Susan Mary MaslinAO (born 1958 or 1959) is an Australian screen producer. She is best known for her feature films Road to Nhill (1997), Japanese Story (2003), and The Dressmaker (2015), but has produced or executive produced more documentary films than fiction features. She is co-founder of the company Film Art Media, established in 2008 with her creative and business partner Daryl Dellora, based in Melbourne.
Initially graduating with a Bachelor of Science from Australian National University and intending to do an honours year in zoology, Maslin instead switched to media studies at the Canberra College of Advanced Education (CCAE), after being attracted by the film posters in the building. Her only exposure to media so far had been as a member of the Women's Broadcasting Collective at the community radio station 2XX, but she gained entry as one of four full-time students at the faculty. The course had a focus on film history rather than practice, and she graduated with a Graduate Diploma in Media in 1983 after a year of study.[4] It was at CCAE that Maslin met Daryl Dellora, her long-term creative and business partner, who was a fellow student in the Graduate Diploma of Media Studies.[5]
Politicised on campus by the birth of second wave feminism in Australia, Maslin started what would become a lifelong fight for women's rights. Maslin was involved with the Women Against Rape in War group, some of whom were arrested and charged in Canberra for using ANZAC Day to protest rape being used as a weapon in war in 1981. In 1983, she and Frances Sutherland produced and directed a video called "More than one day of the year". Maslin wrote the music and lyrics for a song was recorded by the rock band Domestic Dirt in 1982.[6]
Later in her career, in 2013, Maslin completed the two-year Master of Screen Arts and Business degree at the Australian Film, Television and Radio School (AFTRS). She did this with the specific goal of learning how to create a business plan in order to attract private capital and for a feature film, before producing The Dressmaker.[7]
Career
Maslin wrote, directed, and produced her first feature documentary Thanks Girls and Goodbye (1988), about the Australian Land Army – the women who worked on farms during the Second World War and supported the war effort through food production.[4] She then went on to produce the hour-long documentary Mr Neal Is Entitled to Be an Agitator (1991), co-written and directed by Daryl Dellora, about Lionel Murphy's battle to retain his position on the High Court of Australia.[8][9] The film was nominated for Best Documentary at the Australian Film Institute Award in 1992.[10] A Senses of Cinema reviewer wrote in 2017 "in the eyes of this viewer, the film was able to capture something greater than the circumstances that surrounded Lionel Murphy during his lifetime".[11]
Conspiracy, a 1994 documentary about the 1978 Sydney Hilton Hotel bombing, was produced by Maslin, and directed and co-written by Dellora.[12][13]
In 1998 Maslin produced feature documentary The Highest Court, which shows first-hand the characters and drama of the High Court of Australia.[citation needed] Maslin then went on to tell the story of Jørn Utzon, architect of the Sydney Opera House, in The Edge of Possible (1998). This film won the Golden Plaque at the Chicago International Television Competition.[14]
Maslin teamed up again with director Sue Brooks and writer Alison Tilson on Japanese Story (2003), which won many awards, including the 2003 Australian Film Institute Best Feature Film.[14] She executive produced the 2006 feature film Irresistible starring Susan Sarandon.[15] She then produced and executive produced a number of Australian documentaries, includingHunt Angels (producer; won the 2006 Australian Film Institute Best Feature Documentary Film),[14]Celebrity: Dominick Dunne (producer),[citation needed]Michael Kirby: Don't Forget the Justice Bit (producer),[14]Breaking the News (executive producer) and Ringbalin: Breaking the Drought (executive producer).[citation needed]
Maslin produced The Dressmaker, directed by Jocelyn Moorhouse, released in 2015. Starring Kate Winslet, Judy Davis, Liam Hemsworth, and Hugo Weaving, the film was based on the book of the same title written by Rosalie Ham. The film was one of the most successful in Australian history,[14][7] grossing $20 million at the box office [16] and garnered the highest number of nominations at the 2015 Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA) Awards, winning five including the People's Choice Award for Favourite Australian Film.[citation needed] In 2021 Maslin said of The Dressmaker that it was "the most exhilarating project I've worked on, as well as the most stressful" (she said that she had often referred to it as The Stressmaker at the time[2]), and she was also proud that it had "paved the way for so many other female-driven films".[7]
Maslin produced and/or executive produced the feature documentary Harry Seidler: Modernist (2017);[14] comedy series Other People's Problems (2017),[citation needed] and the documentary Paper Trails (2017).[7]
The Show Must Go On (2019) is a documentary about mental health that screened on ABC TV, although it did not have all of the associated launch events that were planned owing to the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia.[7]Brazen Hussies (2020; by filmmakers Philippa Campey, Andrea Foxworthy, and Catherine Dwyer) is a feature documentary about second-wave feminism in Australia, which was screened at 56 cinemas in Australia, lasting for three months on the big screen, after having great difficulty in getting it financed.[7]
Maslin and her company executive produced a documentary about Courtney Barnett called Anonymous Club. The film was directed by Danny Cohen,[23] who had collaborated with Barnett on several of her music videos previously.[24] The film premiered at the Melbourne International Film Festival in August 2021, and screened at a number of film festivals before being released in cinemas in March 2022.[25] It was also broadcast on ABC Television,[26] and is available on DVD.[25]
Maslin is also a distributor of independent documentary films, through her company Film Art Media, established in 2008 with Daryl Dellora and based in Melbourne.[29][14] She said of the company "Our goal has always been to connect ideas with people, and we do that through a variety of ways. We're not just in the business of producing and making content. We’re actually in the business of developing intellectual property and finding ways to connect that with people. So, Film Art Media is actually a film rights management and distribution company."[7]
In October 2021, Maslin was a member of an industry group that developed the Australian Feature Film Summit, an online meeting to grow the success of the Australian feature film sector.[7]
She is the founder and course leader of a Creative Leadership program, a workshop lasting two days, at Compton School,[34] in Melbourne, "the first business school for creatives".[35]
In June 2019 she was made an Officer of the Order of Australia for "distinguished service to the Australian film industry as a producer, and through roles with professional bodies".[1][7] At that time, she was Charles Herschell Industry Fellow at Swinburne University.[37] Later that year, she was the recipient of the Alumni Excellence Award - Faculty of Arts and Design from Canberra University.[38][5]
^ abMaslin, Sue (16 September 2020). "BC(M) Industry Talks: Sue Maslin AO". Media Factory. Retrieved 15 December 2024. B.Comm(Media) Industry Talks is a webinar series for students in RMIT's Bachelor of Communication (Media) program. This talk was recorded live on Tuesday 15 September 2020.