In Pakistan at Lok Virsa

At the co-production of Into the Woods with Pasadena Playhouse. From L-R, Asst. Superintendent of Curriculum, Helen Hill, Deputy Superintendent Dr. Elizabeth Blanco, Board President Michelle Bailey, Superintendent Brian McDonald, and me

My first trip to Islamabad. I am in front and to my right is Dr. Munazza Yaqoob, Associate Professor/ Former Chair of the Department of English International Islamic University Islamabad

In Islamabad, 2016 Sara Rashed Zain

Biography

School Board Trustee, Filmmaker, Writer, Fulbright


I grew up on Staten Island in New York with a dad who was a police officer and a mom who was a social worker. My mother worked at Willowbrook State School, the institution that housed mentally disabled people, as a social worker. She and several others, along with parents, forced the closure of Willowbrook. Geraldo Rivera covered the scandal on his television show. This event led to the deinstitutionalization of mentally disabled people across the nation. This was the my first experience with politics, power and the ability for citizens to create change. 

We moved to Athens, Georgia, which wasn't the hip and cool place it is now. In fact, it was a small town still struggling with the aftermath of the Civil Rights Movement. Then we moved to Atlanta and I spent my teenage years living in the Quaker Meeting House in Little Five Points, amidst the artist’s community in Atlanta. This neighborhood had it all, filmmakers, actors, gay activists, political activists, feminists and the avant-garde of the time. I immersed myself in the culture.  I joined a dance theater company with Celeste Miller and volunteered at Charis Books and More, the local feminist bookstore.

I attended a fully integrated Atlanta public school and the alternative public school. I am a strong advocate for public schools and school boards. Democratically elected school boards are part of the bedrock of our democracy.

After high school, I attended Hampshire College and upon graduating, moved to San Francisco with intentions of working at Lucasfilm's Industrial Light and Magic in their optical department. I was excited to see where visual effects were being made through camera and film.  After several years and a lot of hard work, I started working in the optical department as a compositor in 1989.

Motion Picture: I worked on many feature films while at ILM, including FORREST GUMP, GHOST, BACK TO THE FUTURE 2, DEATH BECOMES HER, THE ROCKETEER, THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER, HOOK and IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS. 

After living in San Francisco for a few years, I moved to Los Angeles to broaden my film experience. I worked with several Hollywood studios including Warner Bros., Sony Imageworks and Technicolor. I worked as a visual effects producer, compositor, editor, digital intermediate conforming editor and producer of miniature effects. My credits include: RACE TO WITCH MOUNTAIN, THE HUMAN STAIN, KILL BILL Vol. 1+2, FINAL DESTINATION, HERBIE FULLY LOADED, BEOWULF, PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN and ENCHANTED. While at ILM I was in IATSE Local 16. Working at Technicolor I was in Editors Guild Local 700.

Independent Film: I wanted to be an independent filmmaker and make my own movies. The first film that I directed was about a little-known southwestern architect. I called it MARY JANE COLTER: THE DESERT VIEW. It was narrated by Ellen Burstyn. I had been drawn to Ms. Colter's story because of her significant and ground-breaking work that seemed to be unfamiliar to most people.  

I produced a film festival which was held at the Winslow Historic Theater from year 2002-2004. During that time, the Winslow Film Festival screened independent films and hosted a visual effects lecture series featuring noteworthy professionals that worked in the field. 

One of my films, FEMINIST: STORIES FROM WOMEN’S LIBERATION, explores the significance of the second wave of the women’s liberation movement and the effect it has on our lives. Interviewees include author and NOW founder Betty Friedan, authors and activists Frances M. Beal, Robin Morgan, Sonia Pressman Fuentes, Betita Martinez among other feminists. I co-created the Women’s History Month assembly in the Pasadena Unified School District in 2017 and it is now recognized regionally.

Global and Fulbright: Today, I am invited to speak around the world. In 2017 I received a Fulbright to teach women’s liberation movement history in Islamabad. (Pakistan was not accepting Fulbright awardees in that year, so travel was not offered. Thus, I am a Fulbright Finalist.) I was also chosen to be the US coordinator for a State Department education al trip for women from the International Islamabad University, Islamabad to visit Los Angeles.

Exhibit: I recently returned from Pakistan where I traveled from mountains to the sea and interviewed diverse women on feminism, patriarchy and the women’s movement. https://www.jenniferhalllee.com/globalwork

Trustee: I was elected to the Pasadena Unified School District Board of Trustees in 2020 after volunteering locally on the Altadena Town Council member and Chairing the Altadena Town Council Education Committee. I served for three terms on the Altadena Town Council. I understand the power of community. When people come together to solve our problems at a local level we are utilizing our power that is needed to solve our problems nationally.

-Jennifer

jenniferhalllee@gmail.com