The Sheffield Film Cooperative (also known as the Sheffield Women's Film Co-op) were a media co-operative based in Sheffield, England. The group emerged in the early 1970s with a view to highlight particular issues being faced by women at the time but officially formed as the Sheffield Film Co-op (SFC) in 1975. The founding members were Jenny Woodley, Christine Bellamy, Gill Booth and Barbara Fowkes.[1]
Beginnings
editPrior to the formation of SFC, Woodley, Bellamy, Booth and Fowkes had worked on several media outputs of a similar subject matter. In 1971 with support from producer and playwright Dave Sheasby, they produce a six-part series of radio shows called Not a Pretty Face, based the demands of the feminist movement including equal pay, education and job opportunities, free contraception, abortion rights and care for the under 5's.[2][3]
With the birth of Sheffield Cablevision Woodley, Bellamy, Booth and Fowkes decided they had found a platform for their message and produce two programs: the difficulties of moving around the city with a child in a pushchair and the need for childminders to be registered.
Formation of Sheffield Film Co-op
editIt was due to the nature of their next project that the collective of women decided to officially organise themselves as the Sheffield Film Co-op. The group wanted to make a program in defence of abortion at a time where rights we're under threat before parliament.[4] A Woman Like You, docu-drama came out in 1976 [5] and marked the official beginnings of the Sheffield Film Co-op.
Filmography
edit- 1991 - Personal Best / Talking Hairs / Running Gay
- 1990 - Women Can Make It Work
- 1990 - Thankyou That's all I Knew
- 1989 - Diamonds in Brown Paper
- 1987 - Bringing It all Back Home
- 1986 - Let Our Children Grow Tall!
- 1986 - For a Living Wage
- 1984 - Women of Steel
- 1984 - Changing Our Lives - 5 Arches Community Centrey
- 1984 - Red Skirts on Clydeside
- 1982 - A Question of Choice
- 1978 - Jobs for the Girls
- 1977 - That's No Lady
- 1975 - A Woman Like You
References
edit- ^ Aitken, Ian (18 October 2013). Encyclopedia of the Documentary Film 3-Volume Set. Routledge. ISBN 9781135206208.
- ^ Aitken, Ian (18 October 2013). Encyclopedia of the Documentary Film 3-Volume Set. Routledge. ISBN 9781135206208.
- ^ Womensfilmandtelevisionhistory (4 April 2014). "Becoming Sheffield Film Co-op". Women's Film and Television History Network-UK/Ireland. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
- ^ Aitken, Ian (18 October 2013). Encyclopedia of the Documentary Film 3-Volume Set. Routledge. ISBN 9781135206208.
- ^ Womensfilmandtelevisionhistory (11 April 2014). "Sheffield Film Co-op: Beginning, Being and Ending". Women's Film and Television History Network-UK/Ireland. Retrieved 2 July 2016.