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'''Sylvia Spring''' (born July 14, 1942<ref name=Filmencyclopedia>{{Cite web|url=http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/sylvia-spring|title=Canadian Film Encyclopedia - Sylvia Spring|last=|first=|date=|website=legacy.tiff.net|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=2018-08-17 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20180817225530/http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/sylvia-spring|archivedate=August 17, 2018 }}</ref>) is a Canadian [[feminist]] writer, filmmaker and activist.<ref>{{cite web |title=People / Sylvia Spring |url=http://vancouverartinthesixties.com/people/163 |website=Ruins in Process: Vancouver Art in the Sixties |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Munshi |first1=Shoma |last2=Birch |first2=David |title=Contextualizing the Global Media Monitoring Project |journal=Asian Studies Journal |date=2000 |volume=36 |issue=2 |page=8 |url=http://lawsdocbox.com/amp/71349725-Politics/Issn-materials-published-in-the-asian-studies-may-not-be-re-published-without-permission.html |accessdate=24 October 2018 |issn=0004-4679}}</ref> In 1970, she made ''Madeleine Is ...'', the first Canadian English-language feature film directed by a woman.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Douglas |first1=Dave |editor1-last=Rist |editor1-first=Peter |title=Guide to the Cinema(s) of Canada |date=2001 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=0313299315 |page=135 |url=https://books.google.com.au/books?id=7uKs4fKOotUC&d |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref><ref name=Loiselle>{{cite journal |last1=Loiselle |first1=André |title=Madeleine is... worth a second look. |journal=Take One (Toronto) |date=July-August 2002 |url=http://femfilm.ca/film_search.php?film=spring-madeleine&lang=e |accessdate=24 October 2018 | postscript=. Viewed on ''Canadian Women Film Directors Database''.}}</ref><ref name=Jordan>{{cite book |last1=Jordan |first1=Randolph |editor1-last=Walls |editor1-first=Rachel |title=World Film Locations: Vancouver |date=2013 |publisher=Intellect Books |location=Bristol |pages=44-45 |url=http://femfilm.ca/film_search.php?film=spring-madeleine&lang=e |accessdate=24 October 2018 |chapter=Vancouver Is...: Defining the City in Sylvia Spring's ''Madeleine Is...'' (1971). | postscript=. Viewed on ''Canadian Women Film Directors Database''.}}</ref> She was a member of the Canadian task force on Sex-Role Stereotyping in the Broadcast Media established in 1979<ref name=Taskforce1979>{{cite journal |title=Task force to study sex stereotyping |journal=The Ottawa Citizen |date=29 September 1979 |page=87 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/461782304/ |accessdate=26 October 2018}}</ref>, a founder of [[MediaWatch Canada]] and subsequently its National Director, and presented internationally at forums on the portrayal of women in advertising. In 2005, she was named in the Top 100 list of Canada's Most Powerful Women, in the Trailblazers and Trendsetters category.<ref name=TopHundred>{{cite journal |last1=El Akkad |first1=Omar |title=A new generation of powerful women |journal=The Globe and Mail |date=24 November 2005 |url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/a-new-generation-of-powerful-women/article18245809/ |accessdate=26 October 2018 |location=Toronto}}</ref><ref name=Previous>{{cite web |title=Previous Winners |url=http://archive.is/snzMt |website=Top 100 Women |accessdate=27 October 2018}}</ref>
'''Sylvia Spring''' (born July 14, 1942)<ref name=encyclopedia>{{Cite web|url=http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/sylvia-spring|title=Canadian Film Encyclopedia - Sylvia Spring|last=|first=|date=|website=legacy.tiff.net|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=2018-08-17 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20180817225530/http://legacy.tiff.net/canadianfilmencyclopedia/content/bios/sylvia-spring|archivedate=August 17, 2018 }}</ref> is a Canadian director and screenwriter. She is known as the first Canadian woman to direct a full feature film.<ref name=encyclopedia/> This was her 1971 film ''Madeleine Is…''. In 1979 Spring led the ''Task Force on Sex-Role Stereotyping in the Broadcast Media'' that had a lasting impact on Canadian media after.<ref>http://vancouverartinthesixties.com/people/163</ref>

== Early life ==
Sylvia Spring was born in [[Galt, Ontario]], on 14 July 1942, the second of three children to Daniel Ronald Spring and Shanna Shapiro.<ref>{{cite web |title=SPRING DANIEL R AT CAMBRIDGE MEMORIA |url=http://www.lifenews.ca/announcement/1862169-spring-daniel-r-at-cambridge-memor |website=Life News |accessdate=26 October 2018}}</ref> She gained a BA(Hons) at the [[State University of New York, Buffalo]], majoring in English literature and drama.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sylvia Spring, Writing/Filmmaking |url=http://gci.wrdsb.ca/files/2016/04/Sylvia-Spring.pdf |website=Galt Collegiate Institute |accessdate=23 October 2018}}</ref> Part of the [[Hippie|hippy]] generation, she participated in a [[Toronto]] [[love-in]] of 5,000 people, at which [[Leonard Cohen]] and [[Buffy Sainte-Marie]] performed.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Boyle |first1=Harry J |title=Love Makes Their World Go Round |journal=The Ottawa Journal Weekend Magazine |date=22 July 1967 |volume=17 |issue=29 |pages=16-21 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/44305984 |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref>

