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Sally Potter

 
Director: Sally Potter
  • Born: 1949 in England
  • Occupation: Director, Writer, Actor
  • Active: '80s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy Drama
  • Career Highlights: Orlando, The Tango Lesson, The Man Who Cried
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Gold Diggers (1983)

Biography

One of cinema's more multifaceted personalities, director, writer, dancer, and performance artist Sally Potter is known for making innovative, personal films that center around the lives of unusual women. Born in 1949, Potter began making films as a teenager, and she also began dancing around the same time. She maintained parallel routes as a performer and director, training as a professional dancer and choreographer at the London School of Contemporary Dance in the 1970s and eventually founding her own dance company, the Limited Dance Company, with fellow performer Jack Lansly. During the same decade, Potter made a series of short dance films in both black and white and color, and she also became recognized as an award-winning theatre director and performance artist.

Potter's first film of significant international import was the 1979 short Thriller, a critical re-working of Puccini's La Boheme. The film was a cult hit on the international festival circuit, and it was followed four years later by Potter's feature directorial debut, Gold Diggers. Starring Julie Christie as a woman who journeys to the Yukon to explore her heritage, the film had a decidedly feminist slant that won over many viewers even as it alienated others. The director followed it with a short film and the television documentary series Tears, Laughter, Fears and Rage, as well as a 1988 film on women in the Soviet cinema entitled I Am an Ox, I Am a Horse, I Am a Man, I Am a Woman.

Potter had her highest-profile film to date with 1992's Orlando. Adapted from Virginia Woolf's novel about an Elizabethan nobleman who lives for four centuries and changes sex along the way, it starred Tilda Swinton as its eponymous adventurer. The film earned great international acclaim, garnering two Oscar nominations and winning over 25 international honors. Following Orlando, Potter was able to explore her twin passions for dance and filmmaking with The Tango Lesson (1997), an autobiographical film about her experiences learning tango that starred Potter as herself. Although it was not as widely praised as her previous film -- some critics labeled it shamelessly self-indulgent -- The Tango Lesson further cemented Potter's reputation for making films that defied easy categorization. In 2000, she again returned to the theme of a woman's personal journey with The Man Who Cried, a love story centering on a Russian Jewish woman (Christina Ricci) who flees WWII Germany for Paris, where she becomes involved in a romantic rectangle with Cate Blanchett, John Turturro, and Johnny Depp. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Sally Potter
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Sally Potter
Born 19 September 1949 (1949-09-19) (age 60)
London, England, United Kingdom
Occupation Film director & screenwriter

Sally Potter (b. 19 September 1949 in London) is an English film director and screenwriter.

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Career

Having left school at sixteen to become a filmmaker, she joined the London Film-Makers' Co-op and started making experimental short films. She later trained as a dancer and choreographer at the London School of Contemporary Dance, before founding her own company, The Limited Dance Company.

Potter went on to become an award winning performance artist and theatre director, with shows including Mounting, Death and the Maiden and Berlin. In addition, she was a member of several music bands (including the Feminist Improvising Group and The Film Music Orchestra) working as a lyricist and singer. She collaborated (as a singer-songwriter) with composer Lindsay Cooper on the song cycle Oh Moscow which was performed throughout Europe, Russia and North America. Her music work continued later when she co-composed with David Motion the soundtrack to Orlando, and created the score for The Tango Lesson. Her most recent music work is as producer and composer of the original tracks for Yes.

Potter returned to filmmaking with her short film Thriller (1979) which was a hit on the international festival circuit. This was followed by her first feature film, The Gold Diggers (1983), starring Julie Christie; a short film, The London Story (1986); a documentary series for Channel 4, Tears, Laughter, Fears and Rage (1986); and a programme about women in Soviet cinema, I Am an Ox, I Am a Horse, I Am a Man, I Am a Woman (1988).

The internationally acclaimed Orlando (1992) brought Potter's work to a wide audience. Starring Tilda Swinton, the film was based on Virginia Woolf's classic novel and adapted for the screen by Potter. In addition to two Academy Award nominations, Orlando won more than 25 international awards, including the Felix awarded by the European Film Academy for the best Young European Film of 1993, and first prizes at St Petersburg, Thessaloniki and other festivals.

Her next film was The Tango Lesson, in which she also performed, with renowned tango dancer Pablo Veron. First presented at the Venice Film Festival, the film was awarded the "Ombú de Oro" for Best Film at the Mar del Plata Film Festival, Argentina, the SADAIC Great Award from the Sociedad Argentina de Autores y Compositores de Música, as well as receiving Best Film nominations from BAFTA and the US National Board of Review.

In 2000 she completed The Man Who Cried (starring Johnny Depp, Christina Ricci, Cate Blanchett and John Turturro), a story set just before World War II in Paris, in the world of the opera.

Sally's film Yes opened in the U.S. & UK in 2005, after a year of touring the worldwide festival circuit. Yes is the story of a passionate love affair between an American woman (Joan Allen) and a Middle-Eastern man (Simon Abkarian), the dialogue of which is entirely in Iambic Pentameter.

She directed English National Opera's production of Bizet's Carmen in 2007, opening on 29 September at the London Coliseum starring Alice Coote.

Potter maintains a daily online diary on her official website.

Sally Potter premiered her new film Rage at this years Berlin Film Festival. The New film made on a small £1 million budget has created a new genre of film titled Naked Cinema. The film will see a UK release on 24 September 2009 for one night only at the BFI and other participating Cinemas.

Feature film credits

Further reading

  • Catherine Fowler, SALLY POTTER Urbana and Chicago, University of Illinois Press, November 2008
  • Sophie Mayer, THE CINEMA OF SALLY POTTER A Politics of Love, 224 pages´, Wallflower Press, Wallflower Publishing Ltd., July 2009 [1]

External links

References


 
 
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Strider (dance)
The Gold Diggers (1983 Drama Film)
Yes (2004 Drama Film)

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