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  1. Susan Streitfeld. Director: Female Perversions. Susan trained in painting at Syracuse University, completed a BFA in Film and Television at NYU Film School and after a stint making documentaries for The Smithsonian Institute, she relocated to Los Angeles to join the faculty of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts/West as an acting teacher and ...

    • Director, Writer, Manager
    • Susan Streitfeld
  2. Susan is a filmmaker of visually stunning and provocative films. Combining her expertise with actors, her love of the word and her painterly eye, both Female Perversions with Tilda Swinton and ...

    • 32
    • Streitfeld Productions
    • New York University-Tisch School of the Arts
  3. Female Perversions is a 1996 erotic drama film directed by Susan Streitfeld (in her feature directorial debut), based on the 1991 book Female Perversions: The Temptations of Emma Bovary by American psychoanalyst Louise J. Kaplan.

  4. Susan Streitfeld. Director: Female Perversions. Susan trained in painting at Syracuse University, completed a BFA in Film and Television at NYU Film School and after a stint making documentaries for The Smithsonian Institute, she relocated to Los Angeles to join the faculty of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts/West as an acting teacher and ...

  5. Female Perversions concerns Eve (Tilda Swinton), a dynamic powerhouse of a district attorney, fresh from an impressive courtroom victory over a sleazy businessman and on the verge of her greatest triumph, a governor’s appointment as a judge.

  6. May 2, 1997 · The film was directed and co-written by Susan Streitfeld, who was a high-powered agent (her clients have included Daniel Day Lewis, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Juliette Binoche and Joanne Whalley-Kilmer). She knows the business world firsthand.

  7. Holly Willis on Susan Streitfeld's Female Perversions. Writer/director Susan Streitfeld, an NYU film grad and co-founder of the theater company Hothouse, read the book and contacted Kaplan immediately about the rights. She then spent nearly three years adapting it.