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Julia Reichert

Julia Bell Reichert (June 16, 1946 – December 1, 2022) was an American Academy Award-winning documentary filmmaker, activist, and feminist. She was a co-founder of New Day Films. Reichert's filmmaking career spanned over 50 years as a director and producer of documentaries.

Julia Reichert
Born(1946-06-16)June 16, 1946
DiedDecember 1, 2022(2022-12-01) (aged 76)
Alma materAntioch College
OccupationDocumentary filmmaker
Years active1968–2021
Known forUnion Maids, Growing Up Female, American Factory, The Last Truck: Closing of a GM Plant, Seeing Red
Spouses
  • Jim Klein
    (div. 1986)
  • Steven Bognar
    (m. 2020)
Children1

Reichert was a four-time Academy Award-nominated director, for Union Maids (1977), Seeing Red: Stories of American Communists (1984), The Last Truck: Closing of a GM Plant (2010) and American Factory (2020, for which she won an Oscar).[1]  

She was a two-time winner of the Primetime Emmy, a two-time nominee of the Peabody Award, and director of two films on the National Film Registry.  

Reichert was the recipient of the award for Distinguished Service to Labor and Working-Class History from the Labor and Working-Class History Association (LAWCHA). She was professor emeritus in the Department of Theatre, Dance and Motion Pictures at Wright State University.

Reichert was honored with lifetime achievement awards from the International Documentary Association, the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, and the Hot Docs Film Festival.  She is a recipient of the Chicken & Egg Pictures 'Breakthrough Prize.' A traveling retrospective of her work was curated by the Wexner Center for the Arts, and was launched at the Museum of Modern Art in May 2019, before traveling to other US cities.

Early life edit

Julia Bell Reichert was born and raised in Bordentown Township, New Jersey.[2][3] Her father Louis was a butcher and her mother Dorothy was a nurse.  Reichert was one of four children.[4] The family spent summers on Long Beach Island, NJ, where her father ran a fishing charter business. Reichert had a youthful fascination with photography.

Reichert was a 1964 graduate of Bordentown Regional High School.[5][6]

She enrolled at Antioch College in 1964, and dropped out in 1967 when she hitchhiked to California during the Summer of Love. She returned to Antioch in 1968 and graduated in 1970 with a degree in documentary arts.

During her Antioch years, Reichert's sole film professor was experimental filmmaker David Brooks, who died at age 24 driving between Antioch and his home in South Charleston, Ohio.

Career edit

1968–1970: WYSO FM edit

In 1968, Reichert became partners in life and creative work with Jim Klein, who introduced her in 1969 to the Antioch student radio station, WYSO FM.  Reichert began to learn audio recording, tape editing, interviewing, and storytelling within a time frame. She worked an Antioch co-op job at WYSO in the Summer of 1969, and in her course evaluation, WYSO manager Tim Mabee wrote:  "Julia developed practically on her own initiative the WYSO news program. She trained and directed about ten students and several outsiders in the writing, compiling, taping, interviewing, and announcing involved."

In 1969, Reichert created and hosted "The Single Girl" on WYSO, possibly the first openly feminist radio program in the United States. Reichert later retitled the show "Sisters, Brothers, Lovers, Listen," feeling the word 'girl' was disrespectful.[7]

1970–1972: Growing Up Female and the creation of New Day Films edit

Produced in 1970 and released in 1971, Growing Up Female chronicles the socialization of women at six different ages, blending interview and cinema verité material. The film is the first feature documentary of the modern Women's Liberation Movement and was selected by the Library of Congress for the National Film Registry in 2011. The film was directed and produced by Reichert and Jim Klein.

Frustrated with unfair distribution offers for Growing Up Female, Reichert and Klein decided to distribute the film themselves. They coined the name New Day Films. While attending the Flaherty Seminar in 1971, they met filmmaker Amalie R. Rothschild, who also had a feminist film, It Happens to Us, and soon thereafter Liane Brandon, director of Anything You Want to Be, also a pioneering feminist documentary. The four filmmakers founded New Day Films as a filmmaker-owned democratically run film distribution cooperative. New Day Films recently celebrated its 50th anniversary, and now has over 140 filmmaker-owners, distributing over 300 films.

1974–1984: Union Maids and Seeing Red: Stories of American Communists edit

Reichert and Klein's collaboration continued with MethadoneAn American Way of Dealing, released in 1974, and then turned towards history, teaming up with Miles Mogulescu to make Union Maids.  

