Judith Crawley (données partielles)
Autres noms : Judy Crawley,
Judith Sparks
Née : 1914
Décédée : 1986
Films réalisés par Judith Crawley
Citations de Judith Crawley [en anglais]
« [Before the 1950s] I did everything; I did sound mixing, photography, etc. because there was only two of us [F.R. Crawley and Judith Crawley]. I even went out as a freelance camerawoman for the NFB, but that was when I only had one or two children. Then I slipped into writing. I was writing more and not directing because with the directing you have to be out for eight or ten hours at a time. Whereas, with writing you can do it at night when the children are asleep. »
-- Judith Crawley
(source)
« [The 'Ages and Stages' series] was about looking at the child rather than saying if I want to have this effect I'll do this. Looking at the child and trying to draw from the child what he had to give. Recognize his stage instead of trying to superimpose. »
-- Judith Crawley
(source)
Citations sur Judith Crawley [en anglais]
« Our living room had a screen at the end, and a projector window was set into our kitchen. Night after night, all through our growing up, Mum and Dad [Judith Crawley and F.R. Crawley] would bring home the 'rushes'—all the footage shot on location, without editing and without any sound or words, just as it came out of the camera—and screen hours of footage. As kids, perhaps we had homework or other desires. But we would drop in, wordlessly, just to watch the country unfolding before us, unedited. »
-- Michal Crawley
(source)
« Judy [Crawley] did a considerable amount of National Film Board work during the war, and both [Budge and Judy Crawley] are now involved in the affairs of the 40-member Crawley Film Company, in which Budge is a partner, Judy an executive. She likes working with children—especially her own—and hopes one day to film such children's stories as Katie and the Big Snow, about a snow plow. Ever since one of the children chewed up a piece of newly exposed kodachrome, Judy has done her film cutting at the studios. But scripting, which works in beautifully with family life, is a night chore at home. »
-- Lotta Dempsey
(source)
« From its humble beginnings, Crawley Films expanded to become, at one time, Canada's largest independent film company, with a $250,000 sound stage in the Gatineau Hills and a $500,000 studio building in Ottawa. Mr. Crawley usually was the producer and Mrs. Crawley the script supervisor. [...] Their reputation was established during the 1940s and 1950s with a long list of documentary and educational films, many of them done under contract to the National Film Board. [...] Mrs. Crawley was the director, cameraman and lab staff on many of the movies—22 of which were on child care that appeared under the title Ages and Stages. They were aimed at women and were immensely popular with women's groups. »
-- Donn Downey
(source)
« The Crawley Film collection, now on deposit at PAC (Public Archives Canada), includes film material on many of the films Judy Crawley contributed to between 1938 and 1975, as well as the production files for that period. These files contain contracts, memos, correspondence, progress reports and various drafts of scripts, allowing researchers not only to see the finished film, but to acquaint themselves with the often tortuous path between the inception of a film and its completion. »
-- Yvette Hackett
(source)
« In making films Mrs. Crawley has all the problems of a Hollywood director in getting just the right expression and the right reaction at the proper moment. (Most of her films are carefully written in advance, and must be directed exactly according to prepared scripts.) After the age of about two, Mrs. Crawley finds children are usually extremely conscious of the camera and are inclined to show off when it's their turn to act. It takes a lot of skill to get them to act normally—skill and sometimes skulduggery. »
-- Cecile Starr
(source)
« When [Judy Crawley's] first child was on the way, 19 years ago, an obstetrician warned her that having children would lessen her interest in making films. He was wrong. 'They were my most creative years,' she says now. In hospital with her first child, Judy Crawley wrote a script about babies and starred her infant in the film that resulted. »
-- Dean Walker
(source)
Pour lire les CITATIONS sur un film spécifique de Judith Crawley, veuillez voir : A Study of Spring Wild Flowers
Four New Apple Dishes
Know Your Baby
The Loon's Necklace
Notes sur Judith Crawley
- Réalisatrice, scénariste, monteuse, productrice et directrice de la photographie.
- Née à Ottawa.
- A étudié la littérature anglaise et les sciences économiques à l'Université McGill (baccalauréat, 1936).
- Co-fondatrice de Crawley Films en 1939, avec Budge Crawley (F.R. Crawley), qui était son mari à l'époque.
- S'est séparée de Budge Crawley en 1965.
- A fondé (avec ses filles, Jennifer et Michal Crawley) une autre entreprise cinématographique.
- Est devenue présidente de l'Institut canadien du film en 1979.
Notes disponibles seulement en anglais :
- With Polly Hill, was commissioned by McGraw-Hill to produce the 'Ages and Stages' series of films about child development. Judith Crawley's children appeared in some of the films.
- Wrote the screenplay for the Academy-Award-winning documentary The Man Who Skied Down Everest.
- In 1986, with Budge Crawley, received a Special Achievement Genie Award.
(sources)
Bibliographie sur
Judith
Crawley
Section 1 : Publications sur Judith Crawley
Brèves parties de livres
-
MELNYK, George. One Hundred Years of Canadian
Cinema, Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2004.
[en anglais] (pp. 91-98)
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WADE ROSE, Barbara. Budge: What Happened to Canada's King of Film, Toronto, ECW Press, 1998.
[en anglais] (pp. 49-52, 57-61, 72-73, 132-134)
Articles de revues scientifiques
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HACKETT, Yvette. « Two Women in Film », The Archivist / L'Archiviste, vol. 14-16 (1987), pp. 6-7.
[en anglais]
Articles de journaux, de revues grand public ou de sites d'information en ligne
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CINEMA CANADA. « Judy Crawley was pioneer in film », Cinema Canada, no. 135, novembre 1986.
[en anglais]
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CRAGG, Margaret. « Country house reflects view, family interests », Globe and Mail, 7 mai 1954.
[en anglais]
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DEMPSEY, Lotta. « Honeymoon started career for film-making family », Globe and Mail, 11 octobre 1949.
[en anglais]
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DOWNEY, Donn. « Canadian film pioneer made documentaries, won Academy Award », Globe and Mail, 17 septembre 1986.
[en anglais]
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FORRESTER, James. « The Crawley era », Cinema Canada, no. 85, juin 1982.
[en anglais]
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STARR, Cecile. « Movie-making mother », Saturday Review, 8 août 1953.
[en anglais]
Sites Web
Fonds et collections d'archives
Ces centres d'archives conservent des fonds ou collections liés à Judith Crawley ou à ses films :