Deanna Kamiel
Deanna Kamiel | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | June 14, 2018 | (aged 71)
Resting place | Pardes Chaim cemetery, Vaughan, Ontario, Canada |
Occupation(s) | Documentary film writer/producer, and a Professor of Film Development |
Spouse | Howard White (1972–1975) |
Deanna Kamiel (July 6, 1946 – June 14, 2018) was a Canadian-born director, documentary film/public TV[1] writer/producer [2] with a career in public broadcasting at the CBC in Toronto and PBS in Minneapolis [3][4] and professor of film development at SUNY Purchase College and then at The New School, Manhattan, New York City, US.[5] She worked for 26 years (1992–2018) as Head of The New School's Documentary Studies program, Director of Graduate Certificate in Doc Studies Program, and Assistant Professor of Media Studies - School of Media Studies, Manhattan, New York, U.S.[6][7][8] Kamiel's documentaries were based on live interviews of the person(s) the film was about.[9][10] As a student at The University of Toronto in the 1960s, she wrote for The Varsity in Toronto,[11] and The Ubyssey in Vancouver.[12]
Awards
[edit]- Guggenheim Fellowship, 1984, Creative Arts, video and audio[13]
- Museum of Modern Art [14]
- Northwest Broadcast News Association (regional Emmy), 1983 [14]
- National Association of Working Women, Best Profile, 1983
- National Film Board of Canada [14]
- International Public Television Festival (INPUT): 1986, 1985, 1984 [14]
- Tokyo Video Festival, First Prize, Nuclear Outpost, 1985 [14]
- Chicago International Film Festival, Cinematography, Nuclear Outpost, 1985 [14]
- The Humanitarian Award at the Long Island International Film Expo, June 30, 2014
- Emmy (New York), City Arts, WNET, 1999
Grants
[edit]- Ontario Arts Council Grant, 1979[15]
- Faculty Support Award, Purchase College, State University of New York, 2005 [15]
- Faculty Support Award, Purchase College, State University of New York, 2010 [15]
- Provost Faculty Research Fund Grant, The New School, Office of the Provost, 2013-14 [15]
Books
[edit]The Lace Ghetto[16]
Filmography
[edit]- Visions of Cinema[17] (Interviews with Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Jonathan Demme, and Jean Luc Godard)[18]
- Visions of Home [18]
- Jean-Luc Godard[19][20]
- Boys with bats: an American romance[21]
- Milgrom's Obsession[22]
- Maggie and the Men of Minnesota, 1972[23][24]
- Dean and Me: Roadshow of an American Primary[25][26]
- Ruth [24]
- Adoption [24]
- Nuclear Outpost [27][28]
- Mickey's Diner[29]
- Nuclear Outpost[30][31][32]
- Nighttime at the Diner [32]
- Lessons from an American Primary[33]
Articles
[edit]- "I believe my eyes: The transformative theatre of Hanif Kureishi",[34][31][35]
References
[edit]- ^ Monday. Sept. 18, 2017, Video Slowly Emerges at the Flaherty Seminar: Deirdre Boyle, Patricia Zimmermann, Chicago Film Festival
- ^ Variety, Pictures, Wednesday, January 26, 1983, p. 28 University of Toronto archives, AFI Women's Directing Workshop is Set for '83; Name Lindfors, Helmond,
- ^ International Documentary Association, Profile: The Documentary Media Studies Graduate Certificate Program at The New School, by Wanda Bershen, JUNE 30, 2014
- ^ Subject to Change: Guerrilla Television Revisted,by Deirdre Boyle, Prof of History New York University, publ. by Oxford Univ. Press, USA 1996, ISBN 0-19-504334-0, p. ix.
- ^ "Remembering Deanna Kamiel". smscommons.newschool.edu. Jun 20, 2018. Retrieved Mar 19, 2020.
- ^ Deanna Kamiel 1946-2018, written on June 19, 2018 by Louis Galdieri in News
- ^ Watson, Mary; Nikolic, Vladan (2018-06-20). "Remembering Deanna Kamiel". The New School. Retrieved 2018-06-28.
- ^ "Home". immediacy.newschool.edu.