== Career ==
After graduating, Spring wrote poetry and worked in advertising, journalism, radio and television. She conducted radio interviews of the Canadian poet [[Irving Layton]]<ref>{{cite journal |title=airwaves |journal=The Gazette (Montreal, Canada) |date=18 February 1966 |page=34 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/421745163 |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=CBC weekly radio highlights |journal=The Ottawa Citizen |date=2 July 1966 |page=80 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/458260849 |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref>, directed ''This Land is People'', a TV series which introduced viewers to up-and-coming Canadians from all walks of life, including [[Peter Lougheed]], [[Sinclair Stevens]] and [[Gustavo da Roza]]<ref name=Land>{{cite web |title=This Land Is People |url=http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/programming/television/land-people |website=History of Canadian Broadcasting |publisher=Canadian Communications Forum |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Fuglem |first1=Terri |editor1-last=Keshavjee |editor1-first=Serena |title=Winnipeg modern architecture, 1945 to 1975 |date=2015 |publisher=issuu |page=202 |url=https://issuu.com/artsfblog1/docs/winnipeg_modern__architecture_1945_ |accessdate=25 October 2018 |chapter=Manitoba Mod}}</ref>, and co-directed with [[David Rimmer]] ''Know Place'', an experimental short documentary about an alternative school.<ref name=Image>{{cite book |last1=Elder |first1=R. Bruce |title=Image and Identity: Reflections on Canadian Film and Culture |date=1989 |publisher=Wilfrid Laurier University Press |isbn=0889209561 |page=448 |url=https://books.google.com.au/books?id=YhnhsJPAaEkC&dq |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref><ref name=KnowPlace>{{cite web |title=Archive / Know Place |url=http://vancouverartinthesixties.com/archive/385 |website=Ruins in Process: Vancouver Art in the Sixties |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref>
=== ''Madeleine Is ...'' ===
In 1969, Sylvia Spring was one of eight Canadian film-makers, and the only woman, to receive a $15,000 grant from the [[Canadian Film Development Corporation]], to produce a feature-length film in Canada.<ref name=Grant>{{cite journal |title=Film-makers get $125,000 |journal=The Gazette (Montreal, Canada) |date=4 Jul 1969 |page=21 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/420982765 |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref> She co-wrote and directed the resulting 90 minute feature film, ''Madeleine Is ...'' (1971)<ref>{{cite web |title=Madeleine Is ... |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0242631/ |website=IMDB |accessdate=27 October 2018}}</ref>, a segment of which, released as a short feature under the name ''Madeleine'', won an award at the [[Vancouver International Film Festival]] in 1970.<ref name=Boom>{{cite journal |title=Vancouver has film boom |journal=The Ottawa Citizen |date=8 June 1970 |page=23 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/459382718/ |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lanken |first1=Dane |title=Madeleine Is ... Finally, she decided to make her own movie |journal=The Gazette (Montreal, Canada) |date=1 May 1971 |page=44 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/421210794/ |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref> With a total budget of $100,000<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Stanton |first1=Victor |title=Backers hard to find |journal=The Ottawa Citizen |date=11 May 1971 |page=25 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/459579952/ |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref>, ''Madeleine Is ...'' was filmed in [[Vancouver]], and starred Vancouver actress [[Nicola Lipman]] in the eponymous role of a young aspiring painter from Quebec who moves to Vancouver, where she is involved in an abusive relationship with a political radical and an unfulfilling relationship with a businessman/nerd, before discovering her own identity as an artist.<ref name=Loiselle/><ref>{{cite web |last1=Killas |first1=Harry |title=The Image Before Us: A History Of Film In British Columbia - Madeleine Is… |url=http://www.thecinematheque.ca/the-image-before-us-a-history-of-film-in-british-columbia/madeleine-is |website=The Cinematheque |accessdate=27 October 2018 |date=2015}}</ref> It premiered in April 1971 in Toronto and Montreal, and in May 1971 in Vancouver, but closed in Toronto after just one week.<ref name=Armatage>{{cite journal |last1=Armatage |first1=Kay |title=Madeleine Is...." Review of ''Madeleine Is....'' |journal=''Take One (Montreal)'' |date=3 June 1971 |volume=2 |issue=11 |url=http://femfilm.ca/film_search.php?film=spring-madeleine&lang=e |accessdate=24 October 2018 | postscript=. Viewed on ''Canadian Women Film Directors Database''.}}</ref> While the film was feted as the "First movie by woman film-maker"<ref name=Stanton>{{cite journal |last1=Stanton |first1=Victor |title=First movie by woman film-maker |journal=The Ottawa Citizen |date=23 April 1971 |page=27 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/460279196/ |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref> (in fact it was the first since [[Nell Shipman]] in 1919), reviews were mixed.<ref name=Kostash>{{cite journal |last1=Kostash |first1=Myrna |title=Women as filmmakers: hey, it's happening! |journal=Miss Chatelaine |date=1973 |issue=Winter |page=69 |url=http://femfilm.ca/film_search.php?film=spring-madeleine&lang=e |accessdate=24 October 2018 | postscript=. Viewed on ''Canadian Women Film Directors Database''.}}</ref> One reviewer stated that Spring "introduces a character or sets up a mood then doesn't sustain or develop it. The result is a picture of little artistic or entertainment merit, relying on a lot of cliched outdoor shots to pad a slight story and thin characterisations."<ref name=Stanton/> When it was shown at the [[Edinburgh Festival]] three years later, a reviewer felt that it "[won] its place merely by a cry of .... militant feminism".<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Robinson |first1=David |title=Edinburgh, a festival that gets the films. |journal=Times [London, England] |date=29 August 1974 |page=10 |url=http://find.galegroup.com.rp.nla.gov.au/dvnw/infomark.do?&source=gale&prodId=DVNW&userGroupName=nla&tabID=T003&docPage=article&docId=CS168655645&type=multipage&contentSet=LTO&version=1.0 |accessdate=24 October 2018 |location=The Times Digital Archive}}</ref> On the other hand, one reviewer recognised "the political and psychological naivety, which at times is downright embarrassing" but found that "Nevertheless, the film was better than the response it got. ... Spring's film achieves something fairly difficult: it takes people of five varying social types .... and never once treats them as stereotypes or without generosity. .... There's a straightforward warmth to this film, and it seems to come from its direction"<ref name=Armatage/>. Another reviewer considered the film "over-condemned", with "tender silly scene[s], amusing and touching"; "by the end of the delightful film I only wished that Spring hadn't bitten off so much for this first feature."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Edwards |first1=N |title=Women & Film Festival |journal=Cinema Canada |date=1973 |page=18 |url=http://cinemacanada.athabascau.ca/index.php/cinema/article/viewFile/204/277 |accessdate=23 October 2018}}</ref><br>
Sylvia Spring herself commented at the time, "Everything I do is affected by the fact that I am a woman. I can only speak from my experience and thus I think it is natural that the lead role in my film [''Madeleine Is...''] was a woman and done completely from her point of view"; "Women reviewers were generally more positive and sympathetic to what I was attempting to say and do since they could probably identify more readily with Madeleine's problems."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Armatage |first1=Kay |last2=Platt |first2=Phyllis |title=Women on Women in Films. |journal=Take One (Montreal) |date=7 February 1972 |volume=3 |issue=2 |pages=10-12 |url=http://femfilm.ca/film_search.php?film=spring-madeleine&lang=e |accessdate=24 October 2018 | postscript=. Viewed on ''Canadian Women Film Directors Database''.}}</ref> Two years later, she herself felt some impatience with the film, saying "The people who like it now are mostly young women who are beginning to assert themselves as human beings. That may be its only value now. I feel like shaking Madeleine myself now, to make her move faster."<ref name=Kostash/><br>
From the early 2000s, critics brought a new perspective to ''Madeleine Is ...'', with one stating that "Spring's film has a few very powerful moments ... and some strikingly expressionistic shots of downtown Vancouver. But regardless of its uneven technical and artistic quality, I would argue that the indifference from which the film has suffered results mainly from two factors: its politics and its style."<ref name=Loiselle/> Another believes that it "should also be recognized as one of the best documents of Vancouver in the history of fiction film, unusually sophisticated in dealing with urban issues as pertinent today as they were in the 1970s."<ref name=Jordan/><br>

