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Archive: Jan 1, 2007


WORD
Big picture show
BOARD FLOW
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Bent puts the 'S' & 'M' ...
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Bucharest is Garth Davis' ...
DIRECTOR'S CHAIR
YEAR IN REVIEW
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REGIONAL REPORT: RUSSIA AND THE BALTIC STATES
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Best adapted screenplay
RSA's Dawn Shadforth moves from electronic music to the macabre
by: Jan 1, 2007 Print

It's the rare music video director who can say they've inspired a book, but Little Minx/Black Dog/RSA's Dawn Shadforth belongs to that exclusive club. Shadforth's future-obsessed 1999 promo for Kylie Minogue's "Can't Get You Out My Head" was so suggestive and idea-rich that it provided the source material for Words & Music, a sprawling 2004 tome on music and hyperconsumption by British journalist Paul Morley.

Shadforth hasn't read the book yet, but as someone who never consciously set out to become a director, the mere notion of it must be a headspinner. A student at Sheffield Hallam University in the early '90s, she studied sculpture and rubbed elbows with future directorial stars like Chris Cunningham and Ne-O before deciding she didn't want to make a career of fine art. Instead, she took to the camera, cutting her teeth on a series of early documentaries for the electronic music label Warp as well as a handful of promos for members of Sheffield's fertile underground. The rest, as they say, is history. In the decade since, she's helmed videos for the likes of Kylie, Björk, Oasis and The Streets, and parlayed that success into a healthy commercial reel. With work for Renault, Toyota, Halifax and Nike Women heading up the list, Shadforth's profile is stronger than ever. We caught up with the refreshed director mere days after her return from a trip to India and picked her brain on the current state of music video, the industry's lack of female directors and why horror is an ideal feature film training ground.

I stumbled into music videos. It just seemed like a logical place for me to be working, coming from a fine arts background and being around a lot of music at that time. Sheffield had a really vibrant underground music scene, and still does, with people like the Arctic Monkeys coming out of there now. It was a very exciting and liberating place to be because it had a bit of a renegade attitude, not being in London, being on the periphery. And there's an element of electronica that is about abstraction, so it was a very natural place to go.

When I first moved to London I was with a very small production company, and then I made a video for a band called All Seeing I. It was one of those fantastic moments of synchronicity - they were friends of mine, so they insisted I make the video, and it was a Top 10 hit, so that gave me the springboard to go around and meet more established companies. I was friends with Chris [Cunningham] and he was at RSA/Black Dog, so it seemed like a logical place to be.

[After] the All Seeing I video, I very quickly went from a budget of £12,000 to a large American commission, which was, again, fantastic and scary. That was my first big budget job. If I knew now what I didn't know then, I would have been even more scared. At the time, I didn't realize how ambitious the idea that I'd pitched was, but that's one of the fantastic advantages of being young and naïve.

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