Big Sky Documentary Film Festival has selected our sponsored film My Country No More as one of ten films to premiere at the festival this year!
Congratulations to the team!
Schedule and details can be found on the Big Sky website.
Big Sky Documentary Film Festival has selected our sponsored film My Country No More as one of ten films to premiere at the festival this year!
Congratulations to the team!
Schedule and details can be found on the Big Sky website.
Four Documentaries Awarded Winter 2017 Grants from The Rogovy Foundation
We are pleased to announce the Miller / Packan Documentary Film Fund Winter 2017 award winners. The Fund awards grants totaling $150,000 to between six and ten film projects annually through Summer and Winter open calls.
The Fund’s four selections represent a cross section of interests that the Foundation supports. The award winners for this Winter period are:
That’s How we Roll — The fading American dream of home ownership meets the changing American stereotype of “trailer-trash” mobile home parks. Set against the backdrop of the nation’s growing affordable housing crisis, and the conglomeration of park ownership, the film explores the last frontier in housing. Director: Sara Terry.
26.2 to Life: The San Quentin Prison Marathon — A year in the life of San Quentin’s 1000 Mile Club, a prison running group whose incarcerated members train for a 105 lap race around a dirt and concrete path that loops the prison’s crowded lower yard. As the men prepare, they confront the challenges of aging, getting an education and maintaining family relationships behind bars. Director: Christine Yoo.
Exposure — A team of 12 women from the Western and Arab world make a bid to reach the North Pole. This daring and unprecedented team navigates ice fissures, polar bears, and -40 degree temperatures in an extraordinary story of resilience, survival and global citizenry. Director: Holly Morris. http://www.powderkeg-studios.com/
Against Goliath — The inspiring, uplifting story of a co-ed public high school debate team who strive together, not only to win, but also to become better informed, committed and collaborative global citizens. Director: Lucia Small. https://www.smallangstfilms.com/against-goliath/
During the Winter open call, over 200 documentary film projects were submitted to the Miller / Packan Film Fund. “We continue to be impressed by the diversity of topics that find a voice within a feature-length documentary.,” says Hugh Rogovy, Foundation Founder. “Documentaries continue to be a highly effective medium for informing the public,” added Asher Rogovy, Foundation Vice-President, “They influence us both emotionally and intellectually.”
Applications are now being accepted for the Summer 2018 open call, which ends May 15th.
Don’t miss The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin !
The Rogovy Foundation supported film is now available to stream on PBS until January 15th!
The colorful story of writer Armistead Maupin, whose Tales of the City series inspired millions to claim their own truth.
Four Documentaries Awarded Summer 2017 Grants from The Rogovy Foundation
We are pleased to announce the Miller / Packan Documentary Film Fund Summer 2017 award winners. The Fund awards grants totaling $150,000 to between six and ten film projects annually through Summer and Winter open calls.
The Fund’s four selections represent a cross section of interests that the Foundation supports. The award winners for this Summer period are:
Unzipped — A provocative feature documentary about the growing economic and political divide, and a search for the remarkable people who are re-defining a new American Dream. Director: Colin Keith Gray. www.unzippedmovie.com
Appellations — Continents apart from one another, two farming families aim to reinvent themselves on their land. One family—an elegant French matriarch and the son she raised among her vines—tends a centuries-old, biodynamic vineyard in the Southern Rhône. Across the ocean in Humboldt, California, another family carefully manage a state-recognized, organic cannabis farm. Director: Rebecca Richman Cohen.
Going Big Time — The untold story of Rutgers University’s quarter-century quest for sports glory, and the small band of resisters who challenged the establishment for control of the school’s future, transforming it from a small colonial college into a global sports brand. The film examines the world of American higher education and the struggle to balance academics and athletics. Director: Robert Andersen. www.robertandersenfilm.com/rutgers-doc/
Fiddlin’ — From their front porches in the Appalachian Mountains, talented musicians and captivating storytellers share a fierce determination to keep Old Time and Bluegrass music alive. Passing this uplifting music from one generation to the next, fiddlers and pickers, young and old, gather for frequent jam sessions without a cell phone in sight. Director: Julie Simone.
During the Summer open call, over 300 documentary film projects were submitted to the Miller / Packan Film Fund. “We’re quite excited by each of the selected film’s topics,” says Hugh Rogovy, Foundation Founder. “There’s a good deal of breadth,” added Asher Rogovy, Foundation Vice-President, “and we believe these films will have wide appeal.”
Applications are now being accepted for the Winter 2018 open call, which ends November 15th.
To bolster the commitment to one of our key programs of interest, Civics, The Rogovy Foundation’s Frontier Fund has chosen to distribute $50,000 among several non-profit organizations which strengthen public knowledge and transparency.
The Rogovy Foundation places great value on the “Fourth Estate,” and supports journalism’s essential role in a functioning democracy. Below are the organizations receiving grants.
Project Specific Funding:
General Operating Funding:
We’re very pleased to support these hard-working organizations during this important period.
Congratulations to one of our 2017 Winter Award Winners: The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin!
The film will be premiering at this year’s SXSW Film Festival in March!
Schedule and details can be found on the SXFW website.
Four Documentaries Awarded Winter 2016 Grants from The Rogovy Foundation.
The Rogovy Foundation is pleased to announce the Miller / Packan Documentary Film Fund Winter 2016 award winners. The Fund awards grants totaling $150,000 to between six and ten film projects annually through its Summer and Winter open calls.
