Martha Ansara
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Martha Ansara (born 9 September 1942) is a documentary filmmaker whose films on social issues have won international prizes and been screened in Australia, the UK, Europe and North America. Ansara was one of the first women in Australia to work as a
cinematographer The cinematographer or director of photography (sometimes shortened to DP or DOP) is the person responsible for the photographing or recording of a film, television production, music video or other live action piece. The cinematographer is the ch ...
, is a full member of the Australian Cinematographers Society (ACS) and was inducted into the ACS Hall of Fame in 2015. Martha is a Life Member of the Australian Directors Guild and a founding member of Ozdox, the Australian Documentary Forum. She has also worked as a film lecturer and film writer and has been active in the trade union, women's and peace movements.


Background

Ansara was born in the United States, where her father was a leading figure in the Syrian-Lebanese community and her mother an educator specializing in dyslexia. She migrated to Australia in 1969, becoming involved in the
Sydney Filmmakers Co-operative Sydney Women's Film Group The Sydney Filmmakers Co-operative was a co-operative of independent filmmakers, set up to distribute and exhibit their films and the films of other independent filmmakers both Australian and overseas. The collection even ...
,. She started making films with other young filmmakers through the Co-operative, but was unable to break into the then male-only domain of professional cinematography. However, in 1975, following the birth of her second child, she was admitted as a student in the first three-year full-time course of the Australian Film, Radio and Television School, directed by Professor Jerzy Toeplitz and Head of Program, Storry Walton. There she studied cinematography under Bill Constable and Brian Probyn BSC, working with a group of students which included many filmmakers later to make their mark in Australia and overseas. After graduating, Ansara gained experience as a camera assistant and starting work as a cinematographer and maker of social documentaries. She began writing reviews and articles on film for '' Filmnews'', the monthly newspaper of the Sydney Filmmakers Co-operative, and then for a range of publications. She organized and taught in the women's film workshops of this period, eventually lecturing in film production at tertiary institutions and conducting short courses in filmmaking throughout Australia. She also worked extensively as an assessor of projects for government film bodies and was involved in promoting the development of women's filmmaking through the Sydney Women's Film Group and the Women's Film Fund of the Australian Film Commission. Martha was the subject of a 2017 Salute organised by Ozdox: The Australian Documentary Forum which surveys the collective history of Australian film in which she was involved: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TOPM94NvUJo. Martha is the mother of three children, including Australian actor Alice Ansara.


