Cynthia Scott

Cynthia Scott
Born (1939-01-01) 1 January 1939
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Occupation Film Director, Screenwriter, Film Editor, Film Producer

Cynthia Scott (born January 1, 1939) RCA, is an Oscar and Canadian Film Award winning filmmaker who has produced, directed, written and edited several Canadian films with the National Film Board of Canada. Scott is a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.[1] She is married to filmmaker John N. Smith.[2] Her work with the NFB is mainly focused on documentary filmmaking. Some of Scott's most notable documentaries for the NFB feature dancing and the dance world including Flamenco at 5:15 (1983), which won an Academy Award for Documentary Short at the 56th Academy Awards in 1984.[3]

Background

Cynthia Scott was born and raised in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Scott grew up in a self-described working-class family that fostered her creativity growing up.[4] Scott studied English Literature and Philosophy at the University of Manitoba, graduating with a B.A. in 1959, at the age of 19.[5]

Early Career in Media

After graduation, Scott worked at the Manitoba Theatre Centre as a second assistant director before moving to London, England where she worked as a researcher for Patrick Wilson and Douglas Leiterman on This Hour Has Seven Days.[6] In 1965, Scott returned to Canada and began working as a public affairs producer for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation television program Take 30, where she stayed for nearly a decade.[7]

Filmmaking with the NFB

Scott's career took a turn in 1972 when the National Film Board of Canada hired her as a staff director. Scott immediately began directing, producing and sometimes writing both documentary and fiction pieces for the NFB; mainly slice-of-life documentaries with a mind for social issues.[8] In Scott's first year with the NFB, she directed a 26-minute documentary named The Ungrateful Land: Roch Carrier Remembers Ste-Justine (1972). Scott's debut directing work would then go on to win a Canadian Film Award (which would later become the Genie Awards in 1980 and then the Canadian Screen Awards in 2012) for direction in a TV Information program.[9] In 1976, Cynthia Scott produced the controversial Barbara Greene documentary Listen Listen Listen (1976) for the NFB.[10]

Once Scott had been working at the NFB for about a decade, she co-wrote, co-edited and co-produced a NFB joint project titled For The Love of Dance (1981).[11] Over the next several years, Scott would work on several documentaries set in the dance world, including Flamenco at 5:15 (1983), which won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject.

Cynthia Scott also researched and co-wrote First Winter (1982),[12] directed by John N. Smith (her spouse and fellow filmmaker), which received an Academy Award nomination for Best Live Action Short at the 54th Academy Awards.

The Company of Strangers

In the late 1980s, Cynthia Scott began developing a full length docufiction film with the NFB featuring eight non-actresses, all but one of whom were senior citizens. The Company of Strangers (US title: Strangers in Good Company), released in 1990, features a heavily improvised script based on the real lives of the women cast.[13] The film was a huge success in both Canada and international markets; it became the highest grossing NFB produced film ever at the time.[14]

After career

Cynthia Scott is currently recovering from cancer. Before being diagnosed, Scott was in development on an adaptation of The Stone Diaries, a 1993 fictional autobiography written by Carol Shields. Scott has stated she plans to go back into development on The Stone Diaries once her health has returned to normal.[15]

However, in a 2004 interview with Sarah Kernochan, Scott described herself to Kernochan as "retired now".[16]

Filmography

Director filmography

Co-writer filmography

Producer filmography

Co-editor filmography

Awards and Nominations

- The Ungrateful Land: Roch Carrier Remembers Ste-Justine (1972):

- First Winter (1982):

- Flamenco at 5:15 (1983):

- The Company of Strangers (1990):

References

  1. http://rca-arc.ca/who-we-are/members/members-since-1880/
  2. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/cynthia-scott
  3. http://aaspeechesdb.oscars.org/link/056-10/
  4. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/cynthia-scott
  5. http://femfilm.ca/director_search.php?director=cynthia-scott&lang=e
  6. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/cynthia-scott
  7. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/cynthia-scott
  8. http://femfilm.ca/director_search.php?director=cynthia-scott&lang=e
  9. http://www.academy.ca/About-the-Academy/Awards-Database?flow=person&step=1&byp-award-v=0&byp-winners-v=False&byp-name-v=cynthia+scott
  10. http://femfilm.ca/film_search.php?film=greene-listen&lang=e
  11. http://femfilm.ca/film_search.php?film=scott-for&lang=e
  12. http://www.nfb.ca/film/first-winter/
  13. http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9D0CEEDE153FF933A25756C0A967958260
  14. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/films/company-of-strangers
  15. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/cynthia-scott
  16. http://www.sarahkernochan.com/women/
  17. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/cynthia-scott
  18. http://www.academy.ca/About-the-Academy/Awards-Database?flow=person&step=1&byp-award-v=0&byp-winners-v=False&byp-name-v=cynthia+scott
  19. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/films/first-winter
  20. http://aaspeechesdb.oscars.org/link/056-10/
  21. http://aqcc.ca/prix-annuels/prix-aqcc-meilleur-film-quebecois/
  22. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/films/company-of-strangers
  23. http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/films/company-of-strangers

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.