My facebook page today is reminding me of something I posted one year ago, to this day:
let the record show, at 2:04 pm on Friday, August 13th, 2010, I SHOT THE LAST FRAME!!!
So I am dropping in here today, one year after shooting the last frame, to make the exciting announcement that was hinted at in the last post… Little Theatres: Homage to the Mineral of Cabbage has been accepted into TIFF! In my very own hometown, the film will be screening at an international festival. So this past week has been a whirlwind of excitement, including a press conference, the TIFF BootCamp (an entire day of seminars and chats with organizers of TIFF, as well as filmworld professionals: seasoned TIFF director Ingrid Veninger, a publicist, a journalist from The Toronto Star, distributors, etc.), and meeting other directors who are also screening at the festival.
The screenings will be on Wednesday September 14th at 5:30pm, and Thursday September 15th at 1:00pm. There are 43 short films in the festival, that are part of the Short Cuts Canada Programme, curated (is this the word?) by TIFF Programmers Alex Rogalski and Magali Simard. The films will be divided into 6 screenings, with Little Theatres appearing as part of Programme 6.
I’m so proud and honoured to be part of this festival! It’s like waiting for school to start, only my whole school year will be condensed into the first two weeks of September. Can’t wait.
Woo hoot! Fantastic news, Stephanie. Congratulations and kudos for your being recognized, rightly.
You’ve got a Midas touch for sure. Have fun!
You’re going to be there too, Shelley! Onscreen, in the “thanks” 🙂
i love your work stephanie! i have no idea how i bumped to your blog. but i’m so lucky to read this blog because you have amazing stuff going on here. and congratz for the TIFF!!! 🙂
Thanks so much Irene! Glad you enjoyed the blog. Are you in Toronto? Maybe see you at TIFF! 🙂
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ancient and medieval Latin,
handwritten books were made,
monuments related to deep
and was erased, and on cleaned
for Countess Louise of Savoy
text carrier and protective
By the end of the 15th century, 35