Inspired by the book "Rank & File – Personal Histories By Working Class Organizers" by Alice & Staughton Lynd, the film is a pioneering oral history/archival documentary telling the rank-and-file story of three union activists. Union Maids premiered in 1976, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1977 and has been in active distribution ever since. Historian Howard Zinn called Union Maids "the best film on labor history I have ever seen."

Seeing Red: Stories of American Communists, produced & directed by Reichert & Klein in the late 1970s and early 1980s, premiered at the Telluride and New York Film Festivals in 1983. It had a successful theatrical run, playing for ten weeks in New York and San Francisco/Bay Area, 7 weeks in Boston & Seattle, and 5 weeks in Los Angeles. The film screened theatrically in nearly 100 US cities and was nominated in 1984 for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.  Seeing Red remains in active distribution, and was recently restored by IndieCollect for new theatrical screenings.

1985–1996: From documentary to narrative and back again edit

After Seeing Red, Reichert wrote, produced, and directed the independent fiction feature Emma & Elvis (1992) and produced the independent fiction feature The Dream Catcher (1999), directed by Ed Radtke. In 1997 she teamed up with her new partner Steven Bognar to begin filming the stories of children fighting cancer at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, in a film that would become A Lion in the House.  

Edited from over 525 hours of material filmed across six years and produced in partnership with ITVS, A Lion in the House tells the stories of five children and teenagers, their parents, siblings, and caregivers as they struggle to navigate childhood cancer and all its challenges. The film, a co-production with ITVS, the Independent Television Service, premiered as a two-night primetime common-carriage PBS special on the series Independent Lens. The film, executive produced by Sally Jo Fifer, premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival in the U.S. Documentary Competition, was nominated for Best Documentary Feature in the Film Independent Spirit Awards, and won the Primetime Emmy for 'Exceptional Merit in Nonfiction Filmmaking' in 2007.

2008-2015: The Last Truck: Closing of a GM Plant edit

In June 2008, following the announcement that Dayton's General Motors would be shuttering their Moraine Assembly Truck and Bus plant - a major employer and financial lifeblood of the community - Reichert and Bognar began production on what would become The Last Truck: Closing of a GM Plant. The duo and their team interviewed hundreds of the plant's 3,000-plus workers. Denied access to film inside the plant, they interviewed workers at the entrance and exits to the plant's property, and supplied digital cameras to workers to covertly film, including footage of the last vehicles to be assembled there. The film is a production of HBO Documentary Films, executive produced by Lisa Heller & Sheila Nevins. The film premiered at the 2009 Telluride Film Festival and was nominated in 2010 for an Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject).

In 2012, Reichert and Bognar produced and directed the short documentary Sparkle, which followed legendary Dayton Contemporary Dance Company (DCDC) dancer Sheri Sparkle' Williams following what could have been a career-ending injury. The film, executive produced by Gita Pullapilly and Aron Gaudet, won the "Best Documentary Short" audience awards at the AFI SilverDocs and New Orleans Film Festivals.  The film was broadcast on the PBS special LIFECASTERS.  

In 2012, Julia Reichert returned to her roots, beginning a two-year collaboration with WYSO 91.3 FM, where she learned many aspects of nonfiction storytelling in the 1960s and 70s. Reichert and Bognar teamed with WYSO staff and volunteers to create ReInvention Stories (2012–14). A project of the national storytelling initiative Localore and in collaboration with web innovators Zeega, ReInvention Stories is a documentary project telling stories of Daytonians forced to reinvent their lives and professions in the wake of the 2008 economic crash. The stories came in the form of WYSO radio pieces, short films, a photography exhibit, and an interactive transmedia website.  The project was supported by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, among others. ReInvention Stories was featured in the interactive media section of the 2014 Tribeca Film Festival.  

In 2015, Reichert and Bognar collaborated with the Cincinnati Opera and the University of Cincinnati's College Conservatory of Music to create the documentary short Making Morning Star, a behind-the-scenes look at the workshopping and development of a new American opera by composer Ricky Ian Gordon and librettist William M. Hoffman.

2015-2020: American Factory edit

In 2015, it was announced that the former General Motors plant in Moraine would be occupied by Chinese windshield manufacturer Fuyao, injecting a wave of new jobs back into the community. Reichert and Bognar were granted access to both the Ohio and China factories, as well as access to the company's chairman; they filmed from 2015 to 2017. Her nephew Jeff Reichert & Julie Parker Benello became producers on the film, and Jeff Reichert became one of the film's primary cinematographers, along with Erick Stoll, Aubrey Keith, Julia Reichert & Steven Bognar.  The film became a production of Participant Media in late 2016, and Diane Weyermann and Jeff Skoll became Executive Producers.  

