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Directors Guild of America

The Directors Guild of America (DGA) is an entertainment guild that represents the interests of film and television directors in the United States motion picture industry and abroad. Founded as the Screen Directors Guild in 1936, the group merged with the Radio and Television Directors Guild in 1960 to become the modern Directors Guild of America.[3]

Directors Guild of America
PredecessorRadio and Television Directors Guild
Founded1936; 88 years ago (1936)
Headquarters7920 Sunset Boulevard
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Location
  • United States
Members
18,000
President
Lesli Linka Glatter
National Vice President
Mary Ray Thewlis
Key people
Paris Barclay, secretary-treasurer
Websitewww.dga.org
Formerly called
Screen Directors Guild (1936-1960)
[1][2]

Overview edit

Total membership (US records)[4]

Finances (US records; ×$1000)[4]
     Assets      Liabilities      Receipts      Disbursements

As a union that seeks to organize an individual profession, rather than multiple professions across an industry, the DGA is a craft union. It represents directors and members of the directorial team (assistant directors, unit production managers, stage managers, associate directors, production associates, and location managers (in New York and Chicago[citation needed])); that representation includes all sorts of media, such as film, television, documentaries, news, sports, commercials and new media.[citation needed]

The guild has various training programs whereby successful applicants are placed in various productions and can gain experience working in the film or television industry.

As of 2020, the guild had more than 18,000 members.[1] The DGA headquarters are on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, with satellite offices in New York and Chicago and coordinating committees in San Francisco, Chicago, and London.

Composition edit

According to DGA's Department of Labor records, the guild's reported membership classifications currently account for 1,532 "retirees" (about 10% of total membership), 323 "suspended" members (2%), and 5 "life" members (<1%), compared to 13,577 "active" members. "Suspended" members pay dues but are ineligible to vote in the union. DGA contracts also cover some non-members, known as agency fee payers. These non-members currently number 172, or about 1% of the size of the union's membership.[5]

Membership edit

The DGA site lists the following for membership:[6]

Upon the DGA's receipt of a deal memo or commercial project listing form ("CPLF") from a DGA signatory Employer which confirms your bona fide employment in a DGA-covered category, you will be sent an application for membership which will include your required initiation fee and other information. The DGA does not provide applications for membership upon request. Your membership in the DGA is subject to approval by your category Council. Applications for membership are submitted to the appropriate Council upon submission of a completed application form and payment of the requisite initiation fee. The DGA membership application form requires endorsements from three members within your application category, your resume and brief biography, your home address and other contact information. Your application must be notarized.

— Joining the DGA

Membership categories are:[6]

  • Director: Feature/Television
  • Director: Commercial, Documentary, Low Budget Feature, Staff, Segment
  • Unit Production Manager
  • 1st Assistant Director
  • 2nd Assistant Director
  • AD/UPM Low Budget
  • Associate Director
  • Stage Manager
  • AD/SM Low Budget
  • Production Associate (West)
  • Program Production Assistant (East)

Membership initiation fees in 2022 ranged from $200 for a Production Associate to $13,416 for a feature director.[6]

The DGA site listed the following for dues in 2022:[7]

DGA membership dues are basic dues of $50 per quarter and income dues based on gross earnings working in all DGA categories. Gross income includes but is not limited to base salary, overtime, residuals, deferments, percentage compensation, completion of assignment, vacation and holiday pay, profit participation and fees of all kinds in any Guild category. DGA members must report all gross earnings from Guild-covered employment and pay the corollary percentage dues quarterly. Dues on gross earnings are calculated at one and one-half percent (1+12 %) of a member's reported gross earnings from employment in all Guild categories, provided that such dues are payable only on gross annual income between $10,000 and $300,000. In addition to basic and percentage dues, members also pay an additional one percent (1%) of the total residuals they receive in connection with employment under a DGA collective bargaining agreement

— DGA Dues

Labor agreements edit

The agreements signed between the guild and film and television production companies make various stipulations covering pay and working conditions for guild members and require that all those employed in the relevant fields on a film made by that company are guild members. Guild members are generally prevented from working for companies that have not signed an agreement with the DGA. This sometimes leads production companies that have no such agreement to form new companies, purely for the purpose of making a particular film, which do then sign an agreement with the DGA.[citation needed]

The Guild enters into negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), the organization that represents the studios, networks and production companies, approximately every three years to update and renew the Basic Agreement[8] and the Freelance Live and Tape Television Agreement,[9] the DGA's two major agreements. The DGA negotiates minimum compensation levels that must be paid by the companies. Many DGA members have agents who may negotiate rates above the minimums for their clients. The DGA agreements also secure residual payments for the reuse of members' work in film, television and new media.