=== Advocacy on Sex-Role Stereotyping in Advertising ===
In 1979, Sylvia Spring was appointed to a task force on Sex-Role Stereotyping in the Broadcast Media, established by the Canadian [[Minister of Status of Women|minister responsible for the status of women]]. The purpose of the task force was "to draw up guidelines for a more positive and realistic portrayal of women in radio and television, and to make policy recommendations for consideration by the [[CRTC]] and the broadcast industry."<ref name=Taskforce1979/> Following the decision of the task force that the broadcast industry should should voluntarily apply self-created guidelines for a two year trial period, Spring and two others founded, and Spring was National Director of, [[MediaWatch Canada]], a national lobby group intended to educate the public, facilitate public complaints about the portrayal of women, monitor television and radio broadcasting and advertising, and lobby the federal government.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Zwarun |first1=Suzanne |title=If ethnic jokes are out, why is rape still funny? |journal=Calgary Herald |date=29 August 1983 |page=14 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/483616625/ |accessdate=26 October 2018 |location=Calgary, Alberta, Canada}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Coutts |first1=Jane |title='If women's ad image wrong, complain' |journal=The Ottawa Citizen |date=17 June 1984 |page=62 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/464703435/ |accessdate=26 October 2018 |location=Ottawa, Ontario, Canada}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Trimble |first1=Linda |title=Coming Soon to a Station near You?: The CRTC Policy on Sex-Role Stereotyping |journal=''Canadian Public Policy / Analyse De Politiques'' |date=1990 |volume=16 |issue=3 |pages=326–338 |url=https://www-jstor-org.rp.nla.gov.au/stable/3551086 |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref> After evaluating industry voluntary self-regulation, the CRTC instituted a policy on sex-role stereotyping in broadcasting in 1986. The Canadian experience was influential in policy development in other countries: Spring presented in 1988 in Australia at a public forum on the portrayal of women in advertising<ref>{{Citation | author1=Reynolds, Margaret | title=Opening address to the public forum on the portrayal of women in advertising | publication-date=1988-10-14 | url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/work/195506191 | accessdate=26 October 2018 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article213878888 |last=Jacka |first=Liz |title=Unfortunately, these women live in a society with advertising |newspaper=[[Filmnews]] |volume=18, |issue=11 |location=New South Wales, Australia |date=1 December 1988 |accessdate=26 October 2018 |page=3 |via=National Library of Australia}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wyndham |first1=Diana |title=The Portrayal of Women in Advertising: Surveys and Forum |journal=Media Information Australia |date=1989 |volume=51 |issue=1 |url=http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1329878X8905100115 |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref>, during which she was interviewed by New Zealand media.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=McLeod |first1=Marion |title=Keeping watch |journal=Listener |date=10 Dec 1988 |volume=122 |issue=2545 |pages=26-27 |url=https://natlib.govt.nz/records/20529136 |accessdate=26 October 2018 |location=Wellington, New Zealand}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bowman |first1=Lisa |last2=Rosier |first2=Pat |title=Television turn-offs |journal=Broadsheet |date=December 1988 |issue=164 |pages=24-27 |url=https://natlib.govt.nz/records/20536538 |accessdate=24 October 2018 |location=Auckland, New Zealand}}</ref><br>
During the following years, Spring presented internationally on [[women in media]], democratization of media, [[media literacy]] and [[media monitoring]].<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/> In 1994, Spring led a workshop at the Women Empowering Communication conference in [[Bangkok, Thailand]], at which a plan to monitor media worldwide on a single day was conceived; the first [[The Global Media Monitoring Project|Global Media Monitoring Project]] occurred in 1995, with 71 countries participating.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Dharmaraj |first1=Glory E. |title=IWD Special: The Global Media Monitoring Project Journey, 1994-2015 |url=http://whomakesthenews.org/articles/iwd-special-the-global-media-monitoring-project-journey-1994-2015 |website=Who Makes the News? |accessdate=26 October 2018 |date=9 March 2015}}</ref> At the 1995 [[UNESCO]] International Symposium ''Women and the Media: Access to Expression and Decision-Making'', Spring was a member of the Canadian Organizing Committee, the Drafting Committee, and co-presented on 'Overview of Common Obstacles and Strategies to Expression in all Regions'.<ref>{{cite book |title=Women and the Media: Access to Expression and Decision-Making. Report of the International Symposium of UNESCO |date=1995 |publisher=United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization |location=Toronto, Canada |url=http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0015/001585/158552eo.pdf |accessdate=26 October 2018}}</ref> Spring worked as a Communications Consultant for the Canadian National Association of Women and the Law (NAWL), and in January 2000, travelled to [[China]] to conduct workshops with grassroots Chinese women on the information dissemination techniques used by women's groups in Canada."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Diamond |first1=Bonnie |title=NAWL Shares Communications Skills with Women in China |journal=Jurisfemme Publications |date=2000 |volume=19 |issue=2 |url=http://nawl.ca/en/jurisfemme/entry/nawl-share-communications-skills-with-women-in-china |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref>