The film's editor Lindsay Utz completed editing in late 2018, and composer Chad Cannon completed his original score in early 2019. American Factory premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2019, where it won the award for Best Director, U.S. Documentary. Shortly after its premiere, the film was acquired by Netflix and Higher Ground Productions. Following a successful film festival tour, it was nominated for and won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.

Following the premiere of American Factory, a traveling retrospective of Julia Reichert's films was curated by the Wexner Center for the Arts and was launched at the Museum of Modern Art in May 2019, before traveling to other US cities.

2020-2021: 9to5: The Story of a Movement edit

Long in production, Reichert and Bognar completed their film 9to5: The Story of a Movement, a real-life activist movement that inspired Jane Fonda to produce the feature narrative film 9 to 5. The film was scheduled to premiere at the 2020 South by Southwest Film Festival until the pandemic shut down the entire festival. The film was screened at the AFI Docs, Mill Valley, and DOC NYC film festivals.  

The film features interviews with many of 9to5's members as well as actor and activist Jane Fonda. The film premiered on PBS on their Independent Lens series in early 2021 and was nominated for a Peabody Award in 2022.

During the height of the pandemic, Reichert & Bognar were approached by a neighbor, comedian Dave Chappelle, to film a series of distanced, outdoor comedy performances Chappelle held in their town of Yellow Springs, Ohio.

Following a full Summer of performances, which included special guests such as Jon Stewart, Tiffany Haddish, and Chris Rock, Bognar and Reichert produced and directed two films - 8:46, which premiered online via Netflix in 2020, and Dave Chappelle: Live in Real Life, which closed the 2021 Tribeca Film Festival to a sold-out audience of over 6,000 at Radio City Music Hall.

Themes and views edit

In a 2019 WYSO interview with Neenah Ellis, Julia Reichert said "I think all of us are shaped by our era that we grow up in. I came of age in the 60s. Millions of us saw racism, saw U.S. domination around the world, imperialism, saw huge inequalities class-wise, and we said "The system's not working. We got to replace it. And we became, in some broad sense, revolutionaries. How do we live the life we can foresee that we'd like to have?  How do we do that?  Particularly when it comes to racism and class, sexism, and patriarchy. This doesn't just go to the government and the board room, it goes to the bedroom and the kitchen, right?  It goes to how we treat each other?  So I think there was a general sense, which was very exciting, that we can build a new world."

Reichart's films focused on the lives of working-class people and women.  Her five feature documentaries about labor struggles, Union Maids, Seeing Red, The Truck, American Factory and 9to5 - The Story of a Movement, center on collective actions, with particular attention to nuances of class, race, and gender. Reichert, with collaborators Klein and Bognar, avoids singling out one "heroic individual" in her films, believing as she does that it takes collective action and solidarity to make social change.  

Reichert has worked in both an oral history documentary tradition, blending in-depth interviews with archival footage (Union Maids, Seeing Red, 9to5 - The Story of a Movement) and in a cinema verité tradition following action as it unfolds (A Lion in the House, The Last Truck, American Factory).  

In her 2020 Academy Award acceptance speech, Julia Reichert said "Working people have it harder and harder these days. But we believe things will get better when workers of the world unite."[4]

Service & Community edit

After Antioch College, Reichert, Klein, and other young filmmakers and media activists formed a collective home and workplace in Dayton, Ohio, which they called "The Media House."  Located in the Dayton View neighborhood, the home served as a hub for social issue media creation, including the community documentary series  "Summer Lights."

Reichert taught film for 28 years in the Department of Theatre, Dance, and Motion Pictures at Wright State University, in Dayton Ohio. Her former students include Hannah Beachler, Karri O'Reilly, Nicole Reigel, Sherman Payne, and Erik Bork.  

Reichert also taught courses at Antioch College and American University and has been a guest lecturer at Harvard and Yale Universities.  

In 2015, Reichert co-founded Indie Caucus, a national group of independent filmmakers committed to pushing PBS to support independent, diverse public media and documentary work, especially on the two flagship documentary programs, INDEPENDENT LENS and P.O.V.  

Julia Reichert has served as a mentor and inspiration to dozens of contemporary documentary filmmakers.  In a 2022 interview with Filmmaker Magazine, filmmaker Leilah Weinraub (Shakedown) said "When I was in my 20s I worked for Steve Bognar and Julia Reichert, whose filmmaking I'm still very inspired by."

