Fronza Woods

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Fronza Woods
FronzaWoods2019byKCarey.jpg
Fronza Woods, photo by Katherine Spencer Carey
Born
Detroit, Michigan
OccupationFilm director, professor

Fronza Woods is an American filmmaker best known for her short films, including Killing Time (1979) and Fannie's Film (1982).

Biography[]

Woods was born in Detroit and now lives in Southern France.[1] She began her career as a junior copywriter at a small Detroit advertising agency.[2] In 1967, she relocated to New York City where she started working in television at ABC.[3]

Woods directed, wrote, and produced independent films, most notably Killing Time and Fannie's Film. Before making her own films, Woods worked on shorts at the Women's Interart Center in Hell's Kitchen[4] with the support of Ellen Hovde and Muffie Meyer.[2] She also worked as a guest filmmaker in the Lincoln Center Film Society's "Artist in the Schools program."[5]

In addition to making her own films, Woods was an assistant sound engineer for John Sayles's film The Brother From Another Planet.[6] She was also involved as a cast member in the 1985 film, The Man Who Envied Women.[7] Of her role in the film industry, Woods said "I think the male-female divisions are more defining".[4] Woods said that she was influenced by people as diverse as Bill Moyers, Malcolm X, Georgia O'Keeffe and others.[8]

Woods attended NYU film school until she left to became a teacher. She moved to Milwaukee where she taught filmmaking at the University of Milwaukee.[3]

Legacy and cultural impact[]

Woods is one of the first black woman directors that completed multiple short films.[3] In 2017, BAM Cinematheque in New York City included both Killing Time and Fannie’s Film in a new season.[9] This proved to be the start of a contemporary "re-discovery" of Wood's work. Woods describes receiving the news in 2017 that her films were to be featured, nearly thirty-five years after they were produced: "It was very strange, not to say a bit destabilizing. Suddenly... I was catapulted forward, backward and sideways in time. I was an artist, and I use that word loosely, who had never really been discovered — I’m speaking solely of critics and the media, the people who have the power to make or break one’s career — yet was now being re-discovered."[10]

Richard Brody called Killing Time "very simply, one of the best short films that I’ve ever seen."[11] Melissa Anderson of the Village Voice praised Woods's film Fannie's Film: "she makes the mundane facts of Drayton’s life indelible."[12] Hyperallergic writes that Woods gives otherwise invisible women like Drayton a platform and calls the documentary "extraordinary."[13] The New York Times wrote that Woods "humorously yet movingly contemplates existence" in Killing Time.[14]

In 2019, Killing Time and Fannie's Film were screened at a film festival of the Institut Jean Vigo at the Cinémathèque de Perpignan in France.[15] That same year, both films were featured at the Courtisane Film Festival in Ghent, Belgium as part of the series "Breaking Sacred Ground: African-American Independent Filmmaking on the US East Coast, 1967-1989.[16] In November 2019, Woods' films were featured during the 41st edition of the Festival des 3 Continents in Nantes, France.[17][18] In June, 2021, Killing Time and Fannie’s Film were screened by Royal Cine Cineclube in Lisbon, Portugal.

In an essay titled "40 Years and 19,979,520 Feet From Stardom or, The Perils of Being (Re)Discovered…” published online in June 2021, Woods humorously reflects on her time as a filmmaker and the late recognition of her work: "When I was a confused, ambitious, younger woman embarking on my filmmaking career, I went to a psychic who I was hoping would tell me “one day you’re going to be a famous filmmaker.” Alas, there was no mention of filmmaking, let alone fame, I had to content myself with “yours will not be just any old name in the phone book.” At the time I was disappointed, not to say terribly disappointed with his lackluster prediction. As it turns out, he was right, and now I'm thinking this late recognition is good enough for me. 19,979,520 feet from stardom is not such a bad place to be."[10]

Short films[]

Killing Time (1979)[]

Killing Time is a 1979 narrative short film written and directed by Fronza Woods.[19] The film follows a woman (credited as Sage Brush) as she prepares to commit suicide. The duration of the film is 9 minutes.[20] Richard Brody called Killing Time "very simply, one of the best short films that I’ve ever seen."[11] In response, Woods reflected: "The most beautiful, thoughtful, understanding and generous analysis being Richard Brody’s review of the series in his The Front Row column for the New Yorker. I was touched and stunned that he was able to empathize so deeply with the plight of black women filmmakers of that era."[10] Hugues Perrot describes the film: "...a bitter and insolent ballad, shows the casual disarray of a woman, alone in her room, searching for the appropriate attire for her suicide. In a jaunty rather than joyful tone (her artificially cheerful whistling), the film ends up hypnotising us, humour acting less as a safety valve than as a corollary of despair."[21]

