutering.
As well as filmmaking, Schulz is an AYTT-certified yoga instructor, and participates in Buddhism, white-water kayaking, and paragliding. Schulz qualified as a NAUI scuba diving instructor under the course direction of Jim Hicks, in Durban, South Africa in 1991. She worked as a dive instructor for Island Ventures on the Indian Ocean island of Grand Comore Island from 1991 to 1993. She further qualified as a deep diving instructor and instructor of underwater photography.
Rin Tin Tin or Rin-Tin-Tin was a male German Shepherd born in Flirey, France, who became an international star in motion pictures. He was rescued from a World War I battlefield by an American soldier, Lee Duncan, who nicknamed him "Rinty". Duncan trained Rin Tin Tin and obtained silent film work for the dog. Rin Tin Tin was an immediate box-office success and went on to appear in 27 Hollywood films, gaining worldwide fame. Along with the earlier canine film star Strongheart, Rin Tin Tin was responsible for greatly increasing the popularity of German Shepherd dogs as family pets. The immense profitability of his films contributed to the success of Warner Bros. studios and helped advance the career of Darryl F. Zanuck from screenwriter to producer and studio executive.
The dog is a domesticated canid species, Canis familiaris.
The 1992 cageless shark-diving expedition was the world's first recorded intentionally cageless dive with great white sharks, contributing to a change in public opinions about the supposed ferocity of these animals.
World Animal Protection, formerly The World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA), is an international non-profit animal welfare organization that has been in operation since 1981. The charity's mission is to create a better world for animals by protecting them.
The Genesis Awards are awarded annually by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) to individuals in the major news and entertainment media for producing outstanding works which raise public awareness of animal issues. Presented by the HSUS Hollywood Outreach program, the awards show takes place every March in California. The awards have honored such well-known personalities as Michael Jackson, Aaron Sorkin, Anderson Cooper, Peter Gabriel, Ellen DeGeneres, Jane Goodall, David E. Kelley, Paul McCartney, Arthur Miller, Stephen Colbert, Oprah Winfrey, Prince, Jacques Cousteau and Ian Somerhalder, as well as journalists, film and documentary writers and producers, print and broadcast news outlets in the United States.
True-Life Adventures is a series of short and full-length nature documentary films released by Walt Disney Studios between the years 1948 and 1960. The first seven films released were thirty-minute shorts, with the subsequent seven films being full features. The series won eight Academy Awards for the studio, including five for Best Two Reel Live Action Short and three for Best Documentary Feature.
Island of the Blue Dolphins is a 1964 American adventure film directed by James B. Clark and written by Jane Klove and Ted Sherdeman. It is based on the 1960 novel Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O'Dell. The film stars Celia Kaye, Larry Domasin, Ann Daniel, Carlos Romero, George Kennedy and Hal John Norman. The film was released on July 3, 1964, by Universal Pictures.
Gordon John Buchanan is a Scottish wildlife cameraman, filmmaker and presenter. His work includes the nature documentaries Tribes, Predators & Me, The Polar Bear Family & Me and Life in the Snow.
Penny Woolcock is an Argentine filmmaker, opera director, and screenwriter.
Pedigree Dogs Exposed is a BBC One investigative documentary, produced by Jemima Harrison, which looks into health and welfare issues facing pedigree dogs in the United Kingdom. It was originally broadcast on 19 August 2008.
The Human Animal: A Personal View of the Human Species is a British nature documentary series written and presented by English zoologist Desmond Morris, first transmitted on BBC One in the United Kingdom from 27 July to 31 August 1994. It was co-produced in association with Discovery Communications in the United States, as well as several public broadcasters include: ORF in Austria, various ARD networks in Germany, and Teleac in the Netherlands.
Survival is one of television's longest-running and most successful nature documentary series. Originally produced by Anglia Television for ITV in the United Kingdom, it was created by Aubrey Buxton, a founder director of Anglia TV, and first broadcast in 1961. Survival films and film-makers won more than 250 awards worldwide, including four Emmy Awards and a BAFTA.
Bret Clifton Gilliam was an American pioneering technical diver. He was most famous as co-founder of the certification agency Technical Diving International along with Mitch Skaggs, and as the one time holder of the world record for deep diving on air. He is also one of diving's most popular writers. Gilliam is the author or coauthor of 72 books, over 1500 feature magazine articles, and over 100 magazine cover photos. In his diving career he has logged over 19,000 dives since 1959.
Richard Boddington is a British-Canadian film director, writer, editor, cinematographer and television producer, with dual citizenship from the United Kingdom and Canada. Born in Yorkshire, England, he now resides in Ontario, Canada.
Naresh Bedi is an Indian filmmaker, the eldest of the Bedi Brothers and a member of the second generation of three generations of Wildlife photographers and filmmakers. He is the first Asian to receive a Wildscreen Panda Award and the first Indian to receive a wildlife film nomination for the British Academy Film Awards. He was honoured by the Government of India in 2015 with Padma Shri, the fourth highest Indian civilian award.
Brandon McMillan is an American television personality, animal trainer, author and television producer best known for his role as host and dog trainer of the television series Lucky Dog on CBS.
Michael Kaczorowski, a nine-time nominated and three-time Emmy Award-winning producer and executive producer, is currently the creative director and producer of Bangkok Swagger. As executive producer, he is responsible for some of Animal Planet and Discovery's biggest and most iconic hits including Carrier: Fortress at Sea, Raising the Mammoth, and Walking with Prehistoric Beasts.
Ashley Avis is an American screenwriter, director, editor, and producer. Her feature films include Disney's Black Beauty (2020) starring Kate Winslet and Mackenzie Foy along with the Critics Choice nominated documentary, Wild Beauty: Mustang Spirit of the West.
Swati Thiyagarajan is an Indian conservationist, documentary filmmaker and environmental journalist, based in Cape Town, South Africa and New Delhi, India. She is a core team member of the Sea Change Project in South Africa and environmental editor at the Indian television news network of NDTV. Thiyagarajan is the recipient of the Carl Zeiss Award, Earth Heroes Award and two Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Awards. Her work as the environmental editor at NDTV has been acclaimed internationally and she has been described as the doyenne of environmental journalism in India.
Fern Levitt is a Canadian-born animal activist, documentary producer and director. Her films focus on human rights, the Holocaust, discrimination against African-Americans in the US, animal welfare, and socially relevant issues. She is best known for her 2016 documentary Sled Dogs, which aired on the CBC Documentary channel. It explores the Iditarod, raising allegations of animal cruelty among breeders, trainers and kennelers of the event's sled dogs.