Personal life edit

Reichert had one child, a daughter, with Jim Klein, to whom she was married until their divorce in 1986. She married longtime partner Steven Bognar in 2020.[4] She was also a member of the Democratic Socialists of America.[8]

Reichert was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2006, and with urothelial cancer in 2018.[4] She died from urothelial cancer at her home in Yellow Springs, Ohio, on December 1, 2022, at the age of 76.[2][4]

Filmography edit

Select awards and honors edit

  • 1984: American Film Festival's Blue Ribbon Award for Documentary (for Seeing Red)
  • 2007: Primetime Emmy for Exceptional Merit in Nonfiction Filmmaking (for A Lion in the House)
  • 2011: National Film Registry preservation selection for Growing Up Female (1971)
  • 2017: Chicken & Egg Pictures Breakthrough Prize
  • 2018: International Documentary Association - Career Achievement Award
  • 2019: Sundance Film Festival Directory Award for Documentary (for American Factory)
  • 2019: Critics' Choice Documentary Award for Best Director (for American Factory)
  • 2019: Gotham Independent Film Award for Best Documentary (for American Factory)
  • 2019: Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival - Outstanding Achievement Award
  • 2019: DOC NYC - The Robert and Anne Drew Award for Documentary Excellence
  • 2019: International Documentary Association - IDA Award for Best Director (for American Factory)
  • 2020: Cinema Eye Honors Award for Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking (for American Factory)
  • 2020: Directors Guild of America, USA award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary (for American Factory)
  • 2020: Film Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary (for American Factory)
  • 2020: Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature (for American Factory)
  • 2020: Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Directing for a Documentary/Nonfiction Program (for American Factory)
  • 2021: Labor and Working-Class History from the Labor and Working-Class History Association award for Distinguished Service to Labor and Working-Class History
  • 2022: National Film Registry preservation selection for Union Maids

References edit

  1. ^ "The 92nd Academy Awards | 2020". Oscars.org. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. February 9, 2020. Retrieved February 10, 2020.
  2. ^ a b Vlessing, Etan (December 2, 2022). "Julia Reichert, Oscar-Winning 'American Factory' Documentarian, Dies at 76". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 2, 2022.
  3. ^ Wilson, Kevin (2020-02-13). "A Q&A With Oscar-Winning Director Julia Reichert, Who Will Speak About 'American Factory' in Louisville". LEO Weekly. Retrieved 2022-12-02. I came from a rural area outside a small town called Bordentown, New Jersey. And pretty much everybody I knew there was a Republican.
  4. ^ a b c d e Hoberman, J. (December 2, 2022). "Julia Reichert, Documentarian of the Working Class, Dies at 76". The New York Times. Retrieved December 2, 2022.
  5. ^ "Julia Reichert Class of 1964". Bordentown Regional High School. Retrieved 2022-12-02.
  6. ^ Broadt, Lisa. "Bordentown High School grad wins Academy Award for 'Best Documentary Feature'". Courier-Post. Retrieved 2022-12-02. A Bordentown Regional High School graduate took home an Academy Award on Sunday for the Best Documentary Feature. Julia Reichert, class of 1964, co-directed and was a producer of American Factory.
  7. ^ "Filmmaker Julia Reichert reflects on her career as a retrospective of her work comes to The Neon". WYSO. 2021-11-17. Retrieved 2022-12-02.
  8. ^ "Julia Reichert, 1946-2022: Chronicler of Working-Class Struggles".

Further reading edit

  • "Interview with Julia Reichert and Jim Klein: New Day's Way". Jump Cut (no. 9, pp. 21-22). 1975. Retrieved 2020-06-02.
  • "Interview: Julia Reichert and Steven Bognar". Film at Lincoln Center: Film Comment. 2020-02-05. Retrieved 2020-06-02.
  • American Prospect interview with Julia Reichert
  • Film Comment interview with Julia Reichert & Steven Bognar
  • Filmmaker Julia Reichert reflects on her career
  • Julia Reichert – the Walker Dialogue
  • Julia Reichert and the Work of Telling Working-Class Stories
  • Julia Reichert on Fresh Air with Terry Gross
  • LaToya Ruby Frazier and Julia Reichert in Conversation
  • Mill Valley Film Festival "9 to 5 – The Story of a Movement" Q&A with Julia Reichert & Steven Bognar
  • Three Documentary Filmmaking Tips Every Director Should Know, from the 'American Factory' Team

