DA Pennebaker, Trailblazing Filmmaker, Honored At Hamptons Doc Fest - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1563775

DA Pennebaker, Trailblazing Filmmaker, Honored At Hamptons Doc Fest

icon 8 Photos
Filmmaker DA Pennebaker with an Arri Reflex movie camera.

Filmmaker DA Pennebaker with an Arri Reflex movie camera.

Filmmaker DA Pennebaker speaking.

Filmmaker DA Pennebaker speaking.

Director Robert Kenner.

Director Robert Kenner.

Filmmaker DA Pennebaker.

Filmmaker DA Pennebaker.

Director Robert Kenner working on set.

Director Robert Kenner working on set.

Robert Kenner, director and producer of the film

Robert Kenner, director and producer of the film "Food, Inc.," will receive the first Pennebaker Award for Career Achievement at this year's Hamptons DocFest.

Filmmakers DA Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus during the making of

Filmmakers DA Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus during the making of "The War Room." Photo by Sonia Moskowitz/Pennebaker Hegedus/Kobal/Shutterstock

Film director D.A Pennebaker at his offices in New York City, 1995.

Film director D.A Pennebaker at his offices in New York City, 1995. Photo by David Corio/Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images.

authorMichelle Trauring on Nov 21, 2019

For Chris Hegedus, standing alongside James Carville and George Stephanopoulos in the war room when Bill Clinton was elected president of the United States was one of the highlights of her career — but her excitement was not necessarily for the candidate himself.

It was primarily for Carville and Stephanopoulos, the masterminds behind the 1992 campaign that would forever change the face of politics — cementing the film she made about them, “The War Room,” in documentary history, shared alongside her partner in life and film, DA Pennebaker.

And while this moment was, undoubtedly, also a career high for the groundbreaking filmmaker, who often went by “Penny,” he told The Guardian in 2013 that another topped his list: when Hegedus had walked through his door 37 years earlier, looking for a job.

“He was my biggest cheerleader and I miss that,” Hegedus said during a recent telephone interview. “I miss his encouragement and his passion for film, for storytelling.”

On August 3, Pennebaker died at age 94 at home in Sag Harbor, leaving behind a legacy that includes dozens of cinéma vérité documentaries, notably “Dont Look Back,” “Monterey Pop” and, of course, “The War Room,” which will screen on Saturday, December 7, at the Southampton Arts Center, as part of the 12th annual Hamptons Doc Fest.

But, perhaps more important, Pennebaker was part of a team that helped redefine what documentary filmmaking means. And the festival’s inaugural Pennebaker Career Achievement Award — to be presented to director Robert Kenner on Saturday, December 7, at Bay Street Theater — will always represent that, Hegedus said.

“For me, it’s honoring Penny’s groundbreaking contribution to moviemaking,” Hegedus said of the award. “He was part of a group of filmmakers that engineered the first sync-sound portable camera system that enabled you to follow the drama that was happening in real life, as it happens — something that we take for granted today, when we can film everything on our phones.

“It really began the first storytelling in documentaries that was a lot like fiction films — where they had storylines that had beginning, middle and end, and crises, and whatever you would find in a Hollywood film, especially really passionate characters to follow.”

While synchronous-sound cameras are far from a precious commodity today, they were an unimaginable technology until the 1960s, when Pennebaker — who served as an engineer in the Naval Air Corps during World War II — linked up with pioneering filmmakers Albert Maysles, Richard Leacock and Robert Drew to re-imagine what was possible.

Together, they built a camera that allowed the cinéma vérité movement to take shape, freeing up filmmakers to move with and among their subjects, ultimately doing away with the postproduction voice-over narrative model that was commonplace up until this point.

It was in search of one of these new cameras that Hegedus first met Pennebaker.

“I was looking for a job, specifically, that had one of these sync-sound cameras,” she recalled. “At the time, they were very expensive and there weren’t a lot of them around, so if you wanted to shoot films — which I was doing before in a job that I had, but it was more of a commercial job — you had to have this equipment.”

First she approached Drew, who pointed her up the street toward Pennebaker, she said. He immediately struck her as charming and a natural conversationalist, she said, even despite the current circumstances.

“At the time I went to see Penny, he was going bankrupt,” she said. “So I came in at a time when he was struggling, and he was really looking for a partner. I guess it was kismet, that I just happened to come and have very similar ideas about the kind of movies that I wanted to make and the type of movies that he was making.”

In their early years together, the duo did not have the luxury of being “choosy” when it came to documentaries, Hegedus said. They relied on sources with access and funding, she said, “but one of the films that we always wanted to do was about a man running for president.”

In a roundabout way, the opportunity would present itself via co-producers R.J. Cutler and Wendy Ettinger, who pitched a related idea to Pennebaker and Hegedus. They suggested a film on the behind-the-scenes campaign of the young Arkansas governor running for president, largely in part because direct access was denied.

“He already had a photojournalist and a journalist, so we were relegated to the campaign staff — which I always thought of, at first, as a booby prize because if Clinton lost the election, we’d have a totally unsellable film about the losing staff of the losing candidate,” Hegedus said. “But those are the kinds of risks you take when you make a real-life story about something. It doesn’t always turn out as you think.”

The decision turned out to be a fortuitous one, because the fast-paced, energetic inner-workings of what would become known as “the war room” were nothing less than brilliant and utterly captivating — though Hegedus didn’t fully realize it until outside the editing room.

“I thought it was a little of a downer because we didn’t film the candidate, and it was only really after I made the film and showed it at the Toronto Film Festival that I realized that, of course, none of the journalists and critics that were writing about the film had been in the war room,” she said. “They were only watching what you get to see if you’re a journalist, which is like, the candidate goes in the hotel and out of the hotel, and they don’t really get to see the process and the people who are behind him.