=== Film-making companies ===
By late 1973, Spring was a member of feminist film-making company, Fromunder Films, which was organized to produce films and television programs exclusively about women.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Filmpeople, filmpeople, filmpeople |journal=Cinema Canada |date=February-March 1973 |issue=6 |page=16 |url=http://cinemacanada.athabascau.ca/index.php/cinema/article/viewFile/25/101 |accessdate=27 October 2018}}</ref><ref>MACDONALD, SHANA. (2016). 'MODES OF INTERSUBJECTIVE ADDRESS IN ''THE CENTRAL CHARACTER'' (1977) AND ''OUR MARILYN'' ' (1987). ''Revue Canadienne D'Études Cinématographiques'' / ''Canadian Journal of Film Studies'', 25(1), 111-134. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org.rp.nla.gov.au/stable/90008149</ref> She later founded Making Waves Productions. In 1995, she produced ''Voices and Visions'', a documentary series from the [[UN World Conference on Women in Beijing|UN World Conference on Women held in Beijing]], China. The following year, she produced ''Breaking the Silence: Stories from AIDS Activists in Southern Africa''<ref name=CMAJ>Needham, D. (1997). 'Review of ''Breaking the Silence: Stories from AIDS Activists in Southern Africa'' (Video).' CMAJ: ''Canadian Medical Association Journal'', 156(6), 896. </ref>, which won two awards at the Ottawa Reel Awards in 1996.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Local TV, film industry honors its top talents |journal=The Ottawa Citizen |date=3 December 1996 |page=22 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/465844016/ |accessdate=27 October 2018}}</ref> For the millennium, Spring had hoped to make a 13-part series on Canadian women, but without funding or TV network interest, instead developed a one hour "docudramady", ''20th Century Gals (According to Babe)'', which explored the women's movement of the 20th century through four themes: politics, sexuality, family and work.<ref name=NFBCGals>Spring, Sylvia, & National Film Board of Canada (firm). (2001). ''20th century gals: According to Babe.'' Montreal, QC: National Film Board of Canada. </ref><ref name=Swallows>{{cite journal |last1=Atherton |first1=Tony |title=Media octopus Corus swallows WTN |journal=The Ottawa Citizen |date=25 November 2001 |page=12 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/468776698/ |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref> Spring explained, ' “As a graduate of the second wave of the women's movement, I was worried that young women (and men) had little or no idea of how hard women had to fight to gain the rights and opportunities that youth now take for granted.”<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wake |first1=Bev |title=TV documentary to showcase Canadian women |journal=The Ottawa Citizen |date=12 July 2000 |page=65 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/466506287/ |accessdate=24 October 2018}}</ref><ref>This Millennium has 45 minutes. ''Herizons''. 2002;15(3):12. http://search.ebscohost.com.rp.nla.gov.au/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=6337875&site=ehost-live. Accessed October 23, 2018.</ref> In 2005, Spring co-produced ''Our bodies...their battleground'', a documentary about the sexual violence crisis facing women and girls in the [[Democratic Republic of Congo]] and [[Liberia]]. It was shown at the inaugural United Nations Documentary Film Festival, and was "the only film to receive a unanimous top vote by all judges".<ref name=IRIN>{{cite web |last1=UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs |title=IRIN documentary takes top honors at film festival |url=https://reliefweb.int/report/democratic-republic-congo/irin-documentary-takes-top-honors-film-festival |website=reliefweb |accessdate=26 October 2018 |date=25 May 2005}}</ref>

Spring currently lives in [[Wakefield, Quebec]], with her partner of 30 years, Canadian diplomat [[Carolyn McAskie]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Spring |first1=Sylvia |title=Who is Sylvia |url=http://www.sylviaspring.com/where.htm |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Page |first1=Shelley |title=That McAskie woman |journal=The Ottawa Citizen's Weekly |date=16 April 2006 |pages=1,7 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/456026496 |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref>


