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From reporting the latest industry news to the hottest entertainment gossip, reporters have continually stirred a plethora of reactions and measures among industry professionals over what they’ve written. And in 2005, following the publication of a New York Times article entitled “Hollywood’s New Old Girl’s Network,” a group of USC women turned something potentially damaging and depressing into something exponentially rewarding by forming the Women of Cinematic Arts group. “We saw that article as a challenge for us to band together,” said 2005 M.F.A. production graduate Phoebe Shackeroff, who along with fellow graduate classmate Chen-HSI Wong moderated a meeting with Dean Elizabeth M. Daley that brought together over 50 female students to address the Times' piece. Shackeroff seized the opportunity before her and cultivated that group into a network that has ballooned into a current roster of over 260 members.
“What started out initially as simple networking emails, has grown into
a phenomenal avenue of communication amongst USC women who want to share what
they’ve learned and what they know,” said Shackeroff who also
ran the group’s initial board meetings. Creating awareness of women
in the cinematic arts program and of those working in the industry is one
of the key goals of the group. With their numbers growing, the group focuses
on everything from helping with jobs and advice, to promoting their work,
to using the forum for information ranging from such topics as vendors and
post-production facilities, to questions and advice on how writers can sell
their scripts.
Eschewing the standard networking bar venue, the group’s first event
was a picnic at the Getty Museum in Los Angeles with 50 people in attendance.
That number grew even greater at the group’s sophomore meeting, a panel
featuring recent female SCA alumni, organized by senior M.F.A. production
student Jules DiBiase entitled “Breaking into TV.”
“It was tremendously inspiring,” added Shackeroff, who found one
of the meetings, set against the backdrop of a tea party that was conceived
and organized by 2006 M.F.A. production graduate Soo Hugh beyond her wildest
imagination.
“We wanted the day to be a fun afternoon, and that’s exactly what
it was,” said Hugh. With the “casual atmosphere a refreshing change”
from the formal awkwardness of cocktails where cliques of friends tend to
congregate and stick together, participants came prepared to first and foremost
introduce themselves and share their need with each other. “That was
important, because in the end, if you don’t know what you’re looking
for, then you won’t find it,” added Hugh.
Building upon the success of these non-threatening events and environments,
the group held last fall’s popular brunch meetings, which spanned nine
different locations on various weekends in November and early December, including
one in New York City.
Combined with the leads gleaned from the “Got Career?” series
sponsored by the school’s Office of Student-Industry Relations, the
group also helps current students stay true to their voice and vision, said
senior writing graduate Kate Powers. “I
think there’s a perception out there that women have to write in the
same voice and style as men or else we’re going to have a harder time
finding audiences,” Powers said. “That’s not true and being
part of this group enables me to avoid caving in to that temptation.”
Women of Cinematic Arts is also about more than just making movies.
“In other situations, no one talks about topics like having a family
in this business, and we are different from men when it comes to subjects
like that,” said 2003 Stark graduate Jennie Yamaki. “There’s
a reality to being female that needs to be discussed, and it’s easier
to talk to women who are in that situation.”
Tess Ortbals, producer of The Lost Journal of Vice Marceaux and M.F.A. Production
candidate who is in “that hiatus space between intermediate and advanced
student,” agrees. “It’s
hard to think of the bigger picture when you are overwhelmed by the day-to-day
work of graduate school, and this group gives me some great role models,”
she said. “Their answers to my questions have come back and been immensely
helpful. That’s a resource you just can’t put a value on. ”
Despite the focus on women helping women, the group shares a common link with
its male counterparts: In the end, true success comes from an individual’s
talent, drive, and smarts.
“You hear a lot of talk about women in the industry, and what you learn
is the ones who succeed are the ones who are well informed, have the training,
and are anxious to move up,” said B.A. Production graduate Betsy Megel
’03. “If you want success, you can get it. You just have to prove
that you want it more than anyone else and work as hard as anyone else to
achieve it.”
To join the Women of Cinematic Arts, currently moderated by Shackeroff, send
an email to phoebephilms@hotmail.com.