Julia Hart (born April 7, 1982) is an American filmmaker and actress. She is known for writing and directing the comedy drama Miss Stevens (2016), the superhero drama Fast Color (2018), the musical romance Stargirl (2020), and the crime thriller I'm Your Woman (2020).
9-631: Julia Hart may refer to: Julia Hart (filmmaker) (born 1982), American filmmaker and actress Julia Hart (wrestler) (born 2001), American pro-wrestler Julia Hart, New Zealand national champion pole vaulter; see List of pole vault national champions (women) Julia Hart (19th century), daughter of Isaiah Hart and namesake of the city street in Jacksonville Julia Catherine Beckwith Hart (1796-1867), Canadian novelist Julia Hart, British Green politician who participated in
18-570: A screenwriter. Miss Stevens was Hart's directorial debut. Inspired by her experience as a teacher, Miss Stevens follows a teacher as she chaperones three students on a weekend trip to a drama competition. This film premiered at the South by Southwest (SXSW) Film Festival on March 12, 2016. Miss Stevens was nominated for the Grand Jury Award and Gamechanger Award at the festival. Hart's film Fast Color premiered at South by Southwest in 2018,
27-527: A tour of the Great Ormond Street Hospital . After returning home to the United States, she asked her friends to make donations to the hospital in lieu of presents for her tenth birthday. Directly after graduating college, Hart began teaching high school at 25 years old. After eight years of teaching, she quit her job to pursue screenwriting. In addition to her father, her brother Jake is also
36-455: A year when 80% of the films in the SXSW festival's narrative feature competition were directed or co-directed by women. Hart co-wrote Fast Color and I'm Your Woman with Jordan Horowitz , who has also served as a producer on her projects. Hart is married to film producer Jordan Horowitz . The couple have two children together. Jordan Horowitz Jordan Horowitz (born April 10, 1980)
45-675: Is a screenwriter in Hollywood , and her mother Judith is an actress. In 1998, while still a teenager, Hart co-founded the Peter Pan Birthday Club, a charity program associated with the Peter Pan Children's Fund. The Birthday Club was inspired by one of her own experiences as a child. In 1992, while in London for the UK premiere of the movie Hook , which was written by her father, she was given
54-602: Is an American film producer . He is best known for producing the musical romantic-drama film La La Land that earned numerous awards and nominations including a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Picture with producers Marc Platt and Fred Berger . Horowitz was raised in Westchester County, New York . He is of Jewish descent. In 2002, he graduated from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois . At
63-458: The 2017 Warwickshire County Council election Adelaide Julia Hart (1900–1995), American political activist See also [ edit ] Julia Haart (born 1971), U.S. fashion designer Julie Hart (disambiguation) Julian Hart (disambiguation) [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
72-472: The 89th Academy Awards , presenters Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty announced that La La Land was the winner of Best Picture. However, they had mistakenly been given the envelope for Best Actress, a category in which Emma Stone had won for her role in La La Land several minutes prior. When the mistake was realized, Horowitz rushed to the microphone to announce Moonlight as the correct winner, snatching
81-443: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Julia_Hart&oldid=1250139246 " Category : Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Julia Hart (filmmaker) Julia Hart was born on April 7, 1982. Her father James
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