Stephanie Rothman(I)
- Writer
- Director
- Producer
Writer/director Stephanie Rothman was one of the few female filmmakers
who specialized in low-budget drive-in exploitation fare in the '60s
and '70s. Her movies are distinguished by gutsy, strong-willed and
sympathetic women main characters and a radical libertarian feminist
point of view. Stephanie was born on November 9, 1936 in Paterson, New Jersey (made famous by Lou Costello, who
mentioned it in every one of his movies). She was the first lady to be
awarded the Directors Guild of America fellowship. Rothman served as an
associate producer on
Queen of Blood (1966),
Beach Ball (1965) and
Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet (1965).
She co-wrote and co-directed the fright flick
Blood Bath (1966) and made her solo
directorial debut with the frothy "Beach Party"-type romp
It's a Bikini World (1967).
Stephanie made two features for
Roger Corman's New World Pictures: the
excellent
The Student Nurses (1970) --
which was the first and best of the popular nurse comedy cycle -- and
the offbeat and inspired horror bloodsucker outing
The Velvet Vampire (1971).
Rothman then went to work for Dimension Pictures, in which she and her
writer/producer husband
Charles S. Swartz had a minority
share, where she made the charming
Group Marriage (1972), the
delightful
The Working Girls (1974) and
the gritty Knuckle-Men (1973)
(an early vehicle for Tom Selleck. Moreover,
she wrote the story for the enjoyable fantasy adventure
Beyond Atlantis (1973) and penned
the screenplay for the amusingly inane
Starhops (1978). In 2007 Stephanie was
honored with a retrospective on her work at the Vienna International
Film Festival.