Other than wages and basic working conditions, the DGA has a particular role in protecting the creative rights of film and TV directors. Such protections that the guild provides include defining the director's role, ensuring, with examples, the principle of "one director to a picture" and the right to prepare a director's cut or edit.[citation needed] Generally, each of these protections is to help offset the power that producers can have over a director during the film-making process.

DGA Awards edit

The DGA hosts the annual DGA Awards, an important precursor to the Academy Awards.[10] In its 69-year history, the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film has been a near perfect barometer for both the Best Director, and in some cases, the Best Picture Academy Award. Only seven times has the DGA Award winner not won the corresponding Best Director Academy Award.[11] Honorees are awarded with a statue manufactured by Society Awards.

Credits edit

The rule that a film can only have one single director was adopted to preserve the continuity of a director's vision and to avoid producers and actors lobbying for a director's credit, or studios hiring multiple directors for a single film or television episode.

The rule is waived only for directorial teams recognized by the DGA who have a history of working together and sharing a common vision. Examples include The Wachowskis, Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, Hughes brothers, Russo Brothers, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller and the Coen brothers.[12] The Coens for years divided credit, with Ethan taking producing credit, Joel taking directing credit, and both of them sharing the writing credit (even though the two of them shared all three duties between themselves) until The Ladykillers in 2004.

An example of the DGA refusing to recognize a directorial team was Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller for Sin City; they were rejected because they had never worked together before; Rodriguez quit the DGA so that Miller would share director's credit.[12]

For the film Bohemian Rhapsody, director Bryan Singer was fired due to frequent absences and clashing on the set, with Dexter Fletcher replacing him with two weeks left of filming. Singer still received director credit and Fletcher received executive producer credit.

In the past, the DGA has also engaged in disputes with the Writers Guild of America (WGA) over possessory credits, first used in the 1915 film The Birth of a Nation. The WGA tried to limit possessory credits to writers, but has always been successfully opposed by the DGA, leaving directors free to try to negotiate such credits if they wish.[13]

Non-member directors edit

Not all Hollywood directors are DGA members. Notable exceptions include George Lucas and Robert Rodriguez.[12] Quentin Tarantino directed six feature films before becoming a DGA member, in 2012.[14] Those who are not members of the guild are unable to direct for the larger movie studios, which are signatories to the guild's agreements that all directors must be guild members.[12]

Leadership edit

 
Directors Guild of America building on Sunset Boulevard.
 
DGA building, Midtown Manhattan

The following are the past Presidents of the Screen Directors Guild and the DGA:[citation needed]

DGA Director's Finder Series edit

The Director's Finder Series (or Director's Finder Screening Series), inaugurated in December 1998, provides for the screening of independent films with no U.S. distributor, and no previous TV or other distribution. Selected by a lottery, the films are screened in DGA theatres in Los Angeles and New York City to an audience of DGA members and invited potential distributors. Many films have been picked up by distributors via the series that may not otherwise have been spotted.[18] The series was initiated by the DGA's Independent Directors' Committee, chaired by Steven Soderbergh, initially for U.S. films only, but later expanded to include Australian, Irish, British and New Zealand directors, via the International Association of English-Speaking Directors Organisation (IAESDO). By 2007, the series had screened more than 75 films.[19] The DGA has collaborated with organisations such as the Screen Directors Guild of Ireland (SDGI)[20] and the Australian Directors' Guild (ADG), which nominate one film to participate.[19]

Australian entries, selected for the Finders Series Award by the ADG from a shortlist of four,[19] include Boxing Day (2007), directed by Kriv Stenders; and after a five-year lapse,[21] Tony Krawitz's documentary The Tall Man (2012),[22] and in 2014 Catriona McKenzie's Satellite Boy was selected for the series.[23]

Irish entries include Terry McMahon's Patrick's Day (2014)[24] and Ross Whitaker's Katie (2018).[25]

