The 2009 Sundance Film
Festival is pleased to announce that Adam, directed by Max Mayer, is
the recipient of this year’s Alfred P. Sloan Prize. The Prize, which
carries a $20,000 cash award to the filmmaker provided by the Alfred P.
Sloan Foundation, is presented to an outstanding feature film focusing on
science or technology as a theme, or depicting a scientist, engineer or
mathematician as a major character.
Adam is a love story between
a man with Asperger's Syndrome (Hugh Dancy) and the woman who moves into
his apartment building (Rose Byrne) who has just had her heart
broken. It is about making the strange familiar and the obstacles we
all face when we try to love intimately. The film, which screened in
Dramatic Competition, was selected “for its credible and moving portrayal
of an engineer with Asperger's Syndrome whose passion for science helps him
in his struggle to achieve a meaningful
relationship.”
Director Max Mayer is a Founder and
Producing Director of New York Stage and Film which has presented
twenty-four summer seasons of original plays at the Powerhouse Theatre at
Vassar College. Mayer has directed over fifty new plays including
world or US premieres by writers such as John Patrick Shanley, Lee
Blessing, Alexandra Gersten-Vassilaros, Richard Nelson, George F. Walker
and Eric Overmyer. His productions have opened both Off-Broadway and in
regional theatres including Arena Stage, Long Wharf and Steppenwolf in
Chicago. For television, Mayer has directed episodes of NBC’s THE
WEST WING, ABC’s ALIAS and CBS’s FAMILY LAW. Mayer directed his
first feature film, Better Living, starring Roy Scheider, Olympia
Dukakis and Edward Hermann which opened theatrically in 2000. Last year,
Adam was chosen as a winner of the 12th Annual Writers’ Network
Fiction and Screenplay Competition. Adam is his second feature
film.
The Alfred P. Sloan Prize is a major
component of the Sundance Science-in-Film Initiative, which is made
possible by a grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The Initiative
supports the development and exhibition of new independent film projects
that explore science and technology themes or that depict scientists,
engineers and mathematicians in engaging and innovative ways. In
addition to the Prize, the Initiative presents a panel discussion at the
Festival that brings together scientists and filmmakers to explore
compelling, contemporary issues regarding science in film; and, in the
Sundance Feature Film
Program, the Initiative supports the
Sloan Commissioning Fund, which provides resources for Initiative projects
early in the development phase; and the Sloan Fellowship, which develops
eligible projects at the Sundance Feature Film Labs towards production.
This Initiative blends the Sloan Foundation’s goal of enhancing public
understanding of science and technology with Sundance Institute’s mission
to foster independent voices and compelling storytelling in
film.
Previous Alfred P. Sloan Prize Winners
include: Alex Rivera, Sleep Dealer (2008); Shi-Zheng Chen, Dark
Matter (2007); Andrucha Waddington, The House of Sand (2006);
Werner Herzog, Grizzly Man (2005) and Shane Carruth, Primer
(2004).
The winning film was selected by a
committee of film and science professionals based on the quality of the
film’s presentation of science and technology themes and/or characters.
This year’s Alfred P. Sloan jury members include:
Fran Bagenal – Fran
Bagenal’s research interests are in the magnetic fields of planets,
planetary plasmas and the interaction of planetary objects - from Jupiter
down to comets - with the solar wind or magnetospheric plasmas. She works
with data from planetary missions (Galileo, Deep Space 1, New Horizons) as
well as emissions observed remotely with telescopes (HST, Cassini) Selected
Recent Publications: Jupiter: The Planet, Satellites and Magnetosphere,
Fran Bagenal, Bill McKinnon, Tim Dowling (eds), Cambridge University Press
2004 Modeling temporal variability of plasma conditions in the Io plasma
torus during the Cassini era, Peter Delamere, Andrew Steffl and Fran
Bagenal, J. Geophys. Res., 109, A10216, 2004 Pluto's kinetic interaction
with the solar wind, Peter Delamere and Fran Bagenal, Geophys. Res. Lett.,
31, L04807, 2004
Rodney Brooks -- In addition
to his multiple roles at MIT, Rodney Brooks is Chairman and Chief Technical
Officer of iRobot Corporation. He received degrees in pure mathematics from
the Flinders University of South Australia and the Ph.D. in Computer
Science from Stanford University in 1981. Brooks is a Founding Fellow of
the American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) and a Fellow of
the American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS).
Raymond Gesteland -- Raymond
Gesteland earned his Ph. D from Harvard University. He was working in
Geneva as a postdoc in Alfred Tissieres' and Pierce Barrs' lab, when he
began looking for work back in the US. John Cairns hired him in Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory in 1967 where he began work as Assistant Director for
Research with Jim Watson. His research in the lab involved working on
translation and trying to understand the regulation of translation of HT4
infected cells. He then began more research work into translation systems
for eukaryotic cells to begin understanding the genes in alden adeno
replicaton. Gesteland is a Distinguished Professor of Human Genetics at the
University of Utah.
Jeffrey Nachmanoff –
Jeffrey Nachmanoff studied Art and English Literature at Harvard University
before attending USC film school. He edited documentaries until
Paramount optioned his first screenplay. Since then he has worked as
a studio screenwriter on everything from science fiction to action
comedy. In 2004 he penned the script for the ecological disaster film,
The Day After Tomorrow with Roland Emmerich. In 2008 he wrote
and directed Traitor, a political thriller starring Don Cheadle and
Guy Pearce.
Alex Rivera -- Alex Rivera
is a New York based digital media artist and filmmaker. His first
feature film, Sleep Dealer premiered at Sundance 2008, and won two
awards, including the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award. Rivera is a
Sundance Fellow and a Rockefeller Fellow. His work, which addresses
concerns of the Latino community through a language of humor, satire, and
metaphor, has also been screened at The Berlin International Film Festival,
New Directors/New Films, The Guggenheim Museum, PBS, Telluride, and other
international venues.
Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation
This Sloan-Sundance partnership forms
part of a broader national program by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation to
stimulate leading artists in film, television, and theater; to create more
realistic and compelling stories about science and technology; and to
challenge existing stereotypes about scientists, engineers, and
mathematicians in the popular imagination. Over the past decade, the
Foundation has partnered with some of the top film schools in the country
– including AFI, Carnegie Mellon, Columbia, NYU, UCLA, and USC – and
established annual awards in screenwriting and film production and an
annual first-feature award for alumni. The Foundation has also started an
annual Sloan Feature Film Prize at the Hamptons International Film Festival
and initiated new screenwriting workshops at the Hamptons and TriBeca Film
Festival. In addition, it continues to work with leading writer/producers
and major studios to create more films, TV shows and TV movies featuring
scientists, mathematicians and engineers.
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