Freida Lee Mock

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Freida Lee Mock at the Sundance Film Festival

Freida Lee Mock is an Academy Award-winning American filmmaker, director, screenwriter and producer. She is a co-founder of the American Film Foundation with Terry Sanders. Her documentary, Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision (1994)[1] won an Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary in 1995.[2][3]

Background[]

Mock was the first Governor of the Documentary Branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. She received her Bachelor's degree from the University of California, Berkeley, where she studied both History and Law.

Director[]

Mock directed a documentary Anita, about Anita Hill, which will premiere at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. She has directed the documentaries G-Dog (2012), Sing China! (2009), Wrestling With Angels (2006) (which screened again on the TV show P.O.V. in 2007) a documentary feature about playwright Tony Kushner, Bird by Bird with Anne (1999) (which screened again on the PBS TV show Independent Lens in 2003) about author Anne Lamott, Return with Honor (1998) (which screened again on the TV show The American Experience in 2000), Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision (1994), and the documentary shorts Lt. Watada (2011), Sing! (2001) (about a Los Angeles community children's choir and which was also an Academy Award nominee for Best Documentary Short Film in 2002[4]), and various episodes of the TV show Screenwriters: Words Into Image in 1982, including episodes on the screenwriters Robert Towne, Carl Foreman, Neil Simon, Eleanor Perry, Paul Mazursky and William Goldman, all done in 1982 (the series was also a Primetime Emmy Award nominee for Best Series).[5]

She also directed a documentary called Anita. This film shows the life of Anita Hill and what she went through when dealing with sexual harassment allegations against Clarence Thomas

Producer[]

Mock's production credits include many of the documentaries she directed, such as Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision, Sing!, Bird by Bird with Annie, Wrestling With Angels, G-Dog, Lt. Watada, Sing China! and Return with Honor, which was also presented by Tom Hanks.

Early in her career, Mock produced episodes of the TV show National Geographic Specials and Untamed Frontier. She has also produced the documentaries Rose Kennedy: A Life to Remember (Academy Award nominee for Best Documentary Short in 1991[6]), To Live or Let Die (Academy Award nominee for Best Documentary Short in 1983[7]), and Never Give Up: The 20th Century Odyssey of Herbert Zipper about Vienna-born composer and musician Herbert Zipper that was also an Academy Award nominee for Best Documentary Short in 1996.[8] She also produced the Lillian Gish: The Actor's Life for Me (which won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Information Special in 1989).[9]

Mock produced "The Kennedy Center Honors" biographies, which honors individuals for lifetime achievement in the performing arts -- Frank Sinatra, James Stewart, Katherine Dunham, Virgil Thomson, Elia Kazan and others (the series was also a Primetime Emmy Award Winner for Best Variety Special).

Mock recently produced the documentary Enterprising Women, celebrating two and a half centuries of entrepreneurial women in America.

Awards and accolades[]

Mock has received an Academy Award (for her film Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision), five Academy Award nominations (for films she either directed or produced), two prime-time Emmy Awards, and three prime-time Emmy Award nominations.

Mock is the recipient of grants from organizations such as the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the American Film Institute, Women in Film, the Robeson Fund and numerous foundations in support of her film projects.

Oscar controversy[]

After the win, the director was accused by the press (which she recalled was unpleasant, exhausting and stressful) of cronyism who said that the award should've belong to the popular Hoop Dreams and having served several terms as Chairman on the screening committee while praising the film. Film critic Roger Ebert apologized to the director after seeing the film.[10]

Selected filmography[]

References[]

  1. ^ Roger Ebert.com
  2. ^ Documentary Winners: 1995 Oscars
  3. ^ "The 67th Academy Awards (1995) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. AMPAS. Retrieved 2015-05-12.
  4. ^ 2002|Oscars.org
  5. ^ Screenwriters/Word into Image|Television Academy
  6. ^ 1991|Oscars.org
  7. ^ "The 55th Academy Awards (1983) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
  8. ^ 1996|Oscars.org
  9. ^ LILLIAN GISH: THE ACTOR'S LIFE FOR ME AMERICAN MAS|Television Academy
  10. ^ Freida Lee Mock's Strong Clear Vision / Director says `Lin' stands on its own - SFGate

External links[]

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