Toronto Star

Young female director makes history with debut

22-year-old began writing her first feature film, Blame, while still in high school

- JOHN CARUCCI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK— Overcoming the hurdle of being a female director in Hollywood is tough enough, but trying to do it a few years removed from high school is an even more daunting task.

So it was to be expected that Quinn Shephard — just 22 years old — was filled with nervous energy as she prepared to screen her feature film debut, Blame, at a major film festival premiere amid cameras, lights and celebritie­s recently.

“It’s like when you’re going up on a roller-coaster, and you chose to be on it,” Shephard said last week.

“You’re excited that you’re on it, but you’re also terrified. That’s kind of how I feel.”

Shephard’s journey to the Tribeca Film Festival — where she became the youngest female director to debut a feature film, according to organizers — was untraditio­nal. She started writing the film when she was15, put college on hold to work on her movie and used money set aside for college to fund her film. Even casting one of her main stars, Chris Messina, took a circuitous route. She wanted Messina to star in Blame but only had his wife’s email.

“I had it from a friend of a friend of a friend. He got my letter and he called me in three days. The rest is history,” Shephard said.

Shephard stars in her own film as an outcast in high school, named Abigail, who escapes by immersing herself in literature. She is cast by the school’s new drama teacher, played by Messina, in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible; the two become intimate, mirroring Miller’s play on the Salem witch hunts.

“The character is very personal, because I also used to latch on to characters from literature . . . as a way to get through going to a small suburban school where I didn’t feel like I fit in, and I didn’t feel like I was on the same page as everyone else,” she said.

“I felt like I was in a different world. I always wanted to escape that, and literature was a big way that I was able to do that. In turn, my film became my ultimate way of channellin­g my energy into doing something better.”

Shephard feels that it’s important to tell women’s stories right now, and she’s grateful she gets the chance to do it right.

“As an actor, I read a lot of the scripts that are written for young women, and I can attest firsthand that we need better films being written about teenage girls. I think that young women are so incredibly complex, and important, and I think that my film pokes fun at a lot of the stereotype­s, and we turn them on their head,” Shephard. “I strive to bring honesty to these characters.”

While Blame debuted to positive reviews, Shephard had supporters, including Tribeca Film Festival cofounder Jane Rosenthal. She says the intent of the festival has always been about discovery, and younger filmmakers are a big part of the equation.

Oscar-winner Reese Witherspoo­n, who most recently produced the HBO series Big Little Lies, also praised Shephard’s effort.

“It’s so wonderful that film festivals support female directors, because our number actually statistica­lly went down this year, the number of female directors. So we have to have women telling their stories, and we have to encourage them when they are young enough to write their stories and understand that this industry is open to them,” Witherspoo­n said.

 ??  ?? Quinn Shephard put college aside to work on her new film.
Quinn Shephard put college aside to work on her new film.

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