Directors Guild Foundation edit

Directors Guild Foundation, founded in 1945, as Directors Guild of America Educational and Benevolent Foundation publishes the Directors Guild of America Oral History series,[26] and provides an interest-free loan program, a Cognitive Wellness Program, and flu shot clinics.[27][28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Directors Guild of America". About.
  2. ^ Robb, David (September 18, 2021). "Lesli Linka Glatter Elected DGA President; Second Woman To Hold Post". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 19, 2021.
  3. ^ Dawes, Amy (2011). "A More Perfect Union". DGA Quarterly. Retrieved May 5, 2016.
  4. ^ a b US Department of Labor, Office of Labor-Management Standards. File number 000-018. (Search)
  5. ^ US Department of Labor, Office of Labor-Management Standards. File number 000-018. Report submitted March 27, 2014.
  6. ^ a b c "The Guild / Departments".
  7. ^ "The Guild / Departments".
  8. ^ "DGA Basic Agreement". DGA Website. Retrieved March 10, 2017.
  9. ^ "DGA Freelance Live and Tape Television Agreement". DGA Website. Retrieved March 10, 2017.
  10. ^ King, Susan (January 9, 2012). "Woody Allen, Martin Scorsese receive nominations for DGA Award". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
  11. ^ Feinberg, Scott (January 29, 2012). "With DGA Win, 'The Artist' and Its Artist Look Virtually Unstoppable at Oscars (Analysis)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
  12. ^ a b c d Engber, Daniel (April 8, 2005). "Why Not Quit the Directors Guild? What Robert Rodriguez can and can't do". Slate. Retrieved December 9, 2011.
  13. ^ Directors Guild of America Magazine, Possessory Credit Timeline August 8, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, 28(6), February 2004
  14. ^ "Membership Report - West Coast Additions" DGA Monthly Magazine, January 2012
  15. ^ Matthew, Jacobs (June 26, 2013). "Directors Guild Of America Elects Paris Barclay First Black, Openly Gay President". Huffington Post.
  16. ^ "Thomas Schlamme Elected Directors Guild President – Complete Election Results". Deadline. June 24, 2017. Retrieved July 5, 2017.
  17. ^ Littleton, Cynthia; Maddaus, Gene (September 18, 2021). "Lesli Linka Glatter Elected President of Directors Guild of America". Variety. Retrieved September 19, 2021.
  18. ^ "DGA Independent Filmmakers Brochure". DGA. Retrieved June 7, 2021. PDF
  19. ^ a b c "Peter Garrett To Attend Directors Guild Awards". Australian Stage Online. October 11, 2007. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  20. ^ "SDGI Announces KATIE as Winner for Finders Series 2018". SDGI. 2018. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  21. ^ "ADG announces the Directors' [sic] Guild of America Finders Award 2012". IF Magazine. February 27, 2012. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  22. ^ "Film-maker Tony Krawitz heads to US as part of Directors' [sic] Guild of America's Finders Series". Mumbrella. October 17, 2012. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  23. ^ "Catriona McKenzie". Sydney, City of Film (Screen NSW). New South Wales Government. December 31, 2019. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  24. ^ Ramachandran, Naman (August 26, 2014). "Patrick's Day wins Screen Directors Guild Finders Series Award". Cineuropa. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  25. ^ "Ross Whitaker's Katie named Screen Directors Guild Finders Series Award-winner for 2018". Scannain. October 18, 2018. Retrieved October 17, 2022.
  26. ^ Jacobson, Arthur; Atkins, Irene Kahn (1991). Arthur Jacobson: Interviewed by Irene Kahn Atkin. Directors Guild of America Oral History. Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow Press and Directors Guild of America. ISBN 978-0-8108-2468-3. OCLC 925733552.
  27. ^ "DGA Foundation". Directors Guild of America. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  28. ^ "The Directors Guild Foundation Annual Campaign — Assisting Members in Need for Seven Decades -". Directors Guild of America. Retrieved March 30, 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website  

