Roving Eye
Documentary filmmaker Rachel Grady opens our eyes to the complexities of overlooked places and people
- By Kenneth Turan
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The first documentary Grady saw, at age 12, was Martin Bell's Streetwise, a look at homeless kids in Seattle. "It was like a lightning bolt, I became completely obsessed with that film, I made my mother take me back," she recalls. "It totally made me love documentaries; I was always looking for a film that good."
As a college student at New York University in the early 1990s, Grady considered a career in journalism, but "something was missing, it didn't do it for me," she says. In 1996, she managed to get a job as an associate producer with documentary filmmaker Jonathan Stack, co-director of Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner The Farm: Angola, USA. "He took a huge risk with me," she says. "I had instincts, I had enthusiasm, but I didn't know anything."
Stack also hired Ewing. Five years later, Grady and Ewing went off to start Loki. "Honestly, in documentaries, you are creating something out of the ether that didn't exist before," Grady says. "There was no project, no film, before you, no one was going to create it or give it to you. It's a mysterious thing you molded out of the air."
Kenneth Turan is film critic for the Los Angeles Times. His most recent book is Now in Theaters Everywhere: A Celebration of a Certain Kind of Blockbuster.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (2)
She's is so inspiring.
Posted by Kara on October 2,2008 | 01:36 AM
She is truely amazing!
Posted by Unknown on September 23,2008 | 09:21 PM