Nancy Kelly - Director's Biography
For
more than 20 years, Nancy Kelly has produced and directed independent
documentary and narrative films.
She wrote,
produced and directed Downside UP a documentary about America's
largest museum of contemporary art (MASS MoCA) which opened in the abandoned
Massachusetts factory where Ms. Kelly's grandparents and parents once
worked. The documentary explores whether something as ephemeral as
contemporary art can breathe life into a dying city. Downside Up is a
co-production with WMHT, Schenectady and the Banff Centre for the Arts,
Banff, Alberta, Canada. Produced in association with the Independent
Television Service (ITVS), with funds from the Massachusetts Foundation for
the Humanities.
Ms. Kelly
developed, produced and directed the highly critically acclaimed American
Playhouse Theatrical film Thousand Pieces of Gold which stars
Rosalind Chao and Chris Cooper. The Los Angeles Times compared her work to
the "lyricism of a John Ford, a Budd Boetticher, a George
Stephens...but always opening up a new world." Thousand Pieces of
Gold tells the story of a young Chinese woman who comes to America
during the late Gold Rush as a slave. It was developed in association with
the Sundance Institute and financed by American Playhouse Theatrical Films,
Film Four International, and Maverick Films International.
Thousand
Pieces of Gold was theatrically released in the top 20 US markets. Its
premiere broadcast on American Playhouse ranks among the seriesí top twenty
highest rated broadcasts. J & M Entertainment sold the television rights
to every country in the world. Showtime, Sundance, Encore and the Romance
cable channels broadcast the film. Thousand Pieces of Gold was
featured in over 20 international film festivals, both in the U.S. and
abroad. Ms Kelly also produced and directed the acclaimed, award-winning
documentaries Cowgirls: Portraits of American Ranch Women; A
Cowhand's Song: Crisis on the Range; and Sweeping Ocean Views. Cowgirls
was broadcast by the National Geographic Explorer Program, on various public
television stations, and overseas in the United Kingdom (Channel Four),
Zimbabwe, New Zealand, and Australia. Cowgirls was featured in the
Sundance Film Festival, won a Blue Ribbon at the American Film Festival, a
Golden Apple at the National Educational Film Festival, Best Documentary
from the National Cowboy Hall of Fame, and Best of the Sinking Creek Film
Festival and the Palo Alto Film Festival. Sweeping Ocean Views,
produced by KQED, received a local Emmy nomination.
She recently
directed OneTree, the pilot segment for SPARK, a documentary art
series on KQED, San Francisco. Her work of creative non-fiction "When
We Were Cowgirls" will be published in 2003 by the University of Utah
Press. Ms. Kelly adapted "Breaking Sugar" from the short story by
the contemporary Scottish writer A. L. Kennedy.
Her work has
been featured in film festivals around the world, including the Sundance
Film Festival, San Francisco International Film Festival, Seattle
International Film Festival, Chicago International Film Festival, South by
Southwest Film Festival, Denver International Film Festival, Hawaii
International Film Festival, Cleveland International Film Festival,
Deauville (France) Festival of American Cinema, London International Film
Festival, Moscow International Film Festival, Vancouver International Film
Festival, Cork International Film Festival, Galway International Film
Festival, Amiens International Film Festival, and Festival of Young Cinema
(Paris), Mill Valley Film Festival, Los Angeles Women in Film Festival,
Rocky Mountain Women's Film Festival, Breckenridge Festival of Film, Santa
Barbara Film Festival, Fort Lauderdale Film Festival, National Educational
Film Festival and the American Film Festival. Her work has been exhibited at
the Directors Guild of America, National Film Theater (London), Centres
Pompidou (Paris). Gene Autry Museum (Los Angeles), and the National Cowboy
Hall of Fame (Oklahoma City).
Her work has
won: Audience Award, Ft. Lauderdale Film Festival, Best Feature, National
Cowboy Hall of Fame, Blue Ribbon, American Film Festival, Golden Apple,
National Educational Film Festival, Best Documentary, National Cowboy Hall
of Fame, Best of Festival, Palo Alto Film Festival, Best of Festival,
Sinking Creek Film Festival, among others.
For her
various projects, she has received funding from the Ford Foundation,
National Endowment for the Arts, ITVS, CPB, NEH, American Playhouse, the
Humanities Councils and Foundations of Massachusetts, California, Oregon,
Nevada and Wyoming, AFI/Rocky Mountain Film Fellowships, LEF Foundation,
Fleishhacker Foundation, Film Arts Foundation Grants Program, Marin Arts
Council, Pioneer Fund, and Lucius and Eva Eastman Fund, among others. She
has also raised funds through limited partnerships.
Ms. Kelly
attended the Sundance Instituteís June Lab (where Thousand Pieces of
Gold was developed), IFFCON, INPUT, and the Squaw Valley Community of
Writers. She has been a resident at the MacDowell Colony, the Banff Centre
for the Arts, the UCross Foundation and Yaddo. She taught film production at
the UCLA Graduate Film School and has given seminars on filmmaking at the
Film Arts Foundation, UC/Berkeley, UC Extension, and the University of
Washington.
Nancy Kelly
is a native of North Adams, Massachusetts.
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