External links edit

  • Julia Reichert at IMDb

julia, reichert, julia, bell, reichert, june, 1946, december, 2022, american, academy, award, winning, documentary, filmmaker, activist, feminist, founder, films, reichert, filmmaking, career, spanned, over, years, director, producer, documentaries, born, 1946. Julia Bell Reichert June 16 1946 December 1 2022 was an American Academy Award winning documentary filmmaker activist and feminist She was a co founder of New Day Films Reichert s filmmaking career spanned over 50 years as a director and producer of documentaries Julia ReichertBorn 1946 06 16 June 16 1946Bordentown Township New Jersey U S DiedDecember 1 2022 2022 12 01 aged 76 Yellow Springs Ohio U S Alma materAntioch CollegeOccupationDocumentary filmmakerYears active1968 2021Known forUnion Maids Growing Up Female American Factory The Last Truck Closing of a GM Plant Seeing RedSpousesJim Klein div 1986 wbr Steven Bognar m 2020 wbr Children1Reichert was a four time Academy Award nominated director for Union Maids 1977 Seeing Red Stories of American Communists 1984 The Last Truck Closing of a GM Plant 2010 and American Factory 2020 for which she won an Oscar 1 She was a two time winner of the Primetime Emmy a two time nominee of the Peabody Award and director of two films on the National Film Registry Reichert was the recipient of the award for Distinguished Service to Labor and Working Class History from the Labor and Working Class History Association LAWCHA She was professor emeritus in the Department of Theatre Dance and Motion Pictures at Wright State University Reichert was honored with lifetime achievement awards from the International Documentary Association the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival and the Hot Docs Film Festival She is a recipient of the Chicken amp Egg Pictures Breakthrough Prize A traveling retrospective of her work was curated by the Wexner Center for the Arts and was launched at the Museum of Modern Art in May 2019 before traveling to other US cities Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 1968 1970 WYSO FM 2 2 1970 1972 Growing Up Female and the creation of New Day Films 2 3 1974 1984 Union Maids and Seeing Red Stories of American Communists 2 4 1985 1996 From documentary to narrative and back again 2 5 2008 2015 The Last Truck Closing of a GM Plant 2 6 2015 2020 American Factory 2 7 2020 2021 9to5 The Story of a Movement 3 Themes and views 4 Service amp Community 5 Personal life 6 Filmography 7 Select awards and honors 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editJulia Bell Reichert was born and raised in Bordentown Township New Jersey 2 3 Her father Louis was a butcher and her mother Dorothy was a nurse Reichert was one of four children 4 The family spent summers on Long Beach Island NJ where her father ran a fishing charter business Reichert had a youthful fascination with photography Reichert was a 1964 graduate of Bordentown Regional High School 5 6 She enrolled at Antioch College in 1964 and dropped out in 1967 when she hitchhiked to California during the Summer of Love She returned to Antioch in 1968 and graduated in 1970 with a degree in documentary arts During her Antioch years Reichert s sole film professor was experimental filmmaker David Brooks who died at age 24 driving between Antioch and his home in South Charleston Ohio Career edit1968 1970 WYSO FM edit In 1968 Reichert became partners in life and creative work with Jim Klein who introduced her in 1969 to the Antioch student radio station WYSO FM Reichert began to learn audio recording tape editing interviewing and storytelling within a time frame She worked an Antioch co op job at WYSO in the Summer of 1969 and in her course evaluation WYSO manager Tim Mabee wrote Julia developed practically on her own initiative the WYSO news program She trained and directed about ten students and several outsiders in the writing compiling taping interviewing and announcing involved In 1969 Reichert created and hosted The Single Girl on WYSO possibly the first openly feminist radio program in the United States Reichert later retitled the show Sisters Brothers Lovers Listen feeling the word girl was disrespectful 7 1970 1972 Growing Up Female and the creation of New Day Films edit Produced in 1970 and released in 1971 Growing Up Female chronicles the socialization of women at six different ages blending interview and cinema verite material The film is the first feature documentary of the modern Women s Liberation Movement and was selected by the Library of Congress for the National Film Registry in 2011 The film was directed and produced by Reichert and Jim Klein Frustrated with unfair distribution offers for Growing Up Female Reichert and Klein decided to distribute the film themselves They coined the name New Day Films While attending the Flaherty Seminar in 1971 they met filmmaker Amalie R Rothschild who also had a feminist film It Happens to Us and soon thereafter Liane Brandon director of Anything You Want to Be also a pioneering feminist documentary The four filmmakers founded New Day Films as a filmmaker owned democratically run film distribution cooperative New Day Films recently celebrated its 50th anniversary and now has over 140 