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Laura Milliken

El texto de esta página por ahora sólo se encuentra en inglés. Si quieres averiguar sobre sitios que facilitan traducción via Internet, entra aquí.

May 2006

By Zachary Naranjo-Morse of FVC, NMAI

ZN-M: Thank you for being with us here today, Laura. Can you a little bit about where you're from?

LM: Well, I come from Toronto, I was born and raised there. But my family, my father specifically, is from the Kettle and Stony Point First Nation in Southern Ontario, which is a Chippewa community. I never spent much time there, I spent my whole time in Toronto, and that's where I...have had my business, Big Soul Productions, for the last seven years.

ZN-M: Can you tell me a little bit about Big Soul Productions, how it started?

LM: Sure, Big Soul Productions was a partnership with Jennifer Podemski, who is a well known Canadian Aboriginal actress. The reason we started the company was because we partnered on a project called the Seventh Generation, which was 39 episodes of an Aboriginal youth role model series. In the course of three years we profiled 91 Aboriginal youth role models in Canada and the United States. It was a highly successful project and we managed to raise about half a million dollars per season for that show, most of it public funds. I think at the time we knew that we were on to something really good together creatively, but also on a business level, that's when I realized that I knew how to access money for the projects that I wanted to realize

Since then, Jennifer and I have gone in our own directions, but we still remain together as a producing team for Moccasin Flats, the dramatic series, which is the first ever Aboriginal produced and written and acted and sometimes directed National television series. (It) has been on for three years on APTN and Showcase Television Network. So, we are very proud of that. Big Soul continues to operate under my sole proprietorship.

ZN-M: Can you tell me a little bit about the evolution of Moccasin Flats?

LM: Sure. It was really interesting, because Jennifer and I were sort of on this path of working with Aboriginal youth, it was amazing—I woke up one day and I thought, "Why are we not engaging youth to work on real film sets, so that we can train them and make subject material that is relevant to youth by working directly with youth to make short films?" So I thought, "Let's use the actual set as a platform for the training. Then we will also have a product that we can actually begin distributing and have screened, hopefully, all over the world." So, we had a few of these training programs which we called RepREZentin'. We had had one in my own community, which was sort of the pilot project ...our second one was called RepREZentin' in Fort Chip, and that was also a very successful program. Then we had our first urban RepREZentin, in Regina. It was very hard for me to find youth to come out and actually audition, but the ones who did were amazing! We brought Randy Redroad up from New York, and he directed the piece that was called RepREZentin' in Regina at the time. Then he said, "Let's call it Moccasin Flats," because that's what people call inner city Regina.

So, anyways, we ended up with a short film, went to 50 film festivals all over the world since then, which was four years ago. It's garnered numerous awards, and it was still in the rough cut stage when we took it to the network, and we said, "Look at these kids in Regina and how amazing they are. Look at this world and how interesting it is and how compelling it is. We want to make a television series about it." It was when Moccasin Flats the short film was premiering, making its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, that we got a call from Showcase Television and they said "Why don't you do a treatment for six episodes and get it to us right away?" So the whole time I was in Sundance for the premiere of Moccasin Flats, I'm working on a treatment for a series. Then, lo and behold, we sold it and it lived for three years, which is a great life span for a series in Canada, especially for first time producers. And now we are working on Moccasin Flats the feature film.

ZN-M: The feature film–when is that scheduled for?

LM: We were hoping this fall of 2006, but most likely spring or summer of 2007. The script is being written right now, and I'm very excited about it. And of course we will continue to use a lot of the same actors that we actually discovered in Regina four years ago.

ZN-M: The originals?

LM: Yeah, exactly. That's what's really important, building a capacity in our community so that we can employ Aboriginal people—writers, directors, actors, craft people of all kinds. That's what we should be doing and that's what Big Soul strives to do through its training programs and its projects.

ZN-M: I'm interested in the workshops that you have for RepREZentin'—can you tell me a little bit about the process?

LM: Well, I think it's been very successful. We had under the RepREZentin' banner about five or six projects, some urban, some rural, and we always ended up with a product at the end that we could market, and, hopefully, inspire other youth to do the same. I find that it has an impact on people. First of all by the recruiting of the trainees who actually work on the project; the ones who get the hands on experience who will, hopefully, go into further work in the industry or seek training. The other way is actually disseminating the information that we've been producing with the youth, so people all over the world will see it and....understand that there are issues and Aboriginal youth subjects that we need to pay more attention to. There's also the issue of capacity building, which I believe we do through these projects by hiring the Aboriginal mentors who train the Aboriginal youth. Then there's all of the other youth who see role models on screen, who aren't necessarily famous people, but are people who had the courage to do something they've never done before. And, also, the team experience. When the youth get on the project, there's nothing like a film set that builds a team or a family. It's a microcosm of all of these different kinds of dynamics. I always thought it was one of the most empowering experiences, which is why I wanted to use it as a training platform.

When we first did it, we just thought, let's bring in like 30 or 50 kids or whatever and let them do what they want. It was just out of control. Then we made it very regimented, it's exactly like a film set (with) call sheets every single day. We have some sort of crash training for the youth before they get on the set; they meet their mentors, they have an interview process so that I can figure out where I want to place them. If they're going to be an actor, they have to audition. If they're going to be a camera person, they have to interview for that. And if they don't know, I just put them somewhere where I think they should be. And sometimes you know, sometimes its my feeling for the person's personality, where I think they might get along or might not—it's definitely not without its problems.