== Filmography ==
== Filmography ==


* ''This Land is People series'' (1966-67)
* 1966-67 ''This Land is People'' (director)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/><ref name=Land/>
* ''Hippies and Housing'' (1967)
* 1967 ''Hippies and Housing'' (director; writer; TV)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/>
* 1968 ''Know Place'' (co-director with [[David Rimmer]]; writer)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/><ref name=Image/><ref name=KnowPlace/>
* ''Knowplace'' (1968)
* ''Madeleine Is…''<ref>{{Citation|last=Spring|first=Sylvia|title=Madeleine Is...|date=1971-04-22|url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0242631/|others=Nicola Lipman, John Juliani, Wayne Specht|access-date=2018-08-17}}</ref> (1970)
* 1971 ''Madeleine Is…'' (director; writer) <ref>{{Citation|last=Spring|first=Sylvia|title=Madeleine Is...|date=1971-04-22|url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0242631/|others=Nicola Lipman, John Juliani, Wayne Specht|access-date=2018-08-17}}</ref>
* ''Weekday series'' (1972)
* 1972 ''Weekday'' series (director; TV)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/>
* 1973 ''Nightmusic'' (director; TV)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/> - a program about music and communication<ref>{{cite journal |title=Filmpeople / Random notes |journal=Canadian Film News |date=1974 |page=9 |url=http://cinemacanada.athabascau.ca/index.php/cinema/article/view/1912/1968 |accessdate=25 October 2018 |publisher=Cinema Canada}}</ref>
* ''Nightmusic'' (1973)
* 1973 ''Point of View Dog'' (director; writer; producer)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/><ref>{{cite web |last1=Goble |first1=Alan |title=Point of View Dog |url=http://www.citwf.com/film273903.htm |website=The Complete Index to World Film |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref>
* ''Point of View Dog'' (1973)
* 1975 ''Some of My Best Friends Are Men'' series (director; TV, four episodes)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/><ref>{{cite web |title=Some Of My Best Friends Are Men |url=http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/programming/television/some-my-best-friends-are-men |website=History of Canadian Broadcasting |publisher=Canadian Communications Forum |accessdate=25 October 2018}}</ref>
* ''Some of My Best Friends series'' (1975)
* ''Women and the Law'' (1977)
* 1977 ''Women and the Law'' (director; writer; producer)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/>
* ''Something in Common: Children of Other Lands series'' (1989)
* 1989 ''Something in Common: Children of Other Lands'' series (director; writer)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/>
* ''Voices and Visions series'' (1995)
* 1995 ''Voices and Visions'' series (producer; TV)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/>
* ''Breaking the Silence: Stories from AIDS Activists in Southern Africa'' (1996)
* 1996 ''Breaking the Silence: Stories from AIDS Activists in Southern Africa'' (producer)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/><ref name=CMAJ/>
* ''Making Waves: Canadian Women Evolving Through the 20th Century'' (1998)
* 1998 ''Making Waves: Canadian Women Evolving Through the 20th Century'' (writer; executive producer)<ref name=Filmencyclopedia/>
* 2001 ''20th Century Gals (According to Babe)''<ref name=NFBCGals/><ref name=Swallows/>
* 2005 ''Our bodies...their battleground'' (co-producer with Nicky Chalk, for the Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN))<ref name=IRIN/>

== Awards ==
* 1969 - Canadian Film Development Corporation $15,000 grant<ref name=Grant/>
* 1970 - Vancouver International Film Festival Award of Merit for ''Madeleine'' (a short feature which forms part of ''Madeleine Is ...'')<ref name=Boom/>
* 2005 - Top 100 list of Canada's Most Powerful Women, in the Trailblazers category.<ref name=TopHundred/><ref name=Previous/>
* 2005 - Best Feature for documentaries over 15 minutes, United Nations Documentary Film Festival, for ''Our bodies...their battleground''<ref name=IRIN/>


== References ==
== References ==
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== External links ==
== External links ==
* [http://www.sylviaspring.com/index.htm Sylvia Spring]
* [http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=187281 Sylvia Spring fonds (multiple media archives) at Library and Archives Canada]


* {{IMDb name|id=nm0819700}}


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[[Category:Canadian screenwriters]]
[[Category:Canadian screenwriters]]
[[Category:Canadian women screenwriters]]
[[Category:Canadian women screenwriters]]
[[Category:Canadian feminists]]
[[Category:University at Buffalo alumni]]
[[Category:1942 births]]
[[Category:1942 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]

Revision as of 05:33, 28 October 2018

Sylvia Spring (born July 14, 1942[1]) is a Canadian feminist writer, filmmaker and activist.[2][3] In 1970, she made Madeleine Is ..., the first Canadian English-language feature film directed by a woman.[4][5][6] She was a member of the Canadian task force on Sex-Role Stereotyping in the Broadcast Media established in 1979[7], a founder of MediaWatch Canada and subsequently its National Director, and presented internationally at forums on the portrayal of women in advertising. In 2005, she was named in the Top 100 list of Canada's Most Powerful Women, in the Trailblazers and Trendsetters category.[8][9]

Early life

Sylvia Spring was born in Galt, Ontario, on 14 July 1942, the second of three children to Daniel Ronald Spring and Shanna Shapiro.[10] She gained a BA(Hons) at the State University of New York, Buffalo, majoring in English literature and drama.[11] Part of the hippy generation, she participated in a Toronto love-in of 5,000 people, at which Leonard Cohen and Buffy Sainte-Marie performed.[12]

Career

After graduating, Spring wrote poetry and worked in advertising, journalism, radio and television. She conducted radio interviews of the Canadian poet Irving Layton[13][14], directed This Land is People, a TV series which introduced viewers to up-and-coming Canadians from all walks of life, including Peter Lougheed, Sinclair Stevens and Gustavo da Roza[15][16], and co-directed with David Rimmer Know Place, an experimental short documentary about an alternative school.[17][18]

Madeleine Is ...