1970s, 1980s

In the 1970s, Ansara formed many of the relationships with filmmakers and activists which she was to sustain in the following decades. She was involved in the anti-Vietnam War movement and joined the Association for International Disarmament and Co-operation, which became People for Nuclear Disarmament (PND). With the support of that organization, she later made one of the first documentaries to be shot by Westerners in Vietnam, ''Changing the Needle'' (1982) with peace activist Mavis Robertson and filmmaker Dasha Ross. She subsequently worked with PND as an organizer of the Pacific Peacemaker project to raise awareness of the launching of the first Trident nuclear submarine, and then in producing the anti-nuclear feature film ''The Pursuit of Happiness'' (1987) which she directed. The finance for this film was raised largely from private sources, including the proceeds of the sale of the Victoria Cross won at Gallipoli by Hugo Throssell and donated to the project by his son, diplomat and writer Ric Throssell. It was after the making of this film that Ansara was awarded the Australian Film Institute's Byron Kennedy Award. During this period, Ansara was an active member of the Australian Theatrical and Amusement Employees' Association, becoming the convener of its Motion Picture sub-committee. She was a foundation member of the Rank and File Movement within the union which came to power briefly in the late 1980s. In 1976, while working in Brewarrina, NSW, on Phillip Noyce's short feature, ''
Backroads A backroad is a secondary type of road usually found in rural areas. Safety Backroads are less safe than other roads, with much higher fatality rates. A 2015 study by TRIP (a national transportation research group) in the United States found ...
'', Ansara was introduced to the realities of Aboriginal Australia through community activist and singer Essie Coffey OAM. She subsequently photographed Coffey's film '' My Survival as an Aboriginal'' (1979), which she co-produced with Coffey and filmmaker Alec Morgan. Now an Australian classic, the documentary helped fuel international interest in Aboriginal issues. Coffey and Ansara later collaborated once again to make a sequel, ''My Life As I Live It'' (1993). In 2017 '' My Survival as an Aboriginal'' was selected for restoration by Australia's National Film and Sound Archive. In 1983, Ansara photographed ''
Lousy Little Sixpence ''Lousy Little Sixpence'' is a 1983 Australian documentary film about Australian history that details the early years of the Stolen Generations and the struggle of Aboriginal Australians against the Aboriginal Protection Board in the 1930s. The f ...
'', a ground-breaking documentary on the
stolen generation The Stolen Generations (also known as Stolen Children) were the children of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent who were removed from their families by the Australian federal and state government agencies and church miss ...
made by Alec Morgan, Aboriginal media pioneer Lester Bostock and his brother,
Gerry Bostock Gerry Bostock (15 July 1942 – 16 May 2014) was a Bundjalung activist, playwright, poet and filmmaker. Early life Bostock was born on 15 July 1942 in Grafton, New South Wales, of the Bundjalung people. After spending nine years in the Australi ...
. She likewise worked in Western Australia with Aboriginal activist Robert Bropho to photograph ''Munda Nyuringu'' (1983, co-director Jan Roberts) and ''Always Was, Always Will Be'' (1989), a documentary on the Swan Brewery Dispute, which she and Bropho made together. In 1989, Ansara, with assistance from Bropho and others involved in the protest, researched and wrote a history of the dispute as a book of the same title with support from a Creative Arts Fellowship at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University.


1990s, and beyond

The writing of the book ''Always Was, Always Will Be'' diverted Ansara from a long-term oral history project, begun at the Australian Film, Television and Radio School, to record the memories of Australian cinematographers. She returned to this project in the early 1990s, gaining a master's degree in Applied History from the University of Technology, Sydney and becoming the founding convener of the Filmmakers Oral History Group (now known as the Film and Broadcast Industries Oral History Group). The members of this group included film producer, writer and historian Joan Long and film historian Graham Shirley, both of whom had been instrumental in the founding of the
National Film and Sound Archive The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia (NFSA), known as ScreenSound Australia from 1999 to 2004, is Australia's audiovisual archive, responsible for developing, preserving, maintaining, promoting and providing access to a national co ...
(NFSA) with which the group was associated. The group drew together a number of filmmakers interested in recording the oral history of their industry and in 2003 many of these people actively defended the Archive during its damaging transfer to the much smaller Australian Film Commission. Ansara was likewise a founding member of the Archive Forum which lobbied for the establishment of the Archive as a statutory body, a goal finally accomplished in 2008. In this period, and especially following the birth of her third child in 1982, Ansara gradually stopped working as a cinematographer and increasingly began teaching film, including as a lecturer at the
University of Technology, Sydney The University of Technology Sydney (UTS) is a public research university located in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Although its origins are said to trace back to the 1830s, the university was founded in its current form in 1988. As of 2021 ...
. She continued to direct and produce occasional documentaries and a silent short drama, ''The Ballad of Betty and Joe'', made with the assistance of students and other filmmakers. In 1999, she attended the Créteil Women's Film Festival (Films de Femmes) where her films were screened in a tribute to Australian Women's Cinema. In 2003, as a long-time member of the Australian Directors Guild, Ansara joined other documentary-makers in forming Ozdox, the Australian Documentary Forum, which continues to present monthly, screenings and seminars on documentary directions, new technology and industry issues. In 2005 Ansara, as a member of the Australian Cinematographers Society, was asked to work with the ACS on a photographic history of cinematography in Australia. This project, significantly relying on oral history, became the book, '' The Shadowcatchers: A history of cinematography in Australia''.


