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  1. Apr 1, 2023 · Barbara Kopple and Cinema Vérité Her always-on-the-record, fly-on-the-wall approach is the same, she says, whether she’s covering coal miners or celebrities. She refuses to be moderated or managed by publicists, even when working with the likes of Mike Tyson (the focus of her 1993 film Fallen Champ ), Woody Allen (featured in her 1997 film Wild Man Blues ), and the Dixie Chicks (2006’s Shut Up and Sing ).

  2. Jun 19, 2004 · NPR's Scott Simon talks to documentary filmmaker Barbara Kopple. Her work includes the Academy Award winning Harlan County, USA and American Dream. She's made films on subjects ranging from ...

  3. Barbara Kopple. Highest Rated: 100% Harlan County, U.S.A. (1976) Lowest Rated: 45% Havoc (2005) Birthday: Jul 30, 1946. Birthplace: New York, New York, USA. Documentarist whose celebrated films ...

  4. Biography. Documentarist whose celebrated films have focused almost exclusively on the struggle of workers to form unions. Kopple began making films in her clinical psychology class while at college in West Virginia and went to live among her coal-mining subjects in Kentucky to film her Oscar-winning debut, "Harlan County, U.S.A." (1976).

  5. Barbara Kopple. Producer, Director. Barbara Kopple is a two-time Academy Award® winning filmmaker. A director of documentaries, as well as narrative TV and film, her most recent project is the documentary Running From Crazy, which explores the life of actress Mariel Hemingway. In 2012, Barbara completed Fight To Live, which through the eyes of ...

  6. Barbara Kopple not only directed and produced Harlan County, U.S.A., but she also served as the film’s sound person, carrying the microphone on a boom and the Nagra recording equipment on her body. The invention and distribution of this relatively cheap and portable sync sound equipment in the early 1960s enabled even independent, poorly-funded documentary filmmakers to begin recording sound on location.

  7. With a career spanning more than forty years, Barbara Kopple (b. 1946) long ago established herself as one of the most prolific and award-winning American filmmakers of her generation. Her projects have ranged from labor union documentaries to fictional feature films to an educational series for kids on the Disney Channel.