34°05′51″N 118°21′45″W / 34.097613°N 118.362413°W / 34.097613; -118.362413

directors, guild, america, entertainment, guild, that, represents, interests, film, television, directors, united, states, motion, picture, industry, abroad, founded, screen, directors, guild, 1936, group, merged, with, radio, television, directors, guild, 196. The Directors Guild of America DGA is an entertainment guild that represents the interests of film and television directors in the United States motion picture industry and abroad Founded as the Screen Directors Guild in 1936 the group merged with the Radio and Television Directors Guild in 1960 to become the modern Directors Guild of America 3 Directors Guild of AmericaPredecessorRadio and Television Directors GuildFounded1936 88 years ago 1936 Headquarters7920 Sunset BoulevardLos Angeles California U S LocationUnited StatesMembers18 000PresidentLesli Linka GlatterNational Vice PresidentMary Ray ThewlisKey peopleParis Barclay secretary treasurerWebsitewww wbr dga wbr orgFormerly calledScreen Directors Guild 1936 1960 1 2 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Composition 1 2 Membership 2 Labor agreements 3 DGA Awards 4 Credits 5 Non member directors 6 Leadership 7 DGA Director s Finder Series 8 Directors Guild Foundation 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksOverview editTotal membership US records 4 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Finances US records 1000 4 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Assets Liabilities Receipts Disbursements As a union that seeks to organize an individual profession rather than multiple professions across an industry the DGA is a craft union It represents directors and members of the directorial team assistant directors unit production managers stage managers associate directors production associates and location managers in New York and Chicago citation needed that representation includes all sorts of media such as film television documentaries news sports commercials and new media citation needed The guild has various training programs whereby successful applicants are placed in various productions and can gain experience working in the film or television industry As of 2020 update the guild had more than 18 000 members 1 The DGA headquarters are on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood with satellite offices in New York and Chicago and coordinating committees in San Francisco Chicago and London Composition edit According to DGA s Department of Labor records the guild s reported membership classifications currently account for 1 532 retirees about 10 of total membership 323 suspended members 2 and 5 life members lt 1 compared to 13 577 active members Suspended members pay dues but are ineligible to vote in the union DGA contracts also cover some non members known as agency fee payers These non members currently number 172 or about 1 of the size of the union s membership 5 Membership edit The DGA site lists the following for membership 6 Upon the DGA s receipt of a deal memo or commercial project listing form CPLF from a DGA signatory Employer which confirms your bona fide employment in a DGA covered category you will be sent an application for membership which will include your required initiation fee and other information The DGA does not provide applications for membership upon request Your membership in the DGA is subject to approval by your category Council Applications for membership are submitted to the appropriate Council upon submission of a completed application form and payment of the requisite initiation fee The DGA membership application form requires endorsements from three members within your application category your resume and brief biography your home address and other contact information Your application must be notarized Joining the DGA Membership categories are 6 Director Feature Television Director Commercial Documentary Low Budget Feature Staff Segment Unit Production Manager 1st Assistant Director 2nd Assistant Director AD UPM Low Budget Associate Director Stage Manager AD SM Low Budget Production Associate West Program Production Assistant East Membership initiation fees in 2022 ranged from 200 for a Production Associate to 13 416 for a feature director 6 The DGA site listed the following for dues in 2022 7 DGA membership dues are basic dues of 50 per quarter and income dues based on gross earnings working in all DGA categories Gross income includes but is not limited to base salary overtime residuals deferments percentage compensation completion of assignment vacation and holiday pay profit participation and fees of all kinds in any Guild category DGA members must report all gross earnings from Guild covered employment and pay the corollary percentage dues quarterly Dues on gross earnings are calculated at one and one half percent 1 1 2 of a member s reported gross earnings from employment in all Guild categories provided that such dues are payable only on gross annual income between 10 000 and 300 000 In addition to basic and percentage dues members also pay an additional one percent 1 of the total residuals they receive in connection with employment under a DGA collective bargaining