In 1969, Sylvia Spring was one of eight Canadian film-makers, and the only woman, to receive a $15,000 grant from the Canadian Film Development Corporation, to produce a feature-length film in Canada.[19] She co-wrote and directed the resulting 90 minute feature film, Madeleine Is ... (1971)[20], a segment of which, released as a short feature under the name Madeleine, won an award at the Vancouver International Film Festival in 1970.[21][22] With a total budget of $100,000[23], Madeleine Is ... was filmed in Vancouver, and starred Vancouver actress Nicola Lipman in the eponymous role of a young aspiring painter from Quebec who moves to Vancouver, where she is involved in an abusive relationship with a political radical and an unfulfilling relationship with a businessman/nerd, before discovering her own identity as an artist.[5][24] It premiered in April 1971 in Toronto and Montreal, and in May 1971 in Vancouver, but closed in Toronto after just one week.[25] While the film was feted as the "First movie by woman film-maker"[26] (in fact it was the first since Nell Shipman in 1919), reviews were mixed.[27] One reviewer stated that Spring "introduces a character or sets up a mood then doesn't sustain or develop it. The result is a picture of little artistic or entertainment merit, relying on a lot of cliched outdoor shots to pad a slight story and thin characterisations."[26] When it was shown at the Edinburgh Festival three years later, a reviewer felt that it "[won] its place merely by a cry of .... militant feminism".[28] On the other hand, one reviewer recognised "the political and psychological naivety, which at times is downright embarrassing" but found that "Nevertheless, the film was better than the response it got. ... Spring's film achieves something fairly difficult: it takes people of five varying social types .... and never once treats them as stereotypes or without generosity. .... There's a straightforward warmth to this film, and it seems to come from its direction"[25]. Another reviewer considered the film "over-condemned", with "tender silly scene[s], amusing and touching"; "by the end of the delightful film I only wished that Spring hadn't bitten off so much for this first feature."[29]
Sylvia Spring herself commented at the time, "Everything I do is affected by the fact that I am a woman. I can only speak from my experience and thus I think it is natural that the lead role in my film [Madeleine Is...] was a woman and done completely from her point of view"; "Women reviewers were generally more positive and sympathetic to what I was attempting to say and do since they could probably identify more readily with Madeleine's problems."[30] Two years later, she herself felt some impatience with the film, saying "The people who like it now are mostly young women who are beginning to assert themselves as human beings. That may be its only value now. I feel like shaking Madeleine myself now, to make her move faster."[27]
From the early 2000s, critics brought a new perspective to Madeleine Is ..., with one stating that "Spring's film has a few very powerful moments ... and some strikingly expressionistic shots of downtown Vancouver. But regardless of its uneven technical and artistic quality, I would argue that the indifference from which the film has suffered results mainly from two factors: its politics and its style."[5] Another believes that it "should also be recognized as one of the best documents of Vancouver in the history of fiction film, unusually sophisticated in dealing with urban issues as pertinent today as they were in the 1970s."[6]

Advocacy on Sex-Role Stereotyping in Advertising

In 1979, Sylvia Spring was appointed to a task force on Sex-Role Stereotyping in the Broadcast Media, established by the Canadian minister responsible for the status of women. The purpose of the task force was "to draw up guidelines for a more positive and realistic portrayal of women in radio and television, and to make policy recommendations for consideration by the CRTC and the broadcast industry."[7] Following the decision of the task force that the broadcast industry should should voluntarily apply self-created guidelines for a two year trial period, Spring and two others founded, and Spring was National Director of, MediaWatch Canada, a national lobby group intended to educate the public, facilitate public complaints about the portrayal of women, monitor television and radio broadcasting and advertising, and lobby the federal government.[31][32][33] After evaluating industry voluntary self-regulation, the CRTC instituted a policy on sex-role stereotyping in broadcasting in 1986. The Canadian experience was influential in policy development in other countries: Spring presented in 1988 in Australia at a public forum on the portrayal of women in advertising[34][35][36], during which she was interviewed by New Zealand media.[37][38]
During the following years, Spring presented internationally on women in media, democratization of media, media literacy and media monitoring.[1] In 1994, Spring led a workshop at the Women Empowering Communication conference in Bangkok, Thailand, at which a plan to monitor media worldwide on a single day was conceived; the first Global Media Monitoring Project occurred in 1995, with 71 countries participating.[39] At the 1995 UNESCO International Symposium Women and the Media: Access to Expression and Decision-Making, Spring was a member of the Canadian Organizing Committee, the Drafting Committee, and co-presented on 'Overview of Common Obstacles and Strategies to Expression in all Regions'.[40] Spring worked as a Communications Consultant for the Canadian National Association of Women and the Law (NAWL), and in January 2000, travelled to China to conduct workshops with grassroots Chinese women on the information dissemination techniques used by women's groups in Canada."[41]