filmmaker owners distributing over 300 films 1974 1984 Union Maids and Seeing Red Stories of American Communists edit Reichert and Klein s collaboration continued with Methadone An American Way of Dealing released in 1974 and then turned towards history teaming up with Miles Mogulescu to make Union Maids Inspired by the book Rank amp File Personal Histories By Working Class Organizers by Alice amp Staughton Lynd the film is a pioneering oral history archival documentary telling the rank and file story of three union activists Union Maids premiered in 1976 was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1977 and has been in active distribution ever since Historian Howard Zinn called Union Maids the best film on labor history I have ever seen Seeing Red Stories of American Communists produced amp directed by Reichert amp Klein in the late 1970s and early 1980s premiered at the Telluride and New York Film Festivals in 1983 It had a successful theatrical run playing for ten weeks in New York and San Francisco Bay Area 7 weeks in Boston amp Seattle and 5 weeks in Los Angeles The film screened theatrically in nearly 100 US cities and was nominated in 1984 for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Seeing Red remains in active distribution and was recently restored by IndieCollect for new theatrical screenings 1985 1996 From documentary to narrative and back again edit After Seeing Red Reichert wrote produced and directed the independent fiction feature Emma amp Elvis 1992 and produced the independent fiction feature The Dream Catcher 1999 directed by Ed Radtke In 1997 she teamed up with her new partner Steven Bognar to begin filming the stories of children fighting cancer at Cincinnati Children s Hospital Medical Center in a film that would become A Lion in the House Edited from over 525 hours of material filmed across six years and produced in partnership with ITVS A Lion in the House tells the stories of five children and teenagers their parents siblings and caregivers as they struggle to navigate childhood cancer and all its challenges The film a co production with ITVS the Independent Television Service premiered as a two night primetime common carriage PBS special on the series Independent Lens The film executive produced by Sally Jo Fifer premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival in the U S Documentary Competition was nominated for Best Documentary Feature in the Film Independent Spirit Awards and won the Primetime Emmy for Exceptional Merit in Nonfiction Filmmaking in 2007 2008 2015 The Last Truck Closing of a GM Plant edit In June 2008 following the announcement that Dayton s General Motors would be shuttering their Moraine Assembly Truck and Bus plant a major employer and financial lifeblood of the community Reichert and Bognar began production on what would become The Last Truck Closing of a GM Plant The duo and their team interviewed hundreds of the plant s 3 000 plus workers Denied access to film inside the plant they interviewed workers at the entrance and exits to the plant s property and supplied digital cameras to workers to covertly film including footage of the last vehicles to be assembled there The film is a production of HBO Documentary Films executive produced by Lisa Heller amp Sheila Nevins The film premiered at the 2009 Telluride Film Festival and was nominated in 2010 for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject In 2012 Reichert and Bognar produced and directed the short documentary Sparkle which followed legendary Dayton Contemporary Dance Company DCDC dancer Sheri Sparkle Williams following what could have been a career ending injury The film executive produced by Gita Pullapilly and Aron Gaudet won the Best Documentary Short audience awards at the AFI SilverDocs and New Orleans Film Festivals The film was broadcast on the PBS special LIFECASTERS In 2012 Julia Reichert returned to her roots beginning a two year collaboration with WYSO 91 3 FM where she learned many aspects of nonfiction storytelling in the 1960s and 70s Reichert and Bognar teamed with WYSO staff and volunteers to create ReInvention Stories 2012 14 A project of the national storytelling initiative Localore and in collaboration with web innovators Zeega ReInvention Stories is a documentary project telling stories of Daytonians forced to reinvent their lives and professions in the wake of the 2008 economic crash The stories came in the form of WYSO radio pieces short films a photography exhibit and an interactive transmedia website The project was supported by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the John D and Catherine T MacArthur Foundation among others ReInvention Stories was featured in the interactive media section of the 2014 Tribeca Film Festival In 2015 Reichert and Bognar collaborated with the Cincinnati Opera and the University of Cincinnati s College Conservatory of Music to create the documentary short Making Morning Star a behind the scenes look at the workshopping and development of a new American opera by composer Ricky Ian Gordon and librettist William M Hoffman 2015 2020 American Factory edit In 2015 it was announced that the former General Motors plant in Moraine would be occupied by Chinese