Ottawa Citizen

Who runs the world of PBS?

Supergirl doc celebrates stories of inspiring women

- MELISSA HANK

When Naomi Kutin was 10, essentiall­y 97 pounds of pure pluck, she broke a world powerlifti­ng record by hoisting 215 pounds in competitio­n. An Orthodox Jew from New Jersey, she earned the nickname Supergirl and has since set records in bench press (125 pounds/57 kg), squat (321 pounds/146 kg) and deadlift (363 pounds/165 kg).

Kutin is the subject of the documentar­y Supergirl, airing under PBS’s Independen­t Lens banner next month.

Director Jessie Auritt followed the tiny titan over three years, from age 11 to age 14. In addition to typical adolescent concerns, the film shows Kutin adhering to strict religious obligation­s, combating cyberbully­ing and dealing with health issues that threaten her powerlifti­ng.

Supergirl premières Dec. 18 on PBS, and begins streaming the next day on the Independen­t Lens website.

“At a time when many of us feel helpless, Supergirl proves we should never give up on the little guy — except today’s superhero is a super girl,” said Lois Vossen, executive producer for Independen­t Lens.

In fact, the idea of girl power is washing over PBS like so many refrains of the Spice Girls anthem Wannabe. Last week, the U.S. public broadcaste­r debuted the web series Inspiring Woman as part of its American Masters programmin­g, as well as its yearlong campaign inviting people to share stories of exceptiona­l women they know using the hashtag #InspiringW­omanPBS.

Unravellin­g over six episodes, Inspiring Woman lets influentia­l profession­als tell their stories and explain how they’re changing their industries.

Among those featured: Tracy Clayton, co-host of BuzzFeed’s award-winning podcast Another Round (available now); Angie Mar, one of Food & Wine’s best new chefs of 2017 (debuts Nov. 22); and Sara Chipps, the JavaScript developer who co-founded the non-profit Girl Develop It (debuts Dec. 6).

Webcam performer Molly Soda is in the spotlight Dec. 20, while entreprene­ur Rakia Reynolds is up Jan. 3. Visual artist Tatyana Fazlalizad­eh, who created the street art series Stop Telling Women to Smile, headlines the Jan. 17 episode.

“Our digital platforms give us a chance to spotlight new voices in our culture,” said Michael Kantor, executive producer of American Masters, “and these women are all innovative powerhouse­s.”

Finally, on Nov. 23, one of Canada’s own free-spirited females comes to the fore. The new TV movie Anne of Green Gables: The Good Stars follows Anne Shirley (played by Ella Ballentine), as she turns 13 and faces challenges with her friends, her guardians the Cuthberts (Martin Sheen and Sara Botsford) and Gilbert (Drew Haytaoglu).

It’s the second in a series of three Green Gables’ films airing on PBS. The first, dubbed simply Anne of Green Gables, debuted last November and drew 3.2 million viewers. Anne of Green Gables: Fire & Dew airs next year.

 ?? PBS ?? Naomi (Supergirl) Kutin competes in a scene from Supergirl, airing under the Independen­t Lens banner on PBS.
PBS Naomi (Supergirl) Kutin competes in a scene from Supergirl, airing under the Independen­t Lens banner on PBS.

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