Zoe Lister-Jones On Her New Movie Band Aid and Hiring an All-Woman Production Crew
EntertainmentWhen actor and writer Zoe Lister-Jones (Breaking Upwards, Life in Pieces) set out to make her charming directorial debut Band Aid, a film in which she stars opposite Adam Pally as a couple who tries to save their marriage by starting a rock band, she assembled a depressingly rare kind of production team: one entirely composed of women. In addition to producer Natalia Anderson and director of photography Hilary Spera, the film had a fluctuating team of 30-50 women each day that included female art directors, camera operators, electricians, sound editors and more.
While conversations about female representation in film tend to focus on on-screen portrayals and, most recently, the pay gap between women and men when it comes to acting, there’s arguably more work to be done getting women behind the camera. Here, Jezebel premieres the trailer for Band Aid and talks to Lister-Jones about making a movie just with women.
JEZEBEL: You’ve co-written and produced several films like Breaking Upwards and Consumed but Band Aid is your directorial debut. What made you finally want to direct this time?
ZOE LISTER-JONES: It was kind of a long time in the making. In co-writing and producing and starring in previous films I had sort of been working on those muscles and it felt like this was the next logical step. My husband Daryl [Wein] and I had made a lot of work together and had both came to the decision that it might be helpful to create some space in our relationship for things that weren’t work! When you’re making independent films it’s hard to set boundaries around where the work ends and your personal life begins.
This is very much a movie about a woman sort of finding new ways to express herself and overcoming trauma through art. Are Anna’s experiences with making personal art in the film similar to how you’ve ever approached your work at all?
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
 
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
        