Selected filmography

* 1973 ''Film for Discussion'' (drama documentary) (director, producer) * 1977 ''Me and Daphne'' (short drama) (cinematographer, co-producer) * 1978 ''Letters from Poland'' (short drama) (cinematographer) * 1979 ''Child Welfare'' (documentary) (cinematographer) * 1979 '' My Survival as an Aboriginal'' (documentary) (cinematographer, co-producer) * 1980 ''Climbers'' (dance drama) (cinematographer) * 1980 ''Age Before Beauty'' (documentary) (cinematographer) * 1981 ''Flamingo Park'' (documentary) (cinematographer) * 1982 ''Changing the Needle'' (documentary) (co-director/producer, cinematographer) * 1985 ''Taking a Look'' (short drama) (cinematographer) * 1985 ''Rocking the Foundations'' (documentary) (cinematographer) * 1988 '' The Pursuit of Happiness'' (feature drama) (director, producer) * 1994 ''My Life as I Live It'' (documentary) (cinematographer, co-director, co-producer) * 2002 ''Ordinary People'' (documentary) (producer) * 2005 ''I Remember 1948'' (documentary) (producer) * 2009 ''The Ballad of Betty and Joe'' (short drama) (director, co-producer) *2020 ''Women of Steel'' (documentary) (consulting producer)


Selected publications

* ''Always Was, Always Will Be: The sacred grounds of the Waugal'', Kings Park, Perth W.A.: the Old Swan Brewery dispute (1989), Balmain, NSW, Fringe Dwellers of the Swan Valley, / 0-7316-7571-1 * ''The Shadowcatchers: A history of cinematography in Australia'' (2012), North Sydney, Austcine, https://web.archive.org/web/20080724005613/http://www.shadowcatchers.com.au/


References


Sources

* ''Don't Shoot Darling!: Women's independent filmmaking in Australia'' (1987) edited by Annette Blonski, Barbara Creed, Freda Freiberg Greenhouse Publications, * ''Interview with Martha Ansara'' ound recording(1993)
Wendy Lowenstein Wendy Lowenstein (born Katherin Wendy Robertson Lowenstein; 1927—2006) was an Australian historian, author, and teacher notable for her recording of people's everyday experiences and her advocacy of social activism. She pioneered oral history ...
, National Library of Australia, Bib ID: 2084582 * ''Edge of the Known World'' (1998) Author: Meredith Quinn and Andrew L. Urban (edited by); Publisher: AFTRS; . * ''Trauma Culture: The politics of terror and loss in media and literature (2005), Elizabeth Ann Kaplan, New Brunswick, N.J. .a. Rutgers University Press


External links

* Martha Ansara at th
Internet Movie Database
* Martha Ansara at http://www.balladfilms.com.au/ansara.html * Martha Ansara at http://www.shadowcatchers.com.au/about.html * ''The New York Times'', Movies & TV database http://movies.nytimes.com/person/584372/Martha-Ansara/filmography * Who's Who of Australian Women at http://whoswhowomen.com.au/wellsaid/martha-ansara/ * Ties That Bind: the psyche of feminist filmmaking: Sydney, 1969-1989 at http://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/dspace/handle/2100/974 * Radio National, ''Movie Time'', 'Trash & Treasure: Martha Ansara on ''Shame, broadcast on Friday, 28 January 2011 http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/movietime/trash--treasure-martha-ansara-on-shame/3009980 {{DEFAULTSORT:Ansara, Martha 1942 births Living people American emigrants to Australia Australian film directors Australian women film directors Australian film producers Australian cinematographers American people of Arab descent Australian documentary filmmakers Australian women cinematographers Australian women screenwriters University of Technology Sydney alumni Women documentary filmmakers