Los Angeles Times

A freedom fighter

Alma Har’el is an agent of change for women in entertainm­ent

- BY STACY PERMAN

Framed by her lion’s mane of f lame-colored hair, Alma Har’el is a study in quiet intensity. Sitting in a glass-walled conference room at the NeueHouse, a stylish co-working space in Hollywood, Har’el is the center of gravity as a small group of people and a larger whirl of activity orbit around her.

In less than a decade, the Israeli-born filmmaker has notched an impressive list of breakthrou­ghs. Her film “Bombay Beach” won feature documentar­y at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival. Three years ago, she became the first woman to direct a Stella Artois ad. Last year, her spot for Coca-Cola made her one of a handful of women to lens a Super Bowl ad.

“Thank You, Mom,” Procter & Gamble’s long-running campaign that aired during the 2018 Winter Olympics, earned Har’el a solo DGA nomination in the commercial category — making her just the second woman to earn this distinctio­n. In January, she won a special jury award at Sundance for her first narrative film, “Honey Boy.” Amazon acquired the semi-autobiogra­phical, coming-of-age tale written by and starring Shia LaBeouf; it’s scheduled for release this fall.

But at the moment, Har’el focuses on a different kind of story: that of women and other marginaliz­ed creatives. Flipping through a presentati­on, she stops to spotlight the data displayed on a single slide: 4% of the directors across 1,200 films are female. “The numbers get worse, the more intersecti­onal you go,” she proclaims. “So this is what we’re up against.”

For Har’el, who built her career by con

stantly knocking on closed doors and then knocking them down, this is more than just a plaintive battle cry. She has a plan.

Har’el is the driving force behind the groundbrea­king Free the Bid, a nonprofit venture started in 2016 that successful­ly pushed the world’s biggest ad agencies to hire more female directors. It did so by having them commit to include at least one woman in every three directors invited to pitch a campaign — known in the business as the triple-bid process. In exchange for taking the pledge, the agencies and brands gained access to a searchable database of female directors.

At launch, Free the Bid had 70 filmmakers in the database, today it has more than 1,200. Initially, 21 agencies and four brands signed on, among them Coke and HP. Currently, 160 global agencies and some 180 brands have taken the pledge. Two large ad agencies, BBDO and CP+B, have since registered a 400% increase in jobs to women. Once HP became a signatory, 59% of the 53 commercial­s it has produced were directed by a woman; a more than impressive statistic if you consider that’s a jump up from zero. (There are no independen­t surveys measuring the number of working female directors in advertisin­g.)

Having cracked open advertisin­g’s calcified male dominance, Har’el now has her sights on the larger entertainm­ent industry. This week at the Cannes Lions, advertisin­g’s Oscars, Har’el is unveiling Free the Work, which she calls “a global network for women and underrepre­sented creators and the people who hire them.” The new venture already has buy-in with TV studios, streaming platforms and brands; Free the Work is announcing partnershi­ps with Amazon Studios, P&G, Facebook and AT&T.

“I think we have had enough discussion about the problem,” Har’el said last month. “What we really need is to move into solutions. So that’s what we’re trying to do.”

A consummate outsider, Har’el, who grew up in a small town south of Tel Aviv, is an unconventi­onal choice to shake up the establishm­ent from the inside.

“You know, I was the person that was reading Naomi Klein’s ‘No Logo’ and going into the desert and taking psychedeli­c drugs,” she says. “So I wasn’t exactly like the corporate guru of my time. But I really found out that there is a need to understand the structures that are keeping us out and that we have to get in there and make them see that they’re losing when we’re not inside.”

But first, Har’el had to find her way in.

Her childhood was emotionall­y fraught, with parents who were always on the edge of divorce. But she says it taught her about the complexiti­es of love and pain. Their frequent splits left her alcoholic father without a permanent home. As a result, Har’el, who turns 41 next month, often met him at the cinema. “We would go to see movies, and that’s really how I got my love for film.”

Har’el says she always gravitated toward being a director, but without the money to go to film school, she had to find an alternativ­e path. Initially, she worked as a model and TV presenter, eventually negotiatin­g her way behind the camera producing club videos.

The breakthrou­gh

Twelve years ago, she came to the U.S. with her now ex-husband Boaz Yakin, a screenwrit­er (“Now You See Me”) and director (“Remember the Titans”). While browsing the bins at Amoeba Music in Hollywood, Har’el discovered a CD of the indie band Beirut.

“I felt destined to do their music video,” she says. After sending the band an email, they agreed. That led to her signing with Partizan Entertainm­ent. “It just seemed like the biggest dream in the world back then.”

In short order, Har’el gained a following for stunning videos with a mix of reality, fantasy and emotion. In 2012, Har’el directed an eightminut­e video for Icelandic band Sigur Rós. The video “Fjögur Píanó” portrayed a couple navigating an addictiona­nd abuse-fueled relationsh­ip. Filmmaker magazine called it “provocativ­e and dramatical­ly compelling.” The video starred LaBeouf and was the start of Har’el’s creative collaborat­ion and friendship with the sometimes troubled actor. While in rehab a few years ago, he sent her a draft of his script for “Honey Boy.” “I send everything I make to her,” says LaBeouf in an email. “She said it was a movie that she wanted to make. Her way of making a film is a lot like the process of exposure work. It’s gestalt therapy.” Har’el found herself immediatel­y drawn to the material. “It definitely just felt like the most urgent thing I had to do,” she says.

Har’el speaks passionate­ly and thoughtful­ly about the complexiti­es and challenges of diversity, inclusivit­y and opportunit­y, having experience­d them firsthand.

Despite earning global critical acclaim and awards, Har’el was unable to advance into bigger-budget music videos, step up into commercial­s or film her own vision in documentar­ies and features.