windshield manufacturer Fuyao injecting a wave of new jobs back into the community Reichert and Bognar were granted access to both the Ohio and China factories as well as access to the company s chairman they filmed from 2015 to 2017 Her nephew Jeff Reichert amp Julie Parker Benello became producers on the film and Jeff Reichert became one of the film s primary cinematographers along with Erick Stoll Aubrey Keith Julia Reichert amp Steven Bognar The film became a production of Participant Media in late 2016 and Diane Weyermann and Jeff Skoll became Executive Producers The film s editor Lindsay Utz completed editing in late 2018 and composer Chad Cannon completed his original score in early 2019 American Factory premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2019 where it won the award for Best Director U S Documentary Shortly after its premiere the film was acquired by Netflix and Higher Ground Productions Following a successful film festival tour it was nominated for and won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Following the premiere of American Factory a traveling retrospective of Julia Reichert s films was curated by the Wexner Center for the Arts and was launched at the Museum of Modern Art in May 2019 before traveling to other US cities 2020 2021 9to5 The Story of a Movement edit Long in production Reichert and Bognar completed their film 9to5 The Story of a Movement a real life activist movement that inspired Jane Fonda to produce the feature narrative film 9 to 5 The film was scheduled to premiere at the 2020 South by Southwest Film Festival until the pandemic shut down the entire festival The film was screened at the AFI Docs Mill Valley and DOC NYC film festivals The film features interviews with many of 9to5 s members as well as actor and activist Jane Fonda The film premiered on PBS on their Independent Lens series in early 2021 and was nominated for a Peabody Award in 2022 During the height of the pandemic Reichert amp Bognar were approached by a neighbor comedian Dave Chappelle to film a series of distanced outdoor comedy performances Chappelle held in their town of Yellow Springs Ohio Following a full Summer of performances which included special guests such as Jon Stewart Tiffany Haddish and Chris Rock Bognar and Reichert produced and directed two films 8 46 which premiered online via Netflix in 2020 and Dave Chappelle Live in Real Life which closed the 2021 Tribeca Film Festival to a sold out audience of over 6 000 at Radio City Music Hall Themes and views editIn a 2019 WYSO interview with Neenah Ellis Julia Reichert said I think all of us are shaped by our era that we grow up in I came of age in the 60s Millions of us saw racism saw U S domination around the world imperialism saw huge inequalities class wise and we said The system s not working We got to replace it And we became in some broad sense revolutionaries How do we live the life we can foresee that we d like to have How do we do that Particularly when it comes to racism and class sexism and patriarchy This doesn t just go to the government and the board room it goes to the bedroom and the kitchen right It goes to how we treat each other So I think there was a general sense which was very exciting that we can build a new world Reichart s films focused on the lives of working class people and women Her five feature documentaries about labor struggles Union Maids Seeing Red The Truck American Factory and 9to5 The Story of a Movement center on collective actions with particular attention to nuances of class race and gender Reichert with collaborators Klein and Bognar avoids singling out one heroic individual in her films believing as she does that it takes collective action and solidarity to make social change Reichert has worked in both an oral history documentary tradition blending in depth interviews with archival footage Union Maids Seeing Red 9to5 The Story of a Movement and in a cinema verite tradition following action as it unfolds A Lion in the House The Last Truck American Factory In her 2020 Academy Award acceptance speech Julia Reichert said Working people have it harder and harder these days But we believe things will get better when workers of the world unite 4 Service amp Community editAfter Antioch College Reichert Klein and other young filmmakers and media activists formed a collective home and workplace in Dayton Ohio which they called The Media House Located in the Dayton View neighborhood the home served as a hub for social issue media creation including the community documentary series Summer Lights Reichert taught film for 28 years in the Department of Theatre Dance and Motion Pictures at Wright State University in Dayton Ohio Her former students include Hannah Beachler Karri O Reilly Nicole Reigel Sherman Payne and Erik Bork Reichert also taught courses at Antioch College and American University and has been a guest lecturer at Harvard and Yale Universities In 2015 Reichert co founded Indie Caucus a national group of independent filmmakers committed to pushing PBS to support independent diverse public media and documentary work especially on the two flagship documentary programs INDEPENDENT LENS and P O V Julia Reichert has served as a mentor and