“They were fascinated by it and it was really only then that I realized that this was a film that was gonna have some legs.”

As a two-person crew, Pennebaker would typically shoot video while Hegedus took sound — “mostly because Penny was not a good sound-taker; he was always moving his hands around the mic, making lots of noise,” she recalled with a laugh — before coming together in the editing room.

“I would usually edit the film down to a few hours, and then Penny would come in and we would both edit the film, and we would usually get divorced during this process,” she said laughing again, “because it’s the creative part of the process and everyone has their own opinion on things. That’s much more of an artistic struggle. I think because we respected each other, we somehow made it through all of those films, and we remained lovers and friends and partners.”

Their 43-year filmmaking partnership, which saw some four-dozen documentaries together, was made only stronger by their marriage, Hegedus said.

“Documentaries, when you’re dropped into somebody else’s world, you get very immersed in it, and sometimes these films take a long time,” she said. “To be able to share that with your life partner is really special, and it’s something that I think bonds you. I feel very fortunate to have had that situation.”

Striking out on her own, Hegedus said she feels the void in “too many ways to probably mention,” but she is keeping busy as a producer, while searching for a home for their immense archive, which not includes not only their films, but also the vintage camera equipment for which Pennebaker made his name.

In the meantime, Hegedus said she will take with her all of the lessons she learned from Pennebaker, as will the generations of filmmakers who come after them.

“What so many people wrote to me when Penny died was just how much he helped them, how much he inspired them, how he took the time to actually talk to them about their films,” she said. “He was just very democratic in his way that he gave himself to people — for encouragement or advice or whatever they were searching for.”

For more information about the Hamptons Doc Fest, which runs from Thursday, December 5, through Monday, December 9, at Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor and Southampton Arts Center, visit hamptonsdocfest.com.

You May Also Like:

The Paintings of Natalie Edgar at Duck Creek

The season’s opening exhibition in the John Little Barn at the Arts Center at Duck ... 30 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

Bruce Wolosoff Is ‘Inspired by Music’ at The Church

The innovative Reflections in Music series returns to The Church on Saturday, May 25, at ... by Staff Writer

Pirates on the ‘Stolen Seas’ at The Church

It’s time to rethink everything you thought you knew about pirates. Join documentary filmmaker Thymaya Payne as he presents his film “Stolen Seas” at The Church in Sag Harbor on Friday, May 17, at 7 p.m. “Stolen Seas,” which follows pirate translator and negotiator Ishmael Ali, tells the story of 13 powerless men trapped on a ship and it explores why their captors feel justified in their tyranny. After the screening, there will be a Q&A with the acclaimed writer and filmmaker. Attempting to make sense of the rapid changes at the hands of globalization and intrigued by the emerging ... by Staff Writer

Laufey Performs in Concert to Benefit the Montauk Historical Society

Grammy award-winning singer, composer and multi-instrumentalist Laufey will perform for one night only to benefit the Montauk Historical Society. The concert, on Saturday, August 3, will be held at the Montauk Point Lighthouse. Laufey’s (pronounced lāy-vāy) 2024 Grammy-winning album “Bewitched” is inspired by jazz greats and classical masters while possessing a point of view that could only be conveyed by a 21st-century twenty-something. “Bewitched” represents an expansion of Laufey’s sonic palette. Her self-assured musicianship and deeply felt lyrics take the idea of “classic” music, whether it’s slotted as classical or jazz or even chart-topping pop, and humanize it, giving her ... 29 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

This Summer, John Mulaney Gets Funny in Montauk

John Mulaney, a three-time Emmy and WGA award-winning writer, actor and comedian, is coming to the East End this summer and will perform outdoors on the grounds of Montauk Point Lighthouse. “John Mulaney in Concert” on Saturday, August 10, begins with a preparty event at 5 p.m. followed by the performance at 7 p.m. The show is a benefit for Montauk Point Lighthouse. Mulaney can be seen in his latest Netflix stand up special, “Baby J.” Released in April 2023, Mulaney converts his personal turmoil into comedic brilliance, which earned him 2023 Emmy nominations in Outstanding Variety Special (prerecorded) and ... by Staff Writer

Ozzmosis Presents an Ozzy Osbourne Tribute

The Suffolk presents Ozzmosis, the world-class Ozzy Osbourne anthology tribute show, on Friday, May 17, at 8 p.m. Ozzmosis brings together some of the finest musicians on the scene who take great pride in creating the next best thing to a live Ozzy performance. This show transports audiences through time to experience the raw energy that Ozzy came to be known for at the height of his career. Ozzmosis captures his whole solo career from Randy Rhoads to Zakk Wylde with thrilling authenticity and electrifying energy. Tickets are $35 to $55 at thesuffolk.org. The Suffolk is at 118 East Main ... by Staff Writer

Francisco Daniel Cabrera Shows at Duck Creek

The Arts Center at Duck Creek’s first exhibition of the season in the Little Gallery ... by Staff Writer

Review: ‘The Pillowman’ at LTV Delves Into the Darkest Corners of Humanity

What do you see in your nightmares? Is it drawn from some traumatic, real-life experience? ... by Annette Hinkle

Book Review: Shelby Raebeck’s ‘East Hampton Blue’

“If life’s lessons could be reduced to single sentences, there would be no need for ... by Michael Z. Jody

Hamptons Summer Songbook by the Sea Comes to LTV

This summer, LTV Studios will present “Hamptons Summer Songbook by the Sea,” a series produced ... by Staff Writer