
Sally Rubin
- Education:
- Tufts University, Bachelor of Arts
Stanford University, Master of Arts
Biography
Sally Rubin is a documentary filmmaker, editor, and professor who has worked in the field for more than 25 years. She is currently working on Taking the Reins, a feature-length documentary about the myth of the American cowboy. In 2021, she released Mama Has a Mustache, a fully animated documentary about kids and gender identity. That film had an acquisition and development deal with Disney+ to be turned into a social issue docu-series for kids entitled Kids Talk. The film premiered at Outfest in 2021 and screened at the San Francisco International Film Festival, MountainFilm in Telluride, the Hamptons International Film Festival, and many others. Rubin also completed a commissioned piece for the Smithsonian called Appalachian Futures, released in January 2022.
In 2018, she completed Hillbilly, a feature documentary about media stereotypes of Appalachia. The film streamed on Hulu and Al Jazeera, and is now available on iTunes, Amazon and beyond. Funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Arts, Hillbilly is in distribution through 1091 Media (Cartel Land, Life Animated). It won the Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the Los Angeles Film Festival, and has been praised by Michael Moore and Dolly Parton. In 2014, Rubin completed Life on the Line, about a teenage girl growing up on the U.S./Mexico border. The film broadcast nationally on PBS and premiered at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. Rubin’s previous film, Deep Down, was an ITVS-funded feature-length documentary about two friends in eastern Kentucky who find themselves divided over mountaintop removal coal mining near their homes. The film was part of the Emmy-winning PBS series Independent Lens (2010-2011) and has reached almost 1.5 million people through its broadcast, distribution, and outreach campaign. It was nominated for an Emmy for its Virtual Mine outreach project, in the category of New Approaches to News and Documentary. It was funded by Chicken and Egg Pictures, the MacArthur Foundation, ITVS, and the Fledgling Fund.
Rubin’s other credits include The Last Mountain, a film about her father’s death in a hiking accident that was broadcast on PBS; Robert Greenwald's Iraq for Sale; and the television series The Freedom Files (editor), as well as David Sutherland’s six-hour Frontline special Country Boys (associate producer) and Riverwebs (editor), which broadcast nationally on PBS. In 2004, Rubin founded the groundbreaking Straight Outta Grrrlville Film Festival in San Francisco and continues to produce local events and benefits for artists and filmmakers, in conjunction with her own continued work.
Rubin is a member of the International Documentary Association and its David Wolper Award screening and judging committees; a feature documentary judge for the IDA Awards; a member of Doculink’s steering and planning committees; president of Tenth Muse Films’ board; and is the owner of New Day Films Cooperative.
After earning her M.A. in documentary film and video from Stanford University, Rubin fell deeply in love with the field of documentary film, where she hopes to continue working for a very long time.
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Recent Creative, Scholarly Work and Publications
- LA County Department of Children and Family Services, June 2024: screening of "Mama Has a Mustache" for all DCFS staff as part of PRIDE Celebration Month.
- Rural Women’s Studies Association, May 2024: screening of "Hillbilly" as part of this annual conference.
- Wildwood School, April 2024: Keynote Speaker, screening "Mama Has a Mustache" as part of the National Day of Silence.
- Hi-Tops Youth and Gender Forum, March 2023: Invited Speaker, screening "Mama Has a Mustache" and discussion of youth and gender.
- Held screenings of "Mama Has a Mustache" at schools throughout the Los Angeles Unified Public School system, along with exercises and activities around gender identity in the classroom.
- Reviewed "Documentary Editing: Principles and Practice" by Jacob Bricca.
- Reviewed "The Technique of Film and Video Editing" by Ken Dancyger.
- Received Faculty Opportunity Fund grant from Chapman, for $15000 for "Mama Has a Mustache," my new documentary about being gender non-conforming and pregnant.
- Editorial Consultant on "This Won't Be on the Test," a work-in-progress documentary about the importance of after-school and extracurricular programs to American education.
- Producer on this 15-minute documentary about a transgendered opera singer, directed by Nicole Opper.
- Los Angeles premiere of "Life on the Line" at the Mark Taper Auditorium at the Los Angeles Public Library. In conjunction with "The Big Read" Los Angeles. Panelists at the event included Lucy Santana, Executive Director of Girls Inc, Linda Lopez, Chief of Immigrant Services in the Los Angeles Mayor’s Office, and moderator Desiree Gutierrez of Impact Media Partners.
- Edited a short piece for documentary director Sarah Feeley entitled "Hamsterdam."
- Completed (co-directed and edited) feature length documentary film for national PBS broadcast in November 2010. See www.deepdownfilm.org for more. The film was broadcast on PBS’ Emmy award winning series, Independent Lens, to over one million viewers.