Jeff L. Lieberman is a film director, screenwriter and producer of both narrative and documentary films. He is the founder of Re-Emerging Films and the filmmaker of Bella!, The Amazing Nina Simone, Re-Emerging: The Jews of Nigeria.[1] Bella! was a joint winner of the 2022 Library of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize for Film.[2]

Jeff L. Lieberman
Born (1978-03-30) March 30, 1978 (age 46)
NationalityAmerican & Canadian
Alma materRyerson University
UCLA
Prince of Wales Secondary School
OccupationFilmmaker
Notable workThe Amazing Nina Simone
Websitewww.re-emergingfilms.com

Early life

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Lieberman was born in Vancouver, British Columbia and is a graduate of The Mini School at Prince of Wales Secondary School,[3] Ryerson University’s RTA School of Media, and UCLA's Professional Program in Producing.[4] Lieberman’s first training in tv/film was through Vancouver’s community access TV program, The Complaint Department, which he helped produce for several years while in high school. He also received theatrical training during a summer at Stagedoor Manor in New York's Catskill Mountains.[citation needed]

Journalism

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While in college, Lieberman interned at Business News Network, The Mike Bullard Show, Pearson Television in London, and at KGTV, the ABC Affiliate in San Diego, California. An internship with CNN brought Lieberman to the network's New York Bureau, working directly with Maria Hinojosa and Rose Arce, where during the last month of 1999, they covered stories on the impending Y2K technical glitch, the changing demographics of America in the year 2000, and the events surrounding the trials of four NYPD officers charged in the murder of Amadou Diallo.[5]

Lieberman went on to write, produce and edit news stories at CBS News and The New York Post, where he covered events all over New York and Washington, DC, including the Obama inauguration, The Times Square terrorist attack, New York’s Fashion Week and the 10-year anniversary of the September 11 attacks. Speaking to LGBT Weekly, he told them: "I’m a journalist at heart and hope that my films invite people to consider situations in different ways and provoke them into action."[1][dead link]

Film and television career

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From 2002–2008, Lieberman was the Senior Producer of Hurwitz Creative, producing behind-the-scenes documentaries on the making of films, including Ratatouille, The Incredibles, The Chronicles of Narnia, Charlie and The Chocolate Factory, Troy, I, Robot, and The Bucket List.[citation needed] Lieberman interviewed actors, directors, producers and crafts people, producing programs that aired on HBO, Fox, Starz, Discovery Channel, and the DVDs of films from Warner Bros, Disney, 20th Century Fox, Sony Pictures and Lionsgate.[5] In 2022, Lieberman joined CNN as a Senior Producer in the new documentary unit created for the short-lived CNN+. During that period, Lieberman led a team in the creation of a documentary film on the proliferation of copyright lawsuits in the music industry.[citation needed] Taking on Taylor Swift had a 2022 primetime broadcast on CNN and received a 2023 Emmy nomination.[6]

For his first independent feature, Lieberman wrote, directed, produced, filmed and edited the 2013 documentary, Re-Emerging: The Jews of Nigeria. Lieberman journeyed around Nigeria, operating as a one-man crew, meeting Jewish communities throughout Nigeria. The film centers around one young Igbo man named Shmuel, and his quest to find "the true Judaism." The film debuted in 2013, opening at New York's Quad Cinema and in LA at Laemmle Theatres. It was also shown at film festivals in Washington DC, Boston, Toronto, Vancouver, Israel and Switzerland.[citation needed]

Lieberman established Re-Emerging Films in 2007, at the outset of his first documentary feature. Lieberman named his company after his first feature: Re-Emerging: The Jews of Nigeria. Through Re-Emerging Films, Lieberman produced three feature documentaries, two TV pilots (Beauty Queens, Mario The Magician) and hours of content for Disney, Coca-Cola,[7] Wine Enthusiast Magazine, Elsevier, Marlo Thomas and Showtime’s Homeland. Lieberman also co-produced the pro-Obama election video, "Call Your Zeyde".[citation needed]

Lieberman has said that he is a longtime fan of Nina Simone,[8] discovering her music while in high-school. In 2012, Lieberman visited Simone's hometown of Tryon, North Carolina to research the musician. He met many of the men and women that grew up with Simone (then named Eunice Waymon), and began the journey to reconstruct the story of the often misunderstood singer, songwriter and civil rights activist. Lieberman interviewed over 50 of Simone's friends, family, band members, lovers, and fellow activists, including Nikki Giovanni, Eric Burdon of The Animals, Chuck Stewart, Billy Vera, Horace Ott, Lester Hyman, Tom Schnabel, Roscoe Dellums, Marie-Christine Dunham Pratt and Sam Waymon, Nina's brother and longtime band member. The film debuted in cinemas in October 2015 and has since played over 100 theatres in 10 countries, being described by The Hollywood Reporter as "frequently dry but comes packed with performance footage",[9]

