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Triumph and frustration: Database documents the history of Canadian women film directors

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Nell Shipman, centre, with the crew of Trail of the North Wind in 1923, is among 1,699 filmmakers in the Canadian Women Film Directors Database includes (Image courtesy of Boise State University)

Women filmmakers in Canada have often grappled with low budgets, employment scarcity and a lack of recognition. Yet they鈥檝e also built a powerful canon of work and inspired an emerging group of artists who are now taking their rightful place on the world stage.

Until recently, few resources existed to tell the story of Canadian women who make movies 鈥 and those that did exist were hard to find. Margaret Fulford, a librarian at the University of Toronto's University College, set out to correct that. 

A lifelong film buff and feminist, Fulford was inspired to create such a resource after attending a 1980s festival showcasing women's films. Much later, she decided to devote her first year-long research leave to create a database of Canadian women filmmakers.

She called up Kay Armatage, professor emerita at the Cinema Studies Institute and the Women & Gender Studies Institute and an acclaimed filmmaker herself. 鈥淚 said, is there anything I鈥檓 overlapping with, and would this be useful?鈥 Fulford recalls.

Armatage assured her that it most certainly would be 鈥 and that a year wouldn鈥檛 be nearly enough to capture all the information. 鈥淪he said, it鈥檚 much bigger than you think,鈥 Fulford says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 only gotten bigger since,鈥 Fulford adds. 

Today,  is a fully digital and bilingual resource with the names of 1,699 filmmakers 鈥 and counting 鈥 along with details of roughly 2,420 films they've made since 1920. Women represented in the collection range from 鈥 to modern-day stars Patricia Rozema, Deepa Mehta, Alanis Obomsawin and many others.

The site is free and accessible to researchers, students and hobbyists alike. In addition to the names of directors and their movies, it also includes a wealth of bibliographic references, lists of awards won by filmmakers, and a 鈥渃hronology of firsts鈥 page, highlighting pioneers in the field.

Fulford took several programming courses to design the database, which has involved 15 years of painstaking detective work. 鈥淚鈥檝e mostly done it myself, but I鈥檝e had some important help from Faculty of Information students who were doing practicums. I had one go through the National Film Board website and find any pre-1980 films that I hadn鈥檛 already, and another one went through festival programs that were only available in print.鈥

Fulford is particularly proud of the quotes by or about directors that she鈥檚 mixed in with the all the other biographical information. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 one of my favourite parts of the research 鈥 looking for pithy, interesting quotes within articles or books. I put those in to give the database a little more flavour,鈥 she says.

These quotes reveal a history in which Canadian women had to fight to be properly credited or even employed within the industry. One learns, for example, that acclaimed war documentarist Jane Marsh resigned from the National Film Board when founder John Grierson 鈥 the inventor of the term 鈥渄ocumentary鈥 鈥 admitted he didn鈥檛 want to promote her because of her sex.

That said, documentary film is one of the areas in which Canadian women found success. Fulford says that, since Grierson鈥檚 time, the National Film Board has been responsible for either directly nurturing or inspiring the careers of many of Canada's finest women filmmakers.

鈥淲omen have traditionally been in the minority as directors everywhere in the world, but historically Canada has had more participation than the United States, and I think that鈥檚 largely because of the NFB,鈥 Fulford says.

鈥淎nd yet documentaries tend to be easier to get into, since they cost less to make. Because when we talk about issues of gender parity in filmmaking, it鈥檚 not just about the percentage of women who are becoming film directors: it鈥檚 about the kinds of budgets they鈥檙e getting.鈥

Watching her database grow over the last 15 years, Fulford has noticed women are continuing to make great documentaries, while making inroads in other genres such as features and animation. Some of Fulford's recent favourites include Pixar's Turning Red by Domee Shi, who grew up in Toronto and is the daughter of Ningsha Zhong in U of T's department of physical therapy, as well as features such as Night Raiders by Danis Goulet and Beans by Tracey Deer.

As for older films, Fulford is hard-pressed to pick a favourite. 鈥淚 love Double Happiness by Mina Shum, and L茅a Pool鈥檚 film Emporte-moi. Also Patricia Rozema, especially Mansfield Park, and Water by Deepa Mehta,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 could go on and on.鈥

 

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