Fannie's Film (1982)[]

Fannie's Film is a 1982 documentary that follows 65-year old Fannie Drayton, a cleaning woman.[22] The film is told from the perspective of Drayton and is 15 minutes in duration.[23][13] Hugues Perrot writes: "In parallel with the hieratic figures that come and go on the sports machines, she is filmed alone cleaning the studio emptied of its ghosts. The film upends paradigms, plunging the visible world into a bare space and giving body to an inaudible voice – a voice that is especially moving as it recounts the joyfulness of the life it has led."[24] Fannie's Film was selected for the 1985 Créteil International Women's Film Festival.[25] Woods comments: “I like films about real people. I am inspired by almost everything but especially by struggle. I am interested in people who take on a challenge, no matter how great or small, and come to terms with it. What inspires me are people who don’t sit on life’s rump but have the courage, energy, and audacity not only to grab it by the horns, but to steer it as well.”[26]

References[]

Citations[]

  1. ^ "WOMEN MAKE MOVIES | Fronza Woods". www.wmm.com.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "Conversation with Fronza Woods – Diagonal Thoughts". Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c Women, Invisible (2021-03-10). "Spotlight: Fronza Woods". Invisible Women. Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Aufderheide, Pat (1984). "Sayles in Harlem". Film Comment. 20 (2): 4–6. JSTOR 43452785.
  5. ^ Campbell 1983, p. 61.
  6. ^ Klotman & Gibson 1997, p. 74.
  7. ^ Green, Shelley (1994). Radical Juxtaposition: The Films of Yvonne Rainer. Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow Press, Inc. pp. 127–128. ISBN 0810828634 – via Archive.org.
  8. ^ Campbell 1983, p. 58.
  9. ^ "Grey Area + 2 By Fronza Woods". BAM.org. Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c ""40 Years and 19,979,520 Feet from Stardom or, the Perils of Being (Re)Discovered…" — by Fronza Woods". Milestone Films. Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b "NYC Repertory Cinema Picks, February 8–14". Brooklyn Magazine. 8 February 2017.
  12. ^ Anderson, Melissa (30 January 2017). "They Are Somebody: BAM Reveals the Rich History of Black Women Filmmakers". Village Voice. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b Hubert, Craig (2017-02-03). "Rewriting Film History with Two Decades of Black Women's Cinema". Hyperallergic. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  14. ^ Dargis, Manohla (2017). "A Film Series Honors Black Women Directors". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  15. ^ "Killing Time & Fannie's Film". Institut Jean Vigo (in French). Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  16. ^ "Breaking Sacred Ground | Courtisane". www.courtisane.be. Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  17. ^ Galliot, Eponine Le. "Le Festival des 3 continents à Nantes propose une rétrospective sur le cinéma noir américain - Les Inrocks". www.lesinrocks.com/ (in French). Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  18. ^ "RETOUR SUR LE 41ème FESTIVAL DES 3 CONTINENTS – NANTES (2019)". L'EMPIRE DES IMAGES (in French). 2019-12-01. Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  19. ^ Klotman & Gibson 1997, p. 264.
  20. ^ Williams, John (1994). "Daughters of the Diaspora: A Filmography of Sixty-Five Black Women Independent Film- and Video-Makers". Cinéaste. 20 (3): 41–42. JSTOR 41687325.
  21. ^ "Killing Time". Festival des 3 Continents. Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  22. ^ Drayton, Fannie; Fitz, Tracy; Jabaily, Barbara; Archbold, Schellie; Barcal, Beth; Onove, Dyne Benner; Bram, Leon; Edwards, Alan; Handy, Judy; Hazen, Lise; Cunningham, Jaimie; Levinson, Gary; Miller, Doug; Mitz, Rick; Phillips, John; Prieto, Berthica; Sherman, Maxine; South, Dean (1979). Fannie's Film. Distributed by Women Make Movies. OCLC 80650831.
  23. ^ Fraser, C. Gerald (1986-12-28). "Black Women's Outlook in Whitney Film Series". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-11-01.
  24. ^ "Fannie's Film". Festival des 3 Continents. Retrieved 2021-06-08.
  25. ^ "Trims * Glitches". The Independent. 8: 34. 1985 – via Archive.org.
  26. ^ "07: Shorts: E. Owens / F. Woods / C. Billops & J. Hatch | Courtisane". www.courtisane.be. Retrieved 2021-06-08.

Sources[]

External links[]

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