inspiration to dozens of contemporary documentary filmmakers In a 2022 interview with Filmmaker Magazine filmmaker Leilah Weinraub Shakedown said When I was in my 20s I worked for Steve Bognar and Julia Reichert whose filmmaking I m still very inspired by Personal life editReichert had one child a daughter with Jim Klein to whom she was married until their divorce in 1986 She married longtime partner Steven Bognar in 2020 4 She was also a member of the Democratic Socialists of America 8 Reichert was diagnosed with non Hodgkin lymphoma in 2006 and with urothelial cancer in 2018 4 She died from urothelial cancer at her home in Yellow Springs Ohio on December 1 2022 at the age of 76 2 4 Filmography editGrowing Up Female 1971 Methadone An American Way of Dealing 1975 with James Klein Union Maids 1976 with Klein Seeing Red Stories of American Communists 1983 with Klein Emma and Elvis 1992 The Dream Catcher 1999 producer A Lion in the House 2006 with Steven Bognar The Last Truck Closing of a GM Plant 2009 with Bognar Sparkle 2012 with Bognar Making Morning Star 2015 with Bognar American Factory 2019 with Bognar 9to5 The Story of a Movement 2020 with Bognar 8 46 2020 with Bognar Dave Chappelle Live in Real Life 2021 with Bognar Select awards and honors edit1984 American Film Festival s Blue Ribbon Award for Documentary for Seeing Red 2007 Primetime Emmy for Exceptional Merit in Nonfiction Filmmaking for A Lion in the House 2011 National Film Registry preservation selection for Growing Up Female 1971 2017 Chicken amp Egg Pictures Breakthrough Prize 2018 International Documentary Association Career Achievement Award 2019 Sundance Film Festival Directory Award for Documentary for American Factory 2019 Critics Choice Documentary Award for Best Director for American Factory 2019 Gotham Independent Film Award for Best Documentary for American Factory 2019 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival Outstanding Achievement Award 2019 DOC NYC The Robert and Anne Drew Award for Documentary Excellence 2019 International Documentary Association IDA Award for Best Director for American Factory 2020 Cinema Eye Honors Award for Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking for American Factory 2020 Directors Guild of America USA award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary for American Factory 2020 Film Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary for American Factory 2020 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for American Factory 2020 Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Directing for a Documentary Nonfiction Program for American Factory 2021 Labor and Working Class History from the Labor and Working Class History Association award for Distinguished Service to Labor and Working Class History 2022 National Film Registry preservation selection for Union MaidsReferences edit The 92nd Academy Awards 2020 Oscars org Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences February 9 2020 Retrieved February 10 2020 a b Vlessing Etan December 2 2022 Julia Reichert Oscar Winning American Factory Documentarian Dies at 76 The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved December 2 2022 Wilson Kevin 2020 02 13 A Q amp A With Oscar Winning Director Julia Reichert Who Will Speak About American Factory in Louisville LEO Weekly Retrieved 2022 12 02 I came from a rural area outside a small town called Bordentown New Jersey And pretty much everybody I knew there was a Republican a b c d e Hoberman J December 2 2022 Julia Reichert Documentarian of the Working Class Dies at 76 The New York Times Retrieved December 2 2022 Julia Reichert Class of 1964 Bordentown Regional High School Retrieved 2022 12 02 Broadt Lisa Bordentown High School grad wins Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Courier Post Retrieved 2022 12 02 A Bordentown Regional High School graduate took home an Academy Award on Sunday for the Best Documentary Feature Julia Reichert class of 1964 co directed and was a producer of American Factory Filmmaker Julia Reichert reflects on her career as a retrospective of her work comes to The Neon WYSO 2021 11 17 Retrieved 2022 12 02 Julia Reichert 1946 2022 Chronicler of Working Class Struggles Further reading edit Interview with Julia Reichert and Jim Klein New Day s Way Jump Cut no 9 pp 21 22 1975 Retrieved 2020 06 02 Interview Julia Reichert and Steven Bognar Film at Lincoln Center Film Comment 2020 02 05 Retrieved 2020 06 02 American Prospect interview with Julia Reichert Film Comment interview with Julia Reichert amp Steven Bognar Filmmaker Julia Reichert reflects on her career Julia Reichert the Walker Dialogue Julia Reichert and the Work of Telling Working Class Stories Julia Reichert on Fresh Air with Terry Gross LaToya Ruby Frazier and Julia Reichert in Conversation Mill Valley Film Festival 9 to 5 The Story of a Movement Q amp A with Julia Reichert amp Steven Bognar Three Documentary Filmmaking Tips Every Director Should Know from the American Factory TeamExternal links editJulia Reichert at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julia Reichert amp oldid 1176920732, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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