Film-making companies

By late 1973, Spring was a member of feminist film-making company, Fromunder Films, which was organized to produce films and television programs exclusively about women.[42][43] She later founded Making Waves Productions. In 1995, she produced Voices and Visions, a documentary series from the UN World Conference on Women held in Beijing, China. The following year, she produced Breaking the Silence: Stories from AIDS Activists in Southern Africa[44], which won two awards at the Ottawa Reel Awards in 1996.[45] For the millennium, Spring had hoped to make a 13-part series on Canadian women, but without funding or TV network interest, instead developed a one hour "docudramady", 20th Century Gals (According to Babe), which explored the women's movement of the 20th century through four themes: politics, sexuality, family and work.[46][47] Spring explained, ' “As a graduate of the second wave of the women's movement, I was worried that young women (and men) had little or no idea of how hard women had to fight to gain the rights and opportunities that youth now take for granted.”[48][49] In 2005, Spring co-produced Our bodies...their battleground, a documentary about the sexual violence crisis facing women and girls in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Liberia. It was shown at the inaugural United Nations Documentary Film Festival, and was "the only film to receive a unanimous top vote by all judges".[50]

Spring currently lives in Wakefield, Quebec, with her partner of 30 years, Canadian diplomat Carolyn McAskie.[51][52]

Filmography

  • 1966-67 This Land is People (director)[1][15]
  • 1967 Hippies and Housing (director; writer; TV)[1]
  • 1968 Know Place (co-director with David Rimmer; writer)[1][17][18]
  • 1971 Madeleine Is… (director; writer) [53]
  • 1972 Weekday series (director; TV)[1]
  • 1973 Nightmusic (director; TV)[1] - a program about music and communication[54]
  • 1973 Point of View Dog (director; writer; producer)[1][55]
  • 1975 Some of My Best Friends Are Men series (director; TV, four episodes)[1][56]
  • 1977 Women and the Law (director; writer; producer)[1]
  • 1989 Something in Common: Children of Other Lands series (director; writer)[1]
  • 1995 Voices and Visions series (producer; TV)[1]
  • 1996 Breaking the Silence: Stories from AIDS Activists in Southern Africa (producer)[1][44]
  • 1998 Making Waves: Canadian Women Evolving Through the 20th Century (writer; executive producer)[1]
  • 2001 20th Century Gals (According to Babe)[46][47]
  • 2005 Our bodies...their battleground (co-producer with Nicky Chalk, for the Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN))[50]