- ^ The Minneapolis Star, Sept. 24, 1981, Variety/TV Tonight – Critic's Choice, p. 32, John Carman
- ^ An Interview with Hanif Kureishi, The Black Album with My Son the Fanatic: A Novel and a Short Story, by Hanif Kureishi, Simon & Schuster, Inc., New York, 1995, ISBN 978-1-4391-3109-1
- ^ The Varsity, Sept. 20, 1965 to March 18, 1966 "Reception idea proves success"
- ^ Rat Blasted Into Space, The Ubyssey, Vancouver, B.C., Vol. XLVII, No. 35, Thurs., Jan. 14, 1965, p. 2
- ^ "4 From State Among Winners of Guggenheim Fellowships". Star Tribune. 17 April 1984. p. 26. Retrieved 28 June 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c d e f Faculty Film Helps Launch New Media Lounge at MoMa, The New School News, Feb 23, 2012
- ^ a b c d LibAnswers <archivist@newschool.libanswers.com, retrieved July 2, 2018
- ^ Maxine Nunes, Deanna White, Publ. by New Press, 1972 ISBN 0887700756 ISBN 9780887700750
- ^ "Deanna Kamiel". IMDb. Retrieved Mar 19, 2020.
- ^ a b Minneapolis: Intermedia Arts MN, ©1988
- ^ 1988, written and directed by D. Kamiel, TV short
- ^ "A YouTube Godard interview with documentary writer, producer for PBS, Deanna Kamiel (1980) is not that enlightening as to his purpose, but there are a few phrases here and there which express his attitude to film." Breaking The Glass Armour: Neoformalist Film Analysis, page 263, chapter 10, Godard's Unknown Country: Sauve qui peut (la vie), by Kirstin Thompson, 1988 (Review by Slarek of Region 2 AI DVD)
- ^ Twin Cities Public Television, Inc., 1985, KTCA-TV, Saint Paul, MN
- ^ Miami Herald, Miami woman tracks her Jewish roots through 22 generations, by Ana Veciana-Suarez, produced by D. Kamiel, Jan. 3, 2014
- ^ Minneapolis Star and Tribune, Tues., Sept. 4, 1984, "COLEMAN: Steinman tells Maggie women set standards too high, by Erma Bombeck, pages 1C and 6C
- ^ a b c "Movies". Star Tribune. 18 January 1985. p. 40. Retrieved 28 June 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ A 2008 documentary film about Howard Dean and his 2004 Presidential campaign, directed by Heath Eiden, starring Howard Dean, Release date 2008, United States
- ^ Twin Cities Daily Planet, unravelme1, "U.S. Premier", written by D. Kamiel, directed by Heath Eiden, April 14, 2008
- ^ Nuclear Outpost, 1984, color, KCTV Channel 19, Santa Barbara, CA
- ^ Journal of Film & Video, Vol. 36, No. 4, "Documentary Film Making" (Fall 1984), pp. 62-80, Publ. by University of Illinois Press, on behalf of the University Film & Video Association
- ^ The Post-Star, Glens Falls, New York, June 11, 1988, p. 14, "Video Series Continues" a ref for "Mickey's Diner", portrait of a vintage diner at St. Paul's Minnesota, and the people who work there"
- ^ Jan 23 Port Washington Public Library, Port Washington, NY: Maggie and the Men of Minnesota; Nuclear Outposts; Boys with Bats; and selected shorter pieces, Film and Video Makers Travel Sheet, 1986
- ^ a b Contemporary Critical Perspectives, Hanif Kureishi, edited by Susan A Fischer, Bloomsbury Publishing, Aug. 13, 2015
- ^ a b The Documentary Today: A Symposium Film in the Cities, St. Paul, MN 55114, Nov. 10-12, 1983, Conference Programs 1983-1984, Journal of Film & Video, XXXVI, Fall, 1984 p. 62
- ^ "Lessons from an American Primary". Vimeo. Retrieved Mar 19, 2020.
- ^ Hanif Kureishi's 'better philosophy', chapter 5, and his screenplay Venus (2006), chapter 2. "Hanif Kureishi ed. by Susan Alice Fischer: A Review of International English Literature, vol. 49 no. 1, 2018, pp. 157-160. Project MUSE
- ^ Hanif Kureishi: Contemporary Critical Perspectives, ed by Susan Alice Fischer, Bloomsbury, Interview: "An Extraordinary Encounter", Stephen Frears, in conversation with Susan Alice Fischer and Deanna Kamiel
External links
[edit]- Jewish Canadian writers
- 20th-century Canadian women writers
- 21st-century Canadian women writers
- Canadian women screenwriters
- Canadian documentary film directors
- Canadian documentary film producers
- Canadian political writers
- 2018 deaths
- Canadian educators
- Canadian women educators
- Canadian non-fiction writers
- Canadian schoolteachers
- Deaths from pancreatic cancer in New York (state)
- Feminist filmmakers
- 1946 births
- Canadian women non-fiction writers
- Canadian women documentary filmmakers
- Jewish film people
- Canadian women film directors
- Canadian women film producers