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PRESIDENT & CEO, CREATIVE WOMEN WORKSHOPS
ASSOCIATION PRODUCER, THE WOMEN IN THE DIRECTORÕS CHAIR
WORKSHOP CAROL
WHITEMAN West
Vancouver, BC |
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A two-time Governor GeneralÕs Award-nominee,
winner of the UBCP/ACTRA Sam Payne Award, Women In Film and Television
Vancouver CBC Sharon Gibbon Lifetime Member Spotlight Award and the Women In
Film and Television Toronto Crystal Award, for her work promoting womenÕs
equality in Canada, mentoring and developing new talent, Carol is a
co-creator of The Women In the DirectorÕs Chair (WIDC) Workshop and has
continued to develop and produce the program since its inception in
1996/97. She produces the eight short films (works in progress) shot at
the WIDC workshop each year, facilitates workshop sessions and provides
personal coaching for the director participants in developing their career
plans for after the workshop. Through her role at Creative Women
Workshops, Carol provides program follow-up, coaching and mentorship for
director graduates, maintains a network of actor and crew alumnae, and
publishes the annual WIDC Newsletter which includes a growing alumnae update
section heralding the career progress of the more than 150 women directors
that have attended WIDC. In April 2004 she traveled to the New
Zealand-hosted Women In Film and Television International Summit to deliver a
specially designed WIDC Mentorship Session to a group of international women
filmmakers, and moderate a sold-out Director's Chair panel discussion with
acclaimed writer / director Niki Caro and her
creative team from the feature film WHALE RIDER. The trip netted
additional rewards, including mentors for the WIDC program (iconic New
Zealand filmmaker Gaylene Preston and TV3 Head of
Drama and Comedy Caterina De Nave) and the seeds of
expansion of the WIDC program into the international arena with the awarding
of a coveted WIDC director's chair to one New Zealand women director. From 2007 to 2010, under the auspices of CWWA, Carol
produced the Telefilm Canada Feature It! program, an
Official Languages Program professional development initiative designed to
advance the feature film careers and projects of mid-career Anglophone writers
and producers in Quebec. A graduate of York UniversityÕs Theatre
Performance Honours BFA program, Carol began her
career in the early 1980Õs in Toronto, Canada, acting professionally in local
and regional theatre, television and film productions. After she
migrated to the west coast where she now lives, she was elected to the local
and national councils of ACTRA where she played a key role in the
reunification of the BC and the national bodies of ACTRA. She became an
active advocate for womenÕs issues as chair of ACTRAÕs BC WomenÕs Committee
as well as through her involvement with Women In Film and the Canadian and BC
Federations of Labour. She was the vice-chair
of the National ACTRA WomenÕs Committee from 1996 to 2003, is a member of a
variety of industry organizations, serves on seven industry advisory
committees and is a graduate of the Alliance Atlantis Banff Television
Executive Program. Fall 2011, Carol began her doctorate in Transformational
Change in Education at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver. |
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