Times Colonist

Documentar­ies turn to celebrity producers for star power, guidance

- ALEX NINO GHECIU

When Priyanka Chopra Jonas announced she was joining the production team of Barry Avrich’s new documentar­y

Born Hungry in early April, it instantly boosted the Canadian film’s internatio­nal profile.

“The news out of India blew up immediatel­y when she was attached to it,” says Avrich, whose film follows Sash Simpson’s journey from a street kid in India to one of Canada’s top chefs.

The Toronto director says that while Chopra Jonas played a more active role in the film’s creative process than “just sticking her name on it,” he hopes her involvemen­t helps the project resonate globally, which is vital in today’s competitiv­e documentar­y landscape.

“As a documentar­y filmmaker in Canada, you have to think about your projects in terms of having a global reach. Created by Canadians, yes, but you have to think about documentar­ies that will resonate in Canada and outside of Canada if you’re going to stand a chance.”

Chopra Jonas is among several celebritie­s listed as producers on films screening at Toronto’s Hot Docs Festival this week, including Elliot Page, who’s an executive producer on Any Other Way: The Jackie Shane Story, and Jennifer Lawrence, who’s an executive producer on AppleTV Plus’s Bread & Roses, about Afghan women. They join an ever-growing list of celebs attaching themselves to documentar­ies and indie films to catapult a project to a larger audience.

What the credit means can vary widely — while some actors offer guidance during the production process, others may use their star power to help a film get financing and exposure.

Whatever the case, attaching a celebrity producer to a project has become the new normal in the economy of smaller budget films, says Charles Tepperman, a media and film professor at the University of Calgary.

“The [celeb producer] credit allows an indie film to get made with an A-list star without that A-list star price. And that’s really important for indie films because it’s harder and harder to get movies financed in the smallto mid-range indie film budget these days,” he says.

“It’s not a kind of film production that Hollywood is really interested in making. They’re much more interested in making franchise films, so the executive producer credit becomes a way that passion projects and important projects get made and that stars can use their name to lend some credibilit­y to them.”

The co-directors of Any Other Way: The Jackie Shane Story say Page joined their doc as they were looking for help pitching it to distributo­rs and making an early sale.

“We talk about things like influencer marketing, but really it’s been around forever. It’s been celebrity endorsemen­t,” says Lucah Rosenberg-Lee.

“I think that the fact that celebs are understand­ing their personal brand as a way to get stories out there is really powerful, because we do listen to people and we do follow their leadership.”

The executive producer credit is a chance for A-listers to support projects they believe in. Michael Mabbott says the film, about one of music’s first Black transgende­r performers, had personal significan­ce to Page.

“As filmmakers, we can only do so much, and I think part of why Elliot was attracted to this is because he knows that he can amplify this even further,” he says.

Avrich says he’s seen celebritie­s join films as producers long after a film was made, but Chopra Jonas and her production company Purple Pebble Pictures were hands-on with Born Hungry, offering input on editing and storytelli­ng.

“I don’t think I would ever get involved now or in future documentar­ies with somebody that just wants to be attached to the film in what we would call a vanity credit,” he says, adding that the actress — who joined Oscarnomin­ated Canadian doc To Kill a Tiger this year — said the film’s message resonated with her.

“Yes, it can be positive for distributi­on and sales, but I’d rather get their perspectiv­e on how I’m telling the story.”

Come awards season, latching big names to projects can become its own kind of arms race. Montreal director Vincent René-Lortie, whose debut film Invincible was up for best liveaction short at the Oscars, says he felt pressure to secure celebrity endorsemen­t as other films in the category recruited famous executive producers.

“Eventually, we felt like, ‘OK, if we want to be able to keep up with the other films, we might have to find someone,’ ” he says.

René-Lortie turned to Riverdale actress Lili Reinhart “because she speaks a lot about mental health and our film deals with that.”

He says Reinhart posted about the film on social media and co-hosted a Q-and-A with him at an L.A. screening.

Meanwhile, Neve Campbell played an especially active role as executive producer of Swan Song, a profile of National Ballet of Canada artistic director Karen Kain, says the doc’s B.C. director.

Chelsea McMullan says the actress — who has a ballet background — attended shoots, provided detailed notes and made media appearance­s on behalf of the film, which premiered at last year’s Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival.

McMullan says Campbell’s involvemen­t gave the film an invaluable edge.

“It’s a competitiv­e market, so you do anything you can do to help your film get seen. Attaching a celebrity is one of those ways, especially if they really care about the subject matter and can speak to it,” McMullan said earlier this year at the Toronto Film Critics Associatio­n Awards, where Swan Song won the $50,000 documentar­y prize.

“How lucky to have someone to advocate for you and make your film stand out in a sea of content.”

 ?? CP ?? Priyanka Chopra Jonas arrives at a Los Angeles fan screening of Citadel, April 25, 2023, at The Culver Theater in Culver City, California.
CP Priyanka Chopra Jonas arrives at a Los Angeles fan screening of Citadel, April 25, 2023, at The Culver Theater in Culver City, California.

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