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Ramona S. Diaz
Director/Producer
Diaz is an award-winning Filipino American filmmaker whose credits include Spirits Rising, an hour-long documentary about women's role in the 1986 People Power revolution in the Philippines. Spirits Rising received a Student Academy Award, the Ida Lupino Director's Guild of America Award, a Golden Gate Award from the San Francisco International Film Festival, a Gold Apple from the National Educational Media Network and a Certificate of Merit from the International Documentary Association. It has been screened internationally and broadcast on public television stations in the United States and Australia.
Prior to pursuing a career as an independent filmmaker, Diaz was an associate producer for Cadillac Desert, a major PBS documentary series about the quest for water in the American West. She also line produced and edited an award-winning, 24-part television documentary series in the Philippines about the immigrant experiences of Filipinos residing in Europe and America entitled Apple Pie, Patis, Paté, atbp. Diaz has also worked in Los Angeles as a writer's assistant for Mary Tyler Moore Productions and as a producer's assistant for Lorimar Productions. She is a graduate of Emerson College and holds an M.A. in communication from Stanford University.
Ferne Pearlstein
Director of Photography
Pearlstein won the Documentary Cinematography Prize at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival for her work on IMELDA. A graduate of Stanford University’s M.A. film program and the International Center of Photography, she began her career as a photographer before becoming an award-winning director and cinematographer. She was director of production on Ruthie and Connie for HBO (2002 Berlinale); Voice of the Prophet (Sundance, Toronto, Human Rights Watch ‘02); Pleasures of Urban Decay (Sundance 2000), and Secret People (PBS). As a director, her films include Raising Nicholas (Sundance 1993), To Meet the Elephant (PBS), and Dita and the Family Business. Her feature film SUMO EAST AND WEST premiered at the 2003 Tribeca and IFP/LA Film Festivals and was broadcast on Independent Lens. Recently, Pearlstein has shifted her focus from documentary to narrative film as director of photography on the shorts Easter Sunday, starring Jennifer Jason Leigh (Tribeca, 2005), and The Suzy Prophecy, starring Heather Juergensen. She is currently second unit director, director of photography, editor and associate producer on the feature film Land of the Blind, starring Ralph Fiennes and Donald Sutherland.
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Leah Marino
Editor
Marino has worked on documentaries for 12 years. Before editing IMELDA, she worked as an editor for numerous documentaries that have aired on PBS. She is currently editing The Creek Runs Red, a documentary about a town in Oklahoma which was the first superfund site in the United States, and recently completed Dirt, a feature documentary about the bottom class of dirt track racecar drivers at the Devils Bowl Speedway in Mesquite, Texas. In the summer of 2004, Marino edited Light from the East, a documentary film about an American actress’s exploration of events inside the Ukraine as the Soviet Union was collapsing. It premiered at the 2005 SXSW Film Festival. Marino worked for six years at Galan Productions, where she completed Winter Texans, the Emmy award-winning segment of the series The Border. She started her career as an assistant editor on Chicano! History of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement, a four-part series that aired on PBS in 1996.
View film credits >>
Read a Q&A with the director >>
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