Award-Winning Short Film TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW Calls Time's Up on Mistreatment of Women in the Arts
By: Macon Prickett Jul. 18, 2018

Even before TIME'S UP became the call to arms for women around the world facing abuse, harassment and discrimination, two Australian filmmakers had joined forces in response to their personal experiences in the theater, film and television industries.
TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW is a 24-minute dramatic short that is provocative, compelling and thoroughly relevant. It premieres online on Vimeo on Monday July 23. Made in 2016, TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW had its World Premiere at the 2017 Sydney Film Festival, followed by its International Premiere at the 2017 Telluride Film Festival, screening in the Filmmakers of Tomorrow program curated by leading directors Gregory Nava (Frida, El Norte) and BARRY Jenkins (Moonlight), as one of only 16 short films selected from around the world. TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW - the title is taken from one of the most famous speeches in Shakespeare's play Macbeth - was produced in less than ten weeks after writer/director Sunday Emerson Gullifer, who had spent years working at some of Australia's leading theater companies, approached producer Alexandra George with an early draft of her script challenging perceptions of the supposedly privileged and glamorous lives of working actresses."I thought about the way men are so often elevated as geniuses, while women have to prove themselves over and over again," says Gullifer.
"There was a sense that we were doing something right, but also a sense that Sunday was hitting something very boldly in the zeitgeist, which also happened to be very true for her," says George. "Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow is a film that challenges the stories we tell and speaks to anyone who has ever had to walk away."
TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW is a complex drama set in the world of a professional theatre company, following Lizzie, a working theatre actor playing Lady Macduff in a bold and visceral production of Shakespeare's Macbeth. When the play's internationally successful auteur director, Helmut, pushes the cast BEYOND their limits, Lizzie is thrown into a dark and unacceptable world of onstage violence and brutality, causing her to question a life of commitment and sacrifice to her calling. It is a compelling, unsettling and triumphant examination of what it means to be a woman in a world that celebrates male genius.

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