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Growing Up Female is the very first feature-length film of the modern women’s movement. Considered controversial and exhilarating on its release, the film examines female socialization through a personal look into the lives of six women, ages four to thirty-five, and the forces that shape them—teachers, counselors, advertisements, music, and the institution of marriage. A time capsule of a generation’s feminist issues, sometimes intersecting with race and class, the film illuminates a complex system of institutions upholding internal and external oppression. Directed by Julia Reichert and Jim Klein. 1971, DCP, 52 min.

Artist Talk by Julia Reichert: My Life in Film
The director takes us on an intimate, personal journey from a working class kid to a four-time Academy Award–nominated documentarian. Reichert shares her frank and often humorous origin story with personal photos and film clips that span her 50-year career. Her talk includes a special preview clip of 9to5: The Story of a Movement.

Please note: This screening of Growing Up Female with an artist talk by Julia Reichert replaced the previously scheduled work-in-progress showing of 9to5: The Story of a Movement. The world premiere of 9to5 was recently announced for this March at the SXSW Film Festival in Austin, Texas.

Julia Reichert: 50 Years in Film is organized by the Wexner Center for the Arts with the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and curated by Wexner Center Director of Film/Video David Filipi. Special thanks to Chicken & Egg Pictures for its support.

The Walker’s Dialogue and Retrospective program is made possible by generous support from Anita Kunin and the Kunin Family.

Related articles

The Expansive, Inexhaustible Curiosity of Julia Reichert

The Expansive, Inexhaustible Curiosity of Julia Reichert

"A living master of observational filmmaking, Reichert’s cinema asserts that observation needn’t imply lack of participation," writes film curator and Film Comment columnist Eric Hynes. "It’s a cinema of attending to what matters, of attendance as assertion of what matters." In advance of his February 29 dialogue with the documentarian, he shares his perspective on Julia Reichert's five decades of filmmaking. 

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