Episode 76

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Published on:

17th Jan 2025

Daughters Documentary || Co-Directors Angela Patton + Natalie Rae, moderated by Filmmaker, Mishka Brown

Film Roundtable is thrilled to welcome Co-Directors Angela Patton and Natalie Rae (Daughters). Their poignant Netflix documentary, which premiered at Sundance last year, won the Audience Award in the Documentary Competition and was named the festival’s overall Festival Favorite. Daughters is also nominated for a BAFTA and is currently on the shortlist for an Oscar nomination in the Best Documentary Feature category.

The conversation is insightfully hosted by Filmmaker and Producer Mishka Brown.

Angela and Natalie share their journey of creating Daughters, a powerful film inspired by Angela’s work as CEO of Girls For A Change, the organization behind the documentary. The film highlights the transformative father-daughter dance initiative inside a Washington, DC jail, an idea born from the creativity and determination of the girls in the program.

This discussion dives into the decade-long journey to bring the film to life, from its origins in a TED Talk to the challenges of production during COVID. Angela and Natalie reflect on their shared values and vision, the therapeutic impact of the project on participants, and the importance of centering the voices of the girls and their families in the storytelling process.

Tune in to hear the inspiring story behind this groundbreaking documentary and its heartfelt message about visibility, connection, and hope.

Enjoy!!

Check out this conversation wherever you listen to podcasts and also available to watch on our Youtube Channel.

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About the Podcast

Film Roundtable
Film Roundtable is an open exploration with celebrated industry professionals to discuss the filmmaking process and to consider the path forward in the post COVID world.
Film Roundtable was to created as space for artists in the industry to talk openly and freely about what is present for them at this unprecedented moment in time. Most of us have found ourselves, until just recently, in a sort of worldwide, collective pause. We have had an abundance of time to be quiet, to go inside ourselves, to listen, but most importantly to imagine the change we want to see in our own lives and careers as well as for the collective as a whole. A quality of life greater not just for ourselves but for all. As image makers, many of us with voices that are heard around the world, to really begin to envision how we use our platform, our art, to create change for a greater good; a kinder and more just world.