Frank Stiefel | |
|---|---|
| Alma mater | City College of New York[1] |
| Occupations | Director, screenwriter, editor, actor, producer, photographer |
| Years active | 1970–present |
| Website | www |
Frank Stiefel is an American filmmaker and photographer. His filmHeaven Is a Traffic Jam on the 405 won theOscar forBest Documentary Short Subject at the90th Academy Awards.[2]
Stiefel was born to aJewish family[3] inNew York City and attended The City College of New York.[4] Stieifel spent most of his career as an executive in the commercial production industry.[5] As an executive producer at Stiefel & Company (and later atRadicalMedia), Stiefel oversaw the production of thousands of TV commercials.[5]
He made his directorial debut in 2009 with the movieIngelore, a short film about his mother,Ingelore Herz Honigstein, a deaf Holocaust survivor. The documentary, which he dedicated to his mother, tells the story of how she survived being raped by two Nazis and eventually managed to flee to theUnited States.[6] The film premiered at the Berlin Film Festival in 2010 and aired on HBO in 2011. At that point, Stiefel retired to concentrate on non-fiction filmmaking full-time.[5]
Heaven is a Traffic Jam on the 405, his second film, won both the 2017Full Frame Audience Award & Full Frame Jury Award for Best Short. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject soon after Stiefel's 70th birthday.[5] The film won theOscar forBest Documentary Short Subject at the90th Academy Awards.[7]
Frank Stiefel is married to artist BJ Dockweiler.[8]