| Meet the Filmmakers |
|
Kier Atherton was born, raised, and returned to northwest Montana, where he makes a living as a seasonal trail worker and goest broke as a musician and documentary filmmaker. Madeleine Graham Blake lives on an inholding in the Lower Klamath Lake Wildlife Refuge with her husband Tupper and her dog Mighty Mick, the Diminutive Duck Dog. She taught film-based photography at Dominican University of California, and her work has been featured in three books and numerous publications, including Western Horseman and Range Magazine. Linda Bunch lives five miles from Tuscarora, Nevada in Independence Valley where she was the community’s only schoolteacher for 30 years. She says some of her students had to travel 40 miles on dirt roads just to get to school. Linda is now retired, breeds registered quarter horses with her husband Randy, and is manager and co-owner of the Van Norman & Friends Production Sale. Making films has taught her that there are stories all around her that need to be shared. Patty Clayton was named "Western Female Vocalist of the Year" by the Academy of Western Artists in 2007, and "Female Performer of the Year" by the Western Music Association in 2004. Her music is a blend of original ballads and borrowed songs about today and yesterday in the West. Tuda Libby Crews is a seventh-generation rancher from Bueyeros, New Mexico, and a dynamic, life-long community leader. She and her husband Jack manage a cow/calf operation with an emphasis on best management practices. They have two children and three grandchildren. Tuda and Jack have presented at the Gathering in years past. Whit Deschner fstopped for a 10-cent cup of coffee in Baker City, Oregon, in 1982 and has never looked back, mainly because he is too busy fixing things on his small ranch. His book, Travels With a Kayak won the Benjamin Franklin Award for humor, and articles have appeard in various adventure anthologies. Whit writes, takes pictures, feeds animals and procrastinates out of Baker City. Linda Dufurrena lives 75 miles northwest of Winnemuca, Nevada at the Dufurrena Sheep Ranch and Gallery. All three of her sons are involved in the family business. Their ranch is situated in the middle of four mountain ranges, so she doesn’t need to go far to find the images she wants to photograph. She produces Deep West Videos with her daughter-in-law and says she “loves Carolyn’s writing because she can describe things that I see, and that’s the key to our collaboration.” Frank Kanig grew up in a sheep ranching family in Utah, and was a herdsman for the College of Southern Utah. He later worked for the California Department of Fish and Game. Frank is an actor, and has been involved in the film business in both Utah and California. Lacey Maddalena runs Lacey Livestock, Incorporated, in California's Sierra Valley. She inherited her love of ranching from her father, and as a girl competed in roping and barrel racing. She likes to hunt and fish, and is training for her first marathon later in 2010. Gia Martynn grew up in Bakersfield, California, and now lives in the northern Sierra Nevada in Quincy, California, where she works as the Watershed Coordinator for the Feather River Coordinated Resource Management Group of Plumas Corporation. She enjoys hiking, exploring, and learning the intricacies of riparian and meadow systems in the Sierra Nevada with her best (dog) friend, Zoe. Joe McCormack has worked for the Nez Perce tribe in resource management for over a dozen years. Active in an array of community building projects, he has been involved over the past four years with a project in Mongolia, dealing with the Kuhlaon (Wild Ass) to study pastoral and herder interactions. He is also helping develop fisheries in northeastern Oregon, and is a strong advocate for his people and their rights. Jane Morton's family began ranching near Fort Morgan, Colorado in 1915. After she married, Jane taught school and worked the ranch with her husband. She has published several children's books and writes poems about ranch life. her most recent book is titled Cowboy Poetry, Turning to Face the Wind. Cindi Nash lives in Spring Creek, Nevada with her husband David and one child who is still at home. Cindi is originally from Idaho but after college moved to Texas where she mostly cowboy'd for a living with her husband. She has been a teacher's assistant at Mound Valley School for the past 4 years. Ali Riordan lives on her husband's family ranch near Jiggs, Nevada, where they are raising the sixth generation of the Riordan family on the same land. Ali grew up in Flordia where she was involved in ranching, raising Santa Gertrudis and Brangus cattle. After falling in love with the West, she took up photography so she could share the beauty of her new home with family in Florida. She says she began to look at the world differently after having her two sons, and through their curiosity discovered a new passion for teaching. Shammy Rodriguez likes to quote a friend who says “you get your love for ranching in your mom’s milk when you’re a baby.” The Rhoads Ranch where she lives and works was started by her great great grandfather, making Shammy a fifth generation rancher. She says making videos makes her appreciate the life she has, and realize that not many people get to see what she sees on a daily basis. Gwendolyn Trice, a native of La Grande Oregon, moved back to the country after a career with Boeing in Seattle. Besides collaborating with Joe McCormack on the Old West, New West Videos film "Homeland," she has dedicated the past several years to uncovering and documenting her family's migration to the West -- African American loggers in search of promise in the early 1900s. Gwendolyn is the founder of the Maxville Heritage Interpretive Center and her efforts have rekindled an interest in eastern Oregon's rural history. Cheryl Turner has been the teacher at the Mound Valley School in Jiggs, Nevada for 20 years. She and her husband, Bob, have raised two children there. Cheryl dedicates her films to her family and hopes that her films film will help people appreciate rural life and rural communities. Glynis Wright is a native Nevadan, born and raised in Elko. she married her husband Jay 20 years ago, and together they have worked the family ranch in Independence Valley. For the next few years, Glynis is living in Elko with their kids so they can attend high school, while Jay continues to work the ranch with his father, Jim. - Return to Deep West Videos -
|
| Audio & Video |
|---|
|
|
|
| Stay Connected | |
|---|---|
|
|
|
|






