Hollywood Glamour Comes to the Berkshires

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The First Gutsy Gal Film Award Celebrated by Filmmakers - and Film Lovers!

In the 24 hours leading up to The Gutsy Gal Film Award - the event that has been a year in the making! - an unexpected blizzard wholloped the east coast threatening to prevent the arrival of filmmakers who were driving and flying into Great Barrington for the weekend; a technological snafu nearly shut down our screening to which over 100 guests had been invited; and our newly printed and delivered Gutsy Gal t-shirts suddenly began to run with blue dye! (they were re-printed, and re-delivered just in the nick of time) ... 

But the show must go on - and it did!

Karen Allen joined Gutsy Gal founder Deborah Hutchison and award-winner Cathryn Michon in addressing the audience of over 100 attendees at the Daniel Arts Theater on Saturday evening March 21; the event was presented in conjunction with The Berkshire Festival of Women Writers. Awards were accepted in person by several of the filmmakers including (above, top photo) Katie Morrison, the lead actress from Imagine I'm Beautiful, accepting for Naomi McDougall Jones and Meredith Edwards; Marian Gagnon, writer/director of Ida Lewis; Cathryn Michon, writer/director of Muffin Top: A Love Story; Heather Taylor, writer/director of Breaking through the Clouds. The evening later transitioned into 90 minutes of laughter, with the screening of Michon's hilarious comedy, Muffin Top.

Sunday morning, Gutsy Gals teamed up with The Berkshire International Film Festival to host the screening of Breaking through the Clouds, the Gutsy Gal Award winning documentary by filmmaker Heather Taylor, above. The event was attended by over 50 guests at The Triplex Theater in Great Barrington, and followed by a Q & A with Taylor.

The Gutsy Gal Film Award Weekend made the headlines in local media .... and made us all proud of being there to recognize and encourage this amazing group of visionary women.

MEET OUR FILM AWARD WINNERS - INGRID PFAU, WRITER AND DIRECTOR OF "SEIZING THE UNRECORDED"

EMERGING TALENT INGRID PFAU DOCUMENTS HER PERSONAL JOURNEY TO UNDERSTAND A LIFE-ALTERING MEDICAL CONDITION

While completing her MFA Degree at Montana State University, Ingrid Pfau embarked upon a year-long project to explore the medical condition epilepsy, once known as "grand mal" seizures. This brave and fascinating short film includes interviews with scientist and with other sufferers of epilepsy, and personal reflections by Pfau on the relationship between this difficult and unpredictable medical condition and her calling as a filmmaker. This film has won in the Best Student and Emerging Filmmaker Category in the Science Media Awards in Boston, was a finalist in the Directors Guild of America Student Awards, has been reviewed in the prestigious "Science" journal.

We are proud to announce that Seizing the Unrecorded is the Winner of the Gutsy Gal Film Award in the category of a Short Film by a Student/Emerging Talent.

HERE ARE WHAT GUTSY GIRLS LOOK LIKE!

DEBORAH HUTCHISON TALKS TO GIRLS OF THE GEMS CLUB ABOUT FILMMAKING, AT THE SOUTH FLORIDA SCIENCE CENTER

I recently interviewed Carla Duhaney, Director of Education at the South Florida Science Center. Duhaney was kind enough to invite Deborah Hutchison to talk to the girls of her GEMS Club (Girls Excelling in Math and Science) about filmmaking. Hutchison is the writer, director, and producer of the award-winning animated film, The Improbably Journey of Berta Benz - and from the looks of it, she definitely got the girls "animated" about filmmaking!


GIVING GIRLS A CHANCE TO "BUILD AND CREATE WITHOUT LIMITS"

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INTERVIEW WITH CARLA DUHANEY, DIRECTOR OF EDUCATION FOR THE SOUTH FLORIDA SCIENCE CENTER

This week, Deborah Hutchison will speak to girls in the GEMS Program (Girls Excelling in Math & Science) at the South Florida Science Center in Palm Beach - at the invitation of Education Director Carla Duhaney. In advance of the program, I interviewed Carla about her adventures working in a National Park in Jamaica, what led her to the South Florida Science Center, and her passion for science and for fostering an environment in which girls feel free to experiment and learn, to "build and create without limits". 
Christina Holbrook

Gutsy Gals: You and I have talked before, and I know you have an interesting background, including time spent working in a National Park in Jamaica. Can you tell me a little bit about this experience? It sounds very adventurous!

Carla Duhaney: I was always out to save the world with Science, so I studied Environmental Resource Management at Penn State University and spent my summers as a Park Ranger at the Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park in California.  I also knew since I was 3 years old that I would join the US Peace Corps and travel to Africa.  When I was accepted into the Peace Corps in 1993, I was delighted, but very surprised to discover that I was headed to the tropical island of Jamaica. 

While in Jamaica I was assigned to the Blue and John Crow Mountains National Park, the largest terrestrial Park in Jamaica with many areas of thick tropical rain forest.  I traveled into the small villages on the outskirts of the Park to deliver educational programs and organized community meetings to discuss some of the environmental problems in the boundary areas of the Park.  When my two years of service was finished, I was just beginning, so I jumped on a job opening at the park as Education Director.  In the 10 years I spent with the Blue and John Crow Mountains National Park, I established the first Environmental Education Program for the Park, participated in many search and rescues, organized the first trail maintenance workshop and taught thousands of children the importance of saving the natural resources of Jamaica.

Gutsy Gals: What brought you to South Florida?

At the time, my husband and family were living in the capital city of Kingston, Jamaica. The city had a high crime rate and as a young woman with young kids, I worried about the safety of my family.  The economy was also at a low in Jamaica and many of the environmental programs were losing funding.  My husband and I decided to travel to South Florida to live close to his mother, who had migrated to this area years ago.  The South Florida Science Center was a natural fit for me, since I loved teaching science to students and I was an experienced educator.

