Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Almudena Carracedo receives the Documentary Emmy Award

The film "Made in L.A." has won the Documentary Emmy Award, and its Spanish director, Almudena Carracedo, has written this in the film's blog:

"We are thrilled beyond words to report that Made in L.A., which started as such a small grassroots project, has just won an Emmy award! The film received the Emmy at the 29th Annual News and Documentary Emmy® Awards in the category of Outstanding Continuing Coverage of a News Story-Long Form at a ceremony on Monday night (September 22nd) in New York. 'Made in L.A.' has been a six-year journey, and we couldn't be happier to have received this honor. Robert and I were both there to accept the award and it was exciting and very moving... Acceptance speeches provide a unique opportunity to say 'thank you', since this film could not have been made without the care, support and encouragement of literally hundreds of people. And so we took the moment to thank our families, our friends, our amazing crew, the organizations that believed in us (including NALIP and our fiscal sponsor Women Make Movies), and the hundreds of individuals that have supported this film throughout its journey. Special thanks must also go to our Executive Producers Simon Kilmurry, Cara Mertes and Sally Jo Fifer, and to Cynthia Lopez, Annelise Wunderlich and the amazing teams at American Documentary P.O.V. and ITVS that took such care and devotion in bringing 'Made in L.A.' to a national audience. We owe a huge debt of gratitude to PBS and to our funders ITVS, POV, the Sundance Documentary Fund, Latino Public Broadcasting, CPB, Pacific Pioneer Fund, Unitarian Universalist Fund for a Just Society, Diane Middleton Foundation, Puffin Foundation, Agape Foundation, and nearly 300 individual donors. Finally, we thank our outreach partners for helping us to spread the word and make an impact!


Above all, we owe the deepest, most personal thanks to the people in the film and to the three amazing women in 'Made in L.A.', Lupe, Maria and Maura, who opened their lives to us and allowed us to capture and portray their stories in 'Made in L.A.'. As we said in front of more than 1,200 attendees on Monday night, we dedicate this award to them, because it was their fight for their rights and personal dignity that taught us the true meaning of courage and perseverance".

"Made in L.A." is Carracedo’s first feature documentary. The 70-minute film follows the story of three Latina immigrants working in Los Angeles garment sweatshops as they embark on a three-year odyssey to win basic labor protections from a trendy clothing retailer.

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