Aboriginal youth have...statistically the numbers are highest for them in areas like incarceration and drug abuse and teenage pregnancy and high school dropout and youth suicide. It's a scary situation right now for Aboriginal youth, and that's another reason behind what I do. They're not empowered, they don't feel like they have a voice, they don't feel that they have any respect or a solid future. Most of this stems from what you see of the residential school experience, so that's something that this strives to do, build self-esteem and confidence in these youth, so even if they don't go off and become a great filmmakers, maybe at the end of the process they're just going to feel better about themselves.

So what's become a little difficult for me is that I sometimes wonder if I'm a producer or if I'm a social advocacy organization (Laughs). I think a bit of both and I think I've proved that by giving them a very, very, very, professional experience on a set that, you are there on time every single day or you get fired, just like in the real world. And the great thing is all of the youth who work on our training projects get paid, too. I think that's important. So that's the long, long answer for a very short question.

ZN-M: Excellent answer, I'm wondering about you growing up and your experiences with film and maybe you could share with me...you were at one time these kids’ age, what drew you to filmmaking?

LM: I love that question, only because I had absolutely no interest at all in filmmaking when I was growing up. All I knew was that I was a complete television addict and for the most part it was because my parents both worked, and I found a lot of times after school, no one's home what do you do, you watch TV.

And as I was growing up I was very good in school, great in drama, I was very artistic, I was in band—I knew that the creative realm is where I belonged. So anyway, after high school I had no idea what to do, and I ended up in a dead end job. One day I woke up and I just went to work and I quit...I went to community college, signed up for journalism. I thought, "What am I doing in journalism?" Ended up working for a national business magazine called Canadian Business, got a lot of corporate and advertising experience. So, before I knew it, all of these things had come together, all of the experiences that I had, artistic and otherwise...these skills that I had acquired that I didn't realize were all the skills that it took to be a good producer.

So, I get this call from John Kimbell, who ran the National Aboriginal Achievement Awards. He actually head hunted me and he said, "I want you to come and produce my television show." He did like a three million dollar live-to-tape stage show that was broadcast on National television. It honored 15 Aboriginal role models in Canada; it's the biggest award show of its kind in the world....I went and I did it and...made a lot of mistakes, but knew from the first time that I started producing that show, that what I wanted to do for the rest of my life was to produce.

People ask me all of the time, "Don't you want to act, don't you want to direct?" I have no interest in that. There are people who are meant for that. I'm a producer, that's what I do. I recognize talent, I know how to get money, I know how to recognize a good story and make it all come together.

I think as a producer, though, you need all kinds of experience....It's probably a good idea if you go and P.A. on a set, or work in craft or in the camera department....so when you're actually putting together a budget, or when you're actually breaking down a script, you know everything that its going to take, you have an intimate awareness of what goes on on the set. That's something that I didn't have at first, so I really screwed up a lot. But I guess that happens.

ZN-M: Being a producer and also being a selector for the Native American Film and Video Festival, have you seen some works that have inspired or excited you?

LM: A lot....I feel like there’s so much more that I could be doing when I see these amazing feature films, short films and some of these music videos....especially when I look at Canada and I see...how many amazing producers are there and how many amazing production companies are emerging. I go, "Oh my God, I'm in trouble!" But amazing work; I'm just so proud of the filmmakers and the producers. I also think that we have some incredible talent emerging...writers and directors who definitely have the potential to cross over into a bigger market, into a mainstream market. Which isn't something that they necessarily have to do, but if they wanted to, they definitely could. So that's really heartening to see that people are taking this so seriously and the people here care so much about it.

I remember last week at home–I think it had been one of many nights that I had been watching the films (as a festival selector)–and I just started crying. "Why do we have to keep doing films about residential schools and why do we have to keep doing all these pained movies and I don't want to cry anymore. Why can't we lighten up a bit?" I remember it was just before I came here, and I went, "That's why that we're making these things—because it's still happening, because it's still there, because it's still what hurts us, because it’s still what dictates what's going on in our communities and in our lives." We have very unique and very different stories to tell and we have stories to tell that the world cannot turn its back on and the world cannot ignore. That's why being an Aboriginal filmmaker is so important, and it's so important that Aboriginal people are telling these stories.

I think that sometimes if there is an Aboriginal person who wants to tell a story and needs to engage a non-Aboriginal person, that's OK. Or if a non-Aboriginal person has gotten their hands on a story that has to be told, I think that is important too. But I also think it's really important for Native people to give it their own perspective. Even if it is a non-Native filmmaker, that perspective is what makes it an Aboriginal piece and what will give it relevance, not only to an Aboriginal audience but to a non-Aboriginal audience.

So it was that moment of realization that when I was sitting there and I went, "Oh my goodness", I was like, "OK, I've been in dramatic series producer mode for too long," and I was really grateful that this experience actually sort of pulled me out of that and made me really remember why producing Aboriginal content, with Aboriginal people is so important and making sure that it gets out to the world.

ZN-M: What are your hopes for Big Soul Productions within the next ten years?

LM: That's a good question. I've been thinking about that, too. My main thing for Big Soul Productions is that I want us to be financially stable and self-sufficient. I would also like to be in a position that we can build more capacity in the film community in Canada, the United States, around the world with Aboriginal and indigenous filmmakers. Eventually I would like to be able to purchase scripts and to develop more projects with more filmmakers, and to be able to access development financing so that I can take a lot of projects to the next step. And continue the education of Aboriginal youth, too, and just be a part of building this community...to a place that is very empowering, educational and inspiration for the world.

ZN-M: Well, thank you so much Laura, It's been a pleasure having you. Thank you for sharing.

LM: Thank you, it's been fun!

Créditos Fotográficos: Laura Milliken - photograph by Tim Warner

Laura Milliken

Moccasin Flats

Moccasin Flats: The Other Side

Moccasin Flats: Whose Team Are You On?

Jennifer Podemski

Randy Redroad


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