agreement DGA DuesLabor agreements editThe agreements signed between the guild and film and television production companies make various stipulations covering pay and working conditions for guild members and require that all those employed in the relevant fields on a film made by that company are guild members Guild members are generally prevented from working for companies that have not signed an agreement with the DGA This sometimes leads production companies that have no such agreement to form new companies purely for the purpose of making a particular film which do then sign an agreement with the DGA citation needed The Guild enters into negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers AMPTP the organization that represents the studios networks and production companies approximately every three years to update and renew the Basic Agreement 8 and the Freelance Live and Tape Television Agreement 9 the DGA s two major agreements The DGA negotiates minimum compensation levels that must be paid by the companies Many DGA members have agents who may negotiate rates above the minimums for their clients The DGA agreements also secure residual payments for the reuse of members work in film television and new media Other than wages and basic working conditions the DGA has a particular role in protecting the creative rights of film and TV directors Such protections that the guild provides include defining the director s role ensuring with examples the principle of one director to a picture and the right to prepare a director s cut or edit citation needed Generally each of these protections is to help offset the power that producers can have over a director during the film making process DGA Awards editMain article Directors Guild of America Awards The DGA hosts the annual DGA Awards an important precursor to the Academy Awards 10 In its 69 year history the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film has been a near perfect barometer for both the Best Director and in some cases the Best Picture Academy Award Only seven times has the DGA Award winner not won the corresponding Best Director Academy Award 11 Honorees are awarded with a statue manufactured by Society Awards Credits editThe rule that a film can only have one single director was adopted to preserve the continuity of a director s vision and to avoid producers and actors lobbying for a director s credit or studios hiring multiple directors for a single film or television episode The rule is waived only for directorial teams recognized by the DGA who have a history of working together and sharing a common vision Examples include The Wachowskis Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris Hughes brothers Russo Brothers Phil Lord and Christopher Miller and the Coen brothers 12 The Coens for years divided credit with Ethan taking producing credit Joel taking directing credit and both of them sharing the writing credit even though the two of them shared all three duties between themselves until The Ladykillers in 2004 An example of the DGA refusing to recognize a directorial team was Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller for Sin City they were rejected because they had never worked together before Rodriguez quit the DGA so that Miller would share director s credit 12 For the film Bohemian Rhapsody director Bryan Singer was fired due to frequent absences and clashing on the set with Dexter Fletcher replacing him with two weeks left of filming Singer still received director credit and Fletcher received executive producer credit In the past the DGA has also engaged in disputes with the Writers Guild of America WGA over possessory credits first used in the 1915 film The Birth of a Nation The WGA tried to limit possessory credits to writers but has always been successfully opposed by the DGA leaving directors free to try to negotiate such credits if they wish 13 Non member directors editNot all Hollywood directors are DGA members Notable exceptions include George Lucas and Robert Rodriguez 12 Quentin Tarantino directed six feature films before becoming a DGA member in 2012 14 Those who are not members of the guild are unable to direct for the larger movie studios which are signatories to the guild s agreements that all directors must be guild members 12 Leadership edit nbsp Directors Guild of America building on Sunset Boulevard nbsp DGA building Midtown ManhattanThe following are the past Presidents of the Screen Directors Guild and the DGA citation needed 1936 1938 King Vidor 1938 1941 Frank Capra 1941 1943 George Stevens 1943 1944 Mark Sandrich 1944 1946 John Cromwell 1946 1948 George Stevens 1948 1950 George Marshall 1950 1951 Joseph L Mankiewicz 1951 1959 George Sidney 1959 1961 Frank Capra 1961 1967 George Sidney 1967 1971 Delbert Mann 1971 1975 Robert Wise 1975 1979 Robert Aldrich 1979 1981 George Schaefer 1981 1983 Jud Taylor 1983 1987 Gilbert Cates 1987 1989 Franklin J Schaffner 1989 1993 Arthur Hiller 1993 1997 Gene Reynolds 1997 2002 Jack Shea 2002 2003 Martha Coolidge first female president 2003 2009 Michael Apted 2009 2013 Taylor Hackford 2013 2017 Paris Barclay first black and first openly gay president 15 2017 2021 Thomas Schlamme 16 2021 present