Awards

  • 1969 - Canadian Film Development Corporation $15,000 grant[19]
  • 1970 - Vancouver International Film Festival Award of Merit for Madeleine (a short feature which forms part of Madeleine Is ...)[21]
  • 2005 - Top 100 list of Canada's Most Powerful Women, in the Trailblazers category.[8][9]
  • 2005 - Best Feature for documentaries over 15 minutes, United Nations Documentary Film Festival, for Our bodies...their battleground[50]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Canadian Film Encyclopedia - Sylvia Spring". legacy.tiff.net. Archived from the original on August 17, 2018. Retrieved 2018-08-17. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  2. ^ "People / Sylvia Spring". Ruins in Process: Vancouver Art in the Sixties. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  3. ^ Munshi, Shoma; Birch, David (2000). "Contextualizing the Global Media Monitoring Project". Asian Studies Journal. 36 (2): 8. ISSN 0004-4679. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  4. ^ Douglas, Dave (2001). Rist, Peter (ed.). Guide to the Cinema(s) of Canada. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 135. ISBN 0313299315. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  5. ^ a b c Loiselle, André (July–August 2002). "Madeleine is... worth a second look". Take One (Toronto). Retrieved 24 October 2018. Viewed on Canadian Women Film Directors Database.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date format (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  6. ^ a b Jordan, Randolph (2013). "Vancouver Is...: Defining the City in Sylvia Spring's Madeleine Is... (1971).". In Walls, Rachel (ed.). World Film Locations: Vancouver. Bristol: Intellect Books. pp. 44–45. Retrieved 24 October 2018. Viewed on Canadian Women Film Directors Database.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  7. ^ a b "Task force to study sex stereotyping". The Ottawa Citizen: 87. 29 September 1979. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  8. ^ a b El Akkad, Omar (24 November 2005). "A new generation of powerful women". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  9. ^ a b "Previous Winners". Top 100 Women. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  10. ^ "SPRING DANIEL R AT CAMBRIDGE MEMORIA". Life News. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  11. ^ "Sylvia Spring, Writing/Filmmaking" (PDF). Galt Collegiate Institute. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
  12. ^ Boyle, Harry J (22 July 1967). "Love Makes Their World Go Round". The Ottawa Journal Weekend Magazine. 17 (29): 16–21. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  13. ^ "airwaves". The Gazette (Montreal, Canada): 34. 18 February 1966. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  14. ^ "CBC weekly radio highlights". The Ottawa Citizen: 80. 2 July 1966. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  15. ^ a b "This Land Is People". History of Canadian Broadcasting. Canadian Communications Forum. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  16. ^ Fuglem, Terri (2015). "Manitoba Mod". In Keshavjee, Serena (ed.). Winnipeg modern architecture, 1945 to 1975. issuu. p. 202. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  17. ^ a b Elder, R. Bruce (1989). Image and Identity: Reflections on Canadian Film and Culture. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. p. 448. ISBN 0889209561. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  18. ^ a b "Archive / Know Place". Ruins in Process: Vancouver Art in the Sixties. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  19. ^ a b "Film-makers get $125,000". The Gazette (Montreal, Canada): 21. 4 Jul 1969. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  20. ^ "Madeleine Is ..." IMDB. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  21. ^ a b "Vancouver has film boom". The Ottawa Citizen: 23. 8 June 1970. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  22. ^ Lanken, Dane (1 May 1971). "Madeleine Is ... Finally, she decided to make her own movie". The Gazette (Montreal, Canada): 44. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  23. ^ Stanton, Victor (11 May 1971). "Backers hard to find". The Ottawa Citizen: 25. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  24. ^ Killas, Harry (2015). "The Image Before Us: A History Of Film In British Columbia - Madeleine Is…". The Cinematheque. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  25. ^ a b Armatage, Kay (3 June 1971). "Madeleine Is...." Review of Madeleine Is....". Take One (Montreal). 2 (11). Retrieved 24 October 2018. Viewed on Canadian Women Film Directors Database. {{cite journal}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |journal= (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  26. ^ a b Stanton, Victor (23 April 1971). "First movie by woman film-maker". The Ottawa Citizen: 27. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  27. ^ a b Kostash, Myrna (1973). "Women as filmmakers: hey, it's happening!". Miss Chatelaine (Winter): 69. Retrieved 24 October 2018. Viewed on Canadian Women Film Directors Database.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  28. ^ Robinson, David (29 August 1974). "Edinburgh, a festival that gets the films". Times [London, England]. The Times Digital Archive: 10. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  29. ^ Edwards, N (1973). "Women & Film Festival". Cinema Canada: 18. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
  30. ^ Armatage, Kay; Platt, Phyllis (7 February 1972). "Women on Women in Films". Take One (Montreal). 3 (2): 10–12. Retrieved 24 October 2018. Viewed on Canadian Women Film Directors Database.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  31. ^ Zwarun, Suzanne (29 August 1983). "If ethnic jokes are out, why is rape still funny?". Calgary Herald. Calgary, Alberta, Canada: 14. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  32. ^ Coutts, Jane (17 June 1984). "'If women's ad image wrong, complain'". The Ottawa Citizen. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: 62. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  33. ^ Trimble, Linda (1990). "Coming Soon to a Station near You?: The CRTC Policy on Sex-Role Stereotyping". Canadian Public Policy / Analyse De Politiques. 16 (3): 326–338. Retrieved 24 October 2018. {{cite journal}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |journal= (help)
  34. ^ Reynolds, Margaret (1988-10-14), Opening address to the public forum on the portrayal of women in advertising, retrieved 26 October 2018
  35. ^ Jacka, Liz (1 December 1988). "Unfortunately, these women live in a society with advertising". Filmnews. Vol. 18, , no. 11. New South Wales, Australia. p. 3. Retrieved 26 October 2018 – via National Library of Australia.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  36. ^ Wyndham, Diana (1989). "The Portrayal of Women in Advertising: Surveys and Forum". Media Information Australia. 51 (1). Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  37. ^ McLeod, Marion (10 Dec 1988). "Keeping watch". Listener. 122 (2545). Wellington, New Zealand: 26–27. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  38. ^ Bowman, Lisa; Rosier, Pat (December 1988). "Television turn-offs". Broadsheet (164). Auckland, New Zealand: 24–27. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  39. ^ Dharmaraj, Glory E. (9 March 2015). "IWD Special: The Global Media Monitoring Project Journey, 1994-2015". Who Makes the News?. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  40. ^ Women and the Media: Access to Expression and Decision-Making. Report of the International Symposium of UNESCO (PDF). Toronto, Canada: United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. 1995. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  41. ^ Diamond, Bonnie (2000). "NAWL Shares Communications Skills with Women in China". Jurisfemme Publications. 19 (2). Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  42. ^ "Filmpeople, filmpeople, filmpeople". Cinema Canada (6): 16. February–March 1973. Retrieved 27 October 2018.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)
  43. ^ MACDONALD, SHANA. (2016). 'MODES OF INTERSUBJECTIVE ADDRESS IN THE CENTRAL CHARACTER (1977) AND OUR MARILYN ' (1987). Revue Canadienne D'Études Cinématographiques / Canadian Journal of Film Studies, 25(1), 111-134. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org.rp.nla.gov.au/stable/90008149
  44. ^ a b Needham, D. (1997). 'Review of Breaking the Silence: Stories from AIDS Activists in Southern Africa (Video).' CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal, 156(6), 896.
  45. ^ "Local TV, film industry honors its top talents". The Ottawa Citizen: 22. 3 December 1996. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  46. ^ a b Spring, Sylvia, & National Film Board of Canada (firm). (2001). 20th century gals: According to Babe. Montreal, QC: National Film Board of Canada.
  47. ^ a b Atherton, Tony (25 November 2001). "Media octopus Corus swallows WTN". The Ottawa Citizen: 12. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  48. ^ Wake, Bev (12 July 2000). "TV documentary to showcase Canadian women". The Ottawa Citizen: 65. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  49. ^ This Millennium has 45 minutes. Herizons. 2002;15(3):12. http://search.ebscohost.com.rp.nla.gov.au/login.aspx?direct=true&db=a9h&AN=6337875&site=ehost-live. Accessed October 23, 2018.
  50. ^ a b c UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (25 May 2005). "IRIN documentary takes top honors at film festival". reliefweb. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  51. ^ Spring, Sylvia. "Who is Sylvia". Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  52. ^ Page, Shelley (16 April 2006). "That McAskie woman". The Ottawa Citizen's Weekly: 1, 7. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  53. ^ Spring, Sylvia (1971-04-22), Madeleine Is..., Nicola Lipman, John Juliani, Wayne Specht, retrieved 2018-08-17
  54. ^ "Filmpeople / Random notes". Canadian Film News. Cinema Canada: 9. 1974. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  55. ^ Goble, Alan. "Point of View Dog". The Complete Index to World Film. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  56. ^ "Some Of My Best Friends Are Men". History of Canadian Broadcasting. Canadian Communications Forum. Retrieved 25 October 2018.

External links