Genevieve Clay-Smith
Genevieve Clay-Smith (born 1988)[1] is an Australian writer and director. She is an advocate of inclusive filmmaking.[2] Clay-Smith's career as a writer and a film director began in 2009 when her film, starring a man with Down syndrome, won Australia's largest short film festival,[3] Tropfest. She is the co-founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the not-for-profit organisation Bus Stop Films (BSF)[4] and co-founder and Creative Director of the creative agency, Taste Creative.[5][6] Early lifeClay-Smith grew up in Newcastle and attended the Hunter School of the Performing Arts in Broadmeadow. As an actress in the local children's theatre called the 'Young People's Theatre,’ she was cast as Nancy Cakebread in the Australian feature film, 15 Almore (1998).[7] She is an alumnus of the Foundation for Young Australians, Young Social Pioneers (YSP) program, where she received a 12-month scholarship to be mentored and trained in social entrepreneurship in 2010.[citation needed] CareerIn 2009 Clay-Smith co-founded the not for profit organisation Bus Stop Films, and she co-founded Taste Creative in 2010. She has been forging pathways for inclusion in the film industry.[8] She has campaigned for the need to incorporate more inclusion and diversity on the film screen and within the media. She has forged a partnership between BSF and AFTRS, facilitating Bus Stop's students with intellectual disabilities access to the film, television and radio industries. Clay-Smith was a stakeholder and consultant of the 2017 Screen NSW ScreenAbility initiative.[citation needed] She received an AMP Tomorrow Makers grant[9] in 2016 which enabled her to spend 18 months writing Bus Stop Films' Accessible Film Studies Curriculum and turning it into an online resource. In 2016, Clay-Smith was invited by the NSW Minister for the Arts to join the Arts and Culture Advisory Board Committee,[10] to advise the government and help influence policy on matters pertaining to developing and promoting the arts and culture of NSW. Clay-Smith has given presentations at the BBC Manchester, the Extraordinary Film Festival in Belgium,[11] Walt Disney Animation Studios HQ in Burbank and the Scottish Mental Health Arts and Film Festival. In January 2018, she finished her first international project in Japan, titled 'Shakespeare in Tokyo', which combined a workshop and professional work experience for six Japanese people with Down syndrome.[12] Shakespeare in Tokyo was launched at the international film festival Short Shorts Film Festival with the Governor of Tokyo Yuriko Koike. In March 2018, Clay-Smith was invited to deliver the closing keynote speech[13] at the Toronto International Film Festival – Kids section, where she presented on BSF and the power of inclusive filmmaking. Clay-Smith released her children's book I Didn't Like Hubert in 2018, with all proceeds being donated to the Humpty Dumpty Foundation.[14] Awards and recognitionClay-Smith won the award of Young Australian Filmmaker at the 2014 Byron Bay International Film Festival for the film The Interviewer.[citation needed] She was the 2014 winner of the Australian Financial Review and Westpac 100 Women of Influence Award, where she was recognised as the overall winner in the Young Leader category for her contribution to creating inclusion within the film industry.[15] In 2015, Clay-Smith was named the NSW Young Australian of the Year.[16] In 2017, she was the winner of the Entrepreneurial Award in the B&T 30 under 30 awards. In the same year, she was awarded the Sidney Myer Creative Fellowship[17] to support her professional work. This is an award of A$160,000 given to mid-career creatives and thought leaders.[18] In 2018, Clay-Smith and her husband Henry Smith accepted the Optus My Business Award as Taste Creative won the Media, Marketing & Advertising Business of the Year award.[19] FilmographyFilm
Documentary film
Executive producer/Co-producer
Awards and nominations
References
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