Lesli Linka Glatter 17 DGA Director s Finder Series editThe Director s Finder Series or Director s Finder Screening Series inaugurated in December 1998 provides for the screening of independent films with no U S distributor and no previous TV or other distribution Selected by a lottery the films are screened in DGA theatres in Los Angeles and New York City to an audience of DGA members and invited potential distributors Many films have been picked up by distributors via the series that may not otherwise have been spotted 18 The series was initiated by the DGA s Independent Directors Committee chaired by Steven Soderbergh initially for U S films only but later expanded to include Australian Irish British and New Zealand directors via the International Association of English Speaking Directors Organisation IAESDO By 2007 the series had screened more than 75 films 19 The DGA has collaborated with organisations such as the Screen Directors Guild of Ireland SDGI 20 and the Australian Directors Guild ADG which nominate one film to participate 19 Australian entries selected for the Finders Series Award by the ADG from a shortlist of four 19 include Boxing Day 2007 directed by Kriv Stenders and after a five year lapse 21 Tony Krawitz s documentary The Tall Man 2012 22 and in 2014 Catriona McKenzie s Satellite Boy was selected for the series 23 Irish entries include Terry McMahon s Patrick s Day 2014 24 and Ross Whitaker s Katie 2018 25 Directors Guild Foundation editDirectors Guild Foundation founded in 1945 as Directors Guild of America Educational and Benevolent Foundation publishes the Directors Guild of America Oral History series 26 and provides an interest free loan program a Cognitive Wellness Program and flu shot clinics 27 28 See also edit nbsp Organized labour portalAlan Smithee Runaway production Stage Directors and Choreographers SocietyReferences edit a b Directors Guild of America About Robb David September 18 2021 Lesli Linka Glatter Elected DGA President Second Woman To Hold Post Deadline Hollywood Retrieved September 19 2021 Dawes Amy 2011 A More Perfect Union DGA Quarterly Retrieved May 5 2016 a b US Department of Labor Office of Labor Management Standards File number 000 018 Search US Department of Labor Office of Labor Management Standards File number 000 018 Report submitted March 27 2014 a b c The Guild Departments The Guild Departments DGA Basic Agreement DGA Website Retrieved March 10 2017 DGA Freelance Live and Tape Television Agreement DGA Website Retrieved March 10 2017 King Susan January 9 2012 Woody Allen Martin Scorsese receive nominations for DGA Award Los Angeles Times Retrieved June 4 2023 Feinberg Scott January 29 2012 With DGA Win The Artist and Its Artist Look Virtually Unstoppable at Oscars Analysis The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved June 4 2023 a b c d Engber Daniel April 8 2005 Why Not Quit the Directors Guild What Robert Rodriguez can and can t do Slate Retrieved December 9 2011 Directors Guild of America Magazine Possessory Credit Timeline Archived August 8 2008 at the Wayback Machine 28 6 February 2004 Membership Report West Coast Additions DGA Monthly Magazine January 2012 Matthew Jacobs June 26 2013 Directors Guild Of America Elects Paris Barclay First Black Openly Gay President Huffington Post Thomas Schlamme Elected Directors Guild President Complete Election Results Deadline June 24 2017 Retrieved July 5 2017 Littleton Cynthia Maddaus Gene September 18 2021 Lesli Linka Glatter Elected President of Directors Guild of America Variety Retrieved September 19 2021 DGA Independent Filmmakers Brochure DGA Retrieved June 7 2021 PDF a b c Peter Garrett To Attend Directors Guild Awards Australian Stage Online October 11 2007 Retrieved June 7 2021 SDGI Announces KATIE as Winner for Finders Series 2018 SDGI 2018 Retrieved June 7 2021 ADG announces the Directors sic Guild of America Finders Award 2012 IF Magazine February 27 2012 Retrieved June 7 2021 Film maker Tony Krawitz heads to US as part of Directors sic Guild of America s Finders Series Mumbrella October 17 2012 Retrieved June 7 2021 Catriona McKenzie Sydney City of Film Screen NSW New South Wales Government December 31 2019 Retrieved June 7 2021 Ramachandran Naman August 26 2014 Patrick s Day wins Screen Directors Guild Finders Series Award Cineuropa Retrieved June 7 2021 Ross Whitaker s Katie named Screen Directors Guild Finders Series Award winner for 2018 Scannain October 18 2018 Retrieved October 17 2022 Jacobson Arthur Atkins Irene Kahn 1991 Arthur Jacobson Interviewed by Irene Kahn Atkin Directors Guild of America Oral History Metuchen New Jersey Scarecrow Press and Directors Guild of America ISBN 978 0 8108 2468 3 OCLC 925733552 DGA Foundation Directors Guild of America Retrieved March 30 2022 The Directors Guild Foundation Annual Campaign Assisting Members in Need for Seven Decades Directors Guild of America Retrieved March 30 2022 External links editOfficial website nbsp 34 05 51 N 118 21 45 W 34 097613 N 118 362413 W 34 097613 118 362413 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Directors Guild of America amp oldid 1169442454, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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