The Fund’s four selections represent a cross section of interests that the Foundation supports. The award winners for this Winter period are:
The Quiet Zone — In the radio-silent town of Green Bank, West Virginia — the only town in America with no cell phones or WiFi — astronomers search for life beyond our planet as local residents struggle to live, love, grow up, relocate and evolve on earth. Director: Katie Dellamaggiore.
The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin — Interviews and stories follow the renowned author’s journey from intolerant conservative to beloved writer known for his outrageous wit and open heart. Director: Jennifer Kroot. www.documentary.org/film/untold-tales-armistead-maupin
The Guardians — An investigative documentary that examines the complicated history of court- appointed guardians in Nevada. Director: Billie Mintz.
In the Closed Room — Each year several American suspects confess to a crime they did not commit. Experts say that trained interrogators can get anybody to confess to anything. Defense lawyer Jane is determined to make this insanity stop. Director: Katrine Philp. www.goodcompanypictures.com/in-the-closed-room
During the Winter open call, nearly 200 documentary film projects were submitted to the Miller / Packan Film Fund. “We’re moved by the quantity, quality and scope of the projects submitted,” says Hugh Rogovy, Foundation Founder. “There’s an army of non-fiction filmmakers out there,” added Asher Rogovy, Foundation Vice-President, “working tirelessly to make a difference.”
Applications are now being accepted for the Summer 2017 open call, which ends May 15th.
Congratulations to the seven Gucci Tribeca Documentary Fund award winners. We are particularly pleased to see My Country, No More directed and produced by Rita Baghdadi and Jeremiah Hammerling, and supported by the Rogovy Foundation, as one of the winners!
In the past the Gucci Tribeca Documentary Fund awarded grants to a larger number of documentaries, but this year curbed the final tally in an effort to allocate more funds to each project. Over the last nine years, the Fund has supported 73 films and handed out $1.15 million in grants.
In the second year that the AOL Charitable Foundation joins the Gucci Tribeca Fund, those awards go to three out of the seven projects whose documentaries illuminate the lives of women and youth around the globe…
In March 2016, The Rogovy Foundation partnered with the international development charity SolarAid to reach over 38,000 people with life-changing solar lights in the Western and Rift Valley provinces of Kenya.
SolarAid enables access to clean and affordable energy through its social enterprise, SunnyMoney, which seeks to create trust and demand for solar lights in rural Africa through its ‘trade-not-aid’ model.
93% of the rural population in Kenya does not have access to electricity. Most families resort to using the toxic kerosene lamp to light their homes at night. Kerosene only serves to imperil health, impair education, waste household income and emit astonishingly high amounts of carbon.
A small affordable solar light changes everything. Each solar light means a child studies one hour extra each evening. Parents can use the significant savings each year on better food, education or farming inputs. Health improves and life gets better.
“[Since the solar light] my lifestyle has changed, my kids eat well, study well and we are a happy family now.” -Dickson Murumbi in Kenya
The Rogovy Foundation has provided a grant to SolarAid to distribute 7,800 solar lights to empower thousands of families to escape the grinding cycle of poverty.
Over the conservatively estimated three year lifespan of the solar lights, the impact of this partnership will be:
• $2,76 million saved collectively by families to spend on food, schooling and to invest in their futures.
• 7.96 million extra study hours for children to improve their education.
• 11,721 tons of carbon dioxide and carbon dioxide equivalent emissions averted.
• 28,388 people experiencing better health because they are using a clean and renewable energy source.
More information available on their website and Facebook Page.
The Rogovy Foundation Announces Summer Awards to Five Documentary Filmmakers
(New York, NY). The Rogovy Foundation is pleased to announce the Miller / Packan Documentary Film Fund Summer award winners. The Fund awards grants totaling $150,000 to between six and ten film projects annually. The Summer open call ended May 15th, 2016, and the Winter open call ends November 15th, 2016.
The Fund’s five selections represent a cross section of interests that the Foundation supports. The Summer 2016 Winners are:
Night School — Three adult students, over the course of a school year, challenge themselves to improve their lives through education. Director: Andrew Cohn. www.nightschoolfilm.com
Silent Forests — In Cameroon and Congo’s lush jungles, one of Africa’s most iconic species – the forest elephant – is being slaughtered to extinction. These are the men and women who are fighting to stop the flow of illegal ivory. Director: Mariah Wilson. www.facebook.com/silentforests/
My Country No More — Generations of family farming tradition go up in flames as the North Dakota oil boom leaves human memory, culture and identity scorched in its wake. Director: Rita Baghdadi. www.mycountrynomore.com
Pigeon Kings — Black and Latino men from South Central Los Angeles, who have a passion for breeding and training this acrobatic breed, prepare to compete in the Roller Pigeon World Cup. Director: Milena Pastreich. www.milenapastreich.com/birdmen.html
Losing Sight of Shore — The extraordinary journey of four women that row the Pacific Ocean from San Francisco to Australia unsupported. They are the first team, and the fastest team, to ever accomplish this phenomenal feat. Director: Sarah Moshman. www.losingsightofshore.com
During this Summer open call, 279 documentary film projects were submitted to the Miller / Packan Film Fund. “We’re overwhelmed by the strong response and number of worthy projects submitted,” says Hugh Rogovy, Foundation Founder. “We chose projects based upon the ideals and values of the Foundation,” added Asher Rogovy, Foundation Vice-President, “along with the quality of the film we hope to see.”
© 2020 — The Rogovy Foundation.