Pamela Katz | |
---|---|
Born |
Rhinebeck, New York |
16 April 1958
Occupation | Screenwriter, novelist, director |
Years active | 1987-present |
Spouse(s) | Florian Ballhaus |
Website | pkatz.com |
Pamela Katz (born April 16, 1958) is an American screenwriter and novelist best known for her collaborations with director Margarethe von Trotta, including Rosenstrasse and Hannah Arendt.
She is currently a teacher of screenwriting at the Tisch School of the Arts.
Katz was born on April 16, 1958 in Rhinebeck, New York to psychoanalyst Natalie Becker and philosophy professor Joseph Katz who had moved to the United States in 1940 from Leipzig, Germany. In 1980 she received her Bachelor's degree of Arts from Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. While she majored in Anthropology, upon graduating she began working in the film world in various technical capacities. This included working with directors such as Martin Scorsese, Mike Nichols and Spike Lee.
The trajectory of Katz's film career has been marked by her fascinations with historical biography with special attention to the cultural context and ramifications of the holocaust. She began her career as a filmmaker with her debut short In a Jazz Way, a thirty minute film co-directed with Louise Ghertler about dance documentarian Mura Dehn. The film was perceived as unusual for its avoidance of typical documentary tropes and its usage of conversation to convey a sense of Dehn's legacy.
Her breakthrough film Rosenstrasse was co-written with director Margarethe von Trotta and came out in 2003. The film centered around the Rosenstrasse protest which occurred in Berlin in 1943. It was concerned with the concept of the good German during the Nazi era and though von Trotta insisted it was not intended to "rehabilitate the German" it was criticized by James Adams at the Globe & Mail for being "insufficiently emotionally complex."
Remembrance (2011) is a love story Katz wrote for director Anna Justice which begins with a Polish prisoner (Tomasz) rescuing his Jewish girlfriend (Hannah) from Auschwitz in 1944. After losing each other and becoming convinced that the other is dead, thirty years pass before Hannah sights Tomasz during an interview and the two reconnect. Though the idea was criticized as being unrealistic, Katz said in an interview with Susana Styron that "there [were] actually 600 attempted escapes from Auschwitz, about a third of which were actually successful."