Gutsy Gals: The South Florida Science Center has placed a particular emphasis on encouraging young women to explore Engineering, Math and Science. Can you tell me a little bit about the evolution of the GEMS program and what you are hoping to accomplish?

Carla Duhaney: At the South Florida Science Center, engaging girls in STEM activities, courses, and careers has been a long-identified goal.   Young women in our communities are missing out on exciting, challenging careers in the STEM fields with opportunities for high salaries and long-term growth.  In our  mixed-gender science programs at the Science Center,  there is a tendency for the girls to hang back and allow the boys to do the science experiments.  We developed our Girls Excelling in Math and Science (GEMs) Club in order to give interested young girls a chance to explore the world of science and engineering in a non-competitive setting. At our GEMs club, the emphasis for all participants is on learning and having fun. ALL of the girls get to do ALL of the activities and therefore experience success.    Our club meets every last Tuesday of the month and we target girls grades 3rd - 8th. A typical night includes  interactive experiments, fun STEM activities and mentoring sessions with leading women in STEM careers.

Gutsy Gals: Deborah Hutchison will be speaking to your GEMS group this week on the topic of  “Getting Animated” – are you noticing a particular interest these days among girls and young women in filmmaking?

Carla Duhaney: We have not noticed a particular interest in filmmaking (since this is not a normal Science Center program), however, we have noticed a spike in interest from females in our technology and maker programs at the South Florida Science Center.  In these workshops and week-long camps, we provide activities like soldering, technical engineering, 3D printing and robotics in a risk-free environment where there is no competition other than doing your personal best.  Participants are able to design their own robots, construct their own video games, and learn the language of computer coding.

Gutsy Gals: That's fantastic! And I hope Deborah's talk this week will let girls know that making films is another wonderful, creative career that is open to them. Women filmmakers are talking about a "movie-ment" these days, with more and more women getting involved in film. I hope some of your girls will be inspired to explore film and video.

On another topic, you are the mom of a young girl – what is your daughter telling you are the main challenges she faces today?

Carla Duhaney: My daughter is 12, and she has an interest in baking and loves making specialty cakes and cupcakes for all occasions.  She is very creative and tries constructing her cakes with small electronics and working lights. Her challenge is exploring and expressing her creativity in her regular school setting, where there are no baking club or technical programs.  This is why I believe that non-profit organizations and non-formal educational institutions are important. These are the places that children are inspired to tinker, build and create without limits. 

THE GUTSY GAL AWARD TAKES OFF!

Gutsy Gals Inspire Me® Launches New Website to Celebrate Award Winners

Gutsy Gals Inspire Me® is excited to announce the launch of the Gutsy Gal Award website: www.GutsyAward.com The new site celebrates winners of the Gutsy Gal Award in the areas of Business, Education, Film & Entertainment, and Charitable work.

The launch of our new site coincides with another exciting moment for Gutsy Gals Inspire Me ...

 

... the presentation of the First Annual Gutsy Gal Film Award, to be held in Great Barrington MA the weekend of March 21-22, 2015. Writer and Director Cathryn Michon is the Grand Prize Winner of the Gutsy Gal Film Award for her feature length comedy Muffin Top: A Love Story. Joining Michon will be outstanding women filmmakers in several other categories.

The film awards will be presented the evening of Saturday March 21 at the Daniel Arts Center at Bard College/Simon's Rock; on Sunday March 22 a screening of the award winning feature length documentary Breaking through the Clouds, directed by Heather Taylor, will be shown at the Triplex Cinema in downtown Great Barrington.

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Gutsy Gals Inspire Me® honors strong female role models with the goal of inspiring women and girls, in ways large and small, to work towards their dreams.

MEET OUR FILM AWARD WINNERS: MARIA AGUI CARTER, WRITER & DIRECTOR OF REBEL

A historical film about a woman for whom only one photograph survives?  A woman director with only documentary experience trying to direct battle scenes and period dramatic scenes for an ambitious documentary?  Seriously?  YES!  

It took 12 years for Carter to get her award-winning film funded and shot - in the meantime she produced and directed 10 other commissioned films for PBS and cable to pay the bills, while raising the funding herself, grant by grant and donation by donation.  The result is REBEL, the incredible true story of Loreta Velazquez, a Civil War soldier and spy.

REBEL is the winner of the Eric Barnouw Honorable Mention Prize as Best Historical Film in America (won in the past by Ken Burns) and is the winner of the Gutsy Gal Film Award for best feature length film for a Documentary of the Americas. 

Meet Our Film Award Winners: Marion Lipschutz and Rose Rosenblatt, Directors of "Young Lakota"

Marion Lipschutz and Rose Rosenblatt are a leading force in creating non-fiction "media that matters". Their company Incite Pictures (and its not-for-profit venture Cine Qua Non) has been educating, entertaining and inspiring audiences for over 15 years.

Young Lakota, winner of the Gutsy Gal Film Award in the special category of Social Justice, documents the story of the first female President of the Oglala Sioux tribe who challenges a South Dakota law criminalizing all abortion. In doing so, she ignites a political firestorm that upends the lives of three young Lakota women on the Pine Ridge Reservation.

Lipschutz who wrote and directed Young Lakota, and Rosenblatt who served as co-director, have worked with HBO, TLC, Court TV, and various private investors. Cine Qua Non, the non-profit arm of the company, has produced for PBS, Fenton Communications, the Jewish Foundation for the Righteous and Advocates for Youth. Their film The Education of Shelby Knox premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and has won numerous awards including Best Cinematography at Sundance and the SXSW Audience Award.