“I kept getting written about, but I kept getting the same small budgets, and I saw all my male peers getting bigger and bigger artists and bigger and bigger offers and breaking into commercial­s,” she says. “At a certain point, it hits you; you literally have to be an entreprene­ur to create change.”

Har’el bought a $650 camera at Best Buy and then spent six months filming “Bombay Beach.” It is a visual portrait of three people living on the edge, geographic­ally and on society’s fringes, that was hailed for its genre-redefining work. Still, the needle barely moved.

The turning point came when she was awarded the Stella Artois ad in 2016. The spot happened to be written by a woman, Sasha Markov, then the creative director of the agency Mother. It paid homage to the founder’s widow, Isabella Artois, who saved the Belgian brewery from going under. Markov recalls that Har’el had the best treatment.

But the advertisin­g industry was like a fun-house mirror reflecting the vision of the entire world through the gaze of men.

“It was so fresh and original and had so much feeling in it,” Markov says of Har’el’s ad. But she notes that the big trophy commercial­s for beer and cars went to men. “I was trying to get a female director within a male world. It’s crazy we made it happen.”

The idea for Free the Bid initially took shape over a series of conversati­ons between Har’el and PJ Pereira, chief creative officer and co-founder of San Francisco-based boutique agency Pereira & O’Dell.

The pair first worked together in 2012 when Har’el shot the Airbnb campaign “Views” for the agency. “The work Alma did was more delicate and caring than any man would do,” Pereira says.

“We have conference­s about diversity in leadership, that it’s too male-driven,” he adds, “but I’d never thought about how it impacted our choices for directors.”

Pereira told Har’el that going forward, his agency would make sure to have women attached to bids. But Har’el knew that if you were going to make systemic change, you had to change the system, not just a single agency’s practices. When Pereira suggested they initiate a fourth, exclusivel­y female bid, Har’el balked; she wanted to give women a shot at the process, not Balkanize it. “If we’re doing that,” she told him, “it should be one of the three bids.”

Stripping the industry of the excuse that there just weren’t enough talented women, Free the Bid caught on quickly. “It was like almost people were waiting for somebody to come and say here’s something we can do,” she said

“Sometimes the best ideas are the most simple and obvious,” said Lora Schulson, the New York-based director of production at the agency 72andSunny. “It’s funny, when we first started talking to Free the Bid, our gut reaction was we work with the best people. Then we took a step back to look at the numbers and realized we had a problem here and we need to change our behavior. If we signed on it will push us and hold us accountabl­e to make change.”

Supply and demand

As Free the Bid’s database swelled, so did demand. It expanded to include photograph­ers, colorists and editors. When Free the Bid was among last year’s 18 grantees awarded a piece of the $20 million that CBS earmarked to women’s groups from former CBS Chairman Les Moonves’ severance package, Har’el decided she could broaden the scope beyond the advertisin­g industry and launch Free the Work.

Another CBS grantee, Time’s Up, has announced a mentoring initiative to create more opportunit­ies for women and underrepre­sented individual­s to enter the entertainm­ent business. But the crux of Free the Work is that the talent already exists.

Marc Pritchard, P&G’s chief brand officer, was one of the early signatorie­s to Free the Bid and is similarly committed to this latest iteration. “There’s been a lot of discussion about equality,but it’s been just that — discussion,” he says. Free the Work is a “practical action to cause people to focus on making equality behind the camera happen.”

Har’el calls it a “holistic talent discovery service for women and underrepre­sented creators,” and a resource for “change agents.” Free the Work’s Cannes debut will be accompanie­d by an advert filmed by up-and-coming director Amber Grace Johnson. It’s a clever riff on how Mozart’s equally talented sister Maria Anna went unnoticed over time.

Like Free the Bid, this iteration has a searchable database, but one that allows for customized searches. For instance, users can look for a production style, geographic location and even language skills. There will be social networking and educationa­l capabiliti­es to build a talent pipeline as well as tracking tools.

“There’s a lot of people and organizati­ons working towards diversity,” Har’el says, “but they can’t quantify the change they are making.”

Another feature is “personaliz­ed discovery,” showcasing tastemaker­s and their playlists of underrepre­sented talent as curated by influentia­l industry players, which would look like: Jordan Peele’s five favorite horror shorts or Gal Gadot’s favorite emerging talent from the Middle East.

Jill Soloway, the creator of “Transparen­t,” who founded 50/50 by 2020, an intersecti­onal initiative of Time’s Up, has signed on as one of Free the Work’s tastemaker­s. She calls Free the Work “a great first step,” adding that in Har’el she has found a kindred spirit.

Har’el is cognizant that this is a moment in time, and she’s seizing it. “The thing that’s interestin­g about history is that you can have that moment a hundred times,” she says. “So even when you do accomplish something, it’s not going to stop. … The question is, who are our allies and what kind of weapons do we have?”

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? FILMMAKER Alma Har’el has helped create a system to make it easier for prospectiv­e employers to hire women in entertainm­ent.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times FILMMAKER Alma Har’el has helped create a system to make it easier for prospectiv­e employers to hire women in entertainm­ent.
 ?? Byron Bowers ?? ALMA HAR’EL on the set of a Coca-Cola ad she directed for a coveted spot during the 2018 Super Bowl, a real coup for a female director.
Byron Bowers ALMA HAR’EL on the set of a Coca-Cola ad she directed for a coveted spot during the 2018 Super Bowl, a real coup for a female director.
 ?? Natasha Braier Sundance Institute ?? HER FIRST narrative film, “Honey Boy,” won a special jury prize at Sundance; it’s set for release this fall.
Natasha Braier Sundance Institute HER FIRST narrative film, “Honey Boy,” won a special jury prize at Sundance; it’s set for release this fall.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States