In March 2015, Lieberman weighed in on the casting of Zoe Saldana as Nina Simone for the separate bio-film, Nina. In a guest column in The Hollywood Reporter, Lieberman stated that he found the script and trailer of the film to offer an "ugly and inaccurate portrayal."[10] Lieberman stated that the sensationalized script was one of the reasons he made his documentary film, in order to counter the dramatic liberties used in the telling of Simone's story in other films. The article was also re-published in People Magazine, The Huffington Post,[11] The Root,[12] BET,[13] and Complex.[14]

In 2016, Lieberman announced the completion of his first feature screenplay, entitled My Harlem,[1] written in response to an anti-gay Harlem church.[15] Lieberman launched a crowd-funding campaign for the project.[16][17] Lieberman says he also wrote the film because "I am a gay man who hardly ever sees my life and dreams on film. I want to see a beautiful, romantic love story between two men that is based in reality with the challenges of dating and relationships but without the pitfalls of dramatic gay tragedy."[1]

Lieberman's 2023 film, Bella!, chronicled the political career of Congresswoman Bella Abzug, with The New York Times calling it a film that "illustrates the merciless challenges of electoral endurance even for the fiercest fighter."[18] The film opened in theatres in August 2023 and continued to tour throughout 2024. Bella! was nominated for Best Documentary Screenplay at The 76th Writers Guild of America Awards,[19] and was selected as joint winner of The Library of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize for Film at an awards ceremony at The Library of Congress in October 2022. The award is a finishing grant designed to help filmmakers with completion funding.[2]

Filmography

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Year Film Role Genre Awards
2007 Akeelah and The Bee DVD Documentary Director, Writer & Producer Documentary Short 2007 Telly Award
2015 The Amazing Nina Simone Director, Writer & Producer Feature Documentary Black Reel Awards for Outstanding Documentary (Nomination)
Audience Choice Award - 2016 Tryon International Film Festival
2022 Taking on Taylor Swift (CNN) Senior Producer Television Documentary 2023 Emmy Award Nominee
2023 Bella! Director, Writer & Producer Feature Documentary 2024 Writers Guild Awards Nominee - Best Documentary Screenplay

The Library of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize for Film

TBD My Harlem Director, Writer & Producer Narrative Feature Film

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Hoff, Victor (November 10, 2016). "My Harlem". LGBT Weekly.
  2. ^ a b Grobar, Matt (October 8, 2022). "'Bella!' And 'Philly On Fire' Become First Docs To Tie For Library Of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize". Deadline.
  3. ^ Derdeyn, Stuart (June 12, 2016). "Vancouver director Jeff Lieberman tells the 'amazing' story of Nina Simone". The Vancouver Sun.
  4. ^ "Professional Programs Alumni Producers and Directors". UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television.
  5. ^ a b Lipps, Jessica (April 1, 2016). Interview: Jeff L. Lieberman, Director of The Amazing Nina Simone (audio). New York: Lipps on Life.
  6. ^ "44 News & Doc Emmys" (PDF). National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Archived from the original on August 7, 2024. Retrieved February 24, 2024.
  7. ^ Lieberman, Jeff L. (Director) (January 6, 2012). COCA-COLA Tour Adelante FEATURETTE-desktop.mov (video). Los Angeles: Coca-Cola.
  8. ^ Wishna, Victor (July 26, 2015). "Nina Simone, misunderstood no more". Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
  9. ^ DeFore, John (October 15, 2015). "'The Amazing Nina Simone': Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter.
  10. ^ Lieberman, Jeff L. (March 18, 2016). "Director of Nina Simone Documentary Calls Zoe Saldana Film an "Ugly and Inaccurate Portrayal" (Guest Column)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  11. ^ Williams, Brennan (March 22, 2016). "Director Of 'The Amazing Nina Simone' Doc Slams Forthcoming Biopic". The Huffington Post.
  12. ^ Callahan, Yesha (March 21, 2016). "Director of Nina Simone Documentary Says Zoe Saldana Film Is 'Ugly and Inaccurate'". The Root.
  13. ^ Cummings, Moriba (March 19, 2016). "Director of Nina Simone Documentary Calls Biopic 'Ugly and Inaccurate'". BET.
  14. ^ Landsbaum, Claire (March 19, 2016). "Director of Nina Simone Documentary Calls Zoe Saldana Film "Ugly and Inaccurate"". Complex.
  15. ^ Yohannes, Alamin (September 13, 2016). "Filmmaker Takes a Stand Against Anti-Gay Harlem Church". NBC News.
  16. ^ Isaac, Tim (September 11, 2016). "Gay Film Set Around Harlem Hate Church Needs Your Help". Big Gay Picture Show.
  17. ^ Duffy, Nick (September 16, 2016). "Filmmaker sets gay love story outside real-life 'stone the gays' church". Pink News.
  18. ^ Rapold, Nicolas (August 17, 2023). "'Bella!' Review: Taking the Fight to the Streets and the House". The New York Times.
  19. ^ Schneider, Michael (February 24, 2024). "WGA Nominations: 'Oppenheimer', 'Barbie', 'The Bear', 'Succession' Among 2024 Nods". Variety.
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