Heather Booth: Changing the World

OCOpen Caption screening
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Heather Booth: Changing the World

March 18, 3:00 Q&As with filmmaker Lilly Rivlin (after Heather Booth) and with filmmaker Leah Galant (after Death Metal Grandma)

“Exactly the kind of sophisticated and inspiring story we need in these troubling times. Go see this film…a remarkable documentary.” (LA Review of Books)

Heather Booth may be the most influential person you’ve never heard of. Accomplished director Lilly Rivlin (Grace Paley: Collected Shorts) makes an unequivocal argument for Booth’s work in her engaging portrait of the organizer and activist. From a politically conscious college student who began her career in 1964 registering voters in Mississippi at the height of the Civil Rights movement, Booth became the go-to strategist for causes ranging from child care to women’s rights to immigration reform, and advisor to leaders including Julian Bond and Senator Elizabeth Warren. At a time when many are wondering how to make their voices heard and when civil and women’s rights are under attack, this empowering documentary is an inspiring look at how to make social change.

Screens with

Death Metal Grandma

Leah Galant. 2018. 14 m. NR. US. English.

This short documentary by JBFC Creative Culture alum Leah Galant (Kitty and Ellen) tells the story of Inge Ginsberg, Holocaust survivor, songwriter for Doris Day and Dean Martin, and now a 97-year-old heavy-metal performer.

JBFC’s Creative Culture program provides support to emerging filmmakers and fosters a thriving artistic community in the Hudson Valley region.

Tickets: $10 (members), $15 (nonmembers)

PAST EVENTS

Q&As with filmmaker Lilly Rivlin (after Heather Booth) and with filmmaker Leah Galant (after Death Metal Grandma)
Sunday, Mar. 18 2018, 3:00
This event is over. View all of our upcoming events.

A 7th generation Jerusalemite, Lilly came to the USA as a child with her family.  She has had an interesting life.  She lived in Washington, DC, until attending U. of C. Berkeley in the 60’s, where she received an MA in Political Science, and developed her lifelong passions as an activist/feminist. She returned to Israel in 1963, and was the main researcher for O Jerusalem, which began a life of journalism, photography, and story telling. Her credits are many; in mid-life she began making documentaries. She won the Miller Reel Jewish Woman Filmmaker Award winner for 2013.  She has made 7 documentaries to date. Heather Booth: Changing the World, is the third in a trilogy about activist women. For a fuller description of this long life visit www.lillyrivlin.com

Leah was a 2017 Sundance Ignite Fellow which offers an intensive year long mentorship program for emerging filmmakers. Leah was named Variety magazine's "110 Students to Watch in Film and Media" while a student at Ithaca College for her work on The Provider and Beyond the Wall. The Provider is about the story of a traveling abortion provider in Texas. The Provider won a Student Emmy Award and screened at various festivals including SXSW and Palm Springs Shortfest. Leah was the Fall 2016 inaugural Sally Burns Shenkman Women Filmmaker Fellow at Jacob Burns Film Center where she completed her latest project Kitty and Ellen (DOC NYC 2017) and Death Metal Grandma that is premiering at SXSW 2018.

This film is part of the Westchester Jewish Film Festival 2018 series.



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