Peggy Rajski facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Peggy Rajski
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Born |
Stevens Point, Wisconsin, U.S.
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Occupation | Filmmaker |
Years active | 1983–present |
Notable work
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The Trevor Project Trevor (film) Matewan Little Man Tate The Grifters |
Peggy M. Rajski is an American filmmaker, best known for directing and co-producing the 1994 American short film Trevor, which won an Academy Award for "Best Live Action Short Film" at the 67th Annual Academy Awards in 1995. She is a founder of The Trevor Project, a crisis-intervention and ... prevent organization for LGBTQ+ youth. Rajski taught producing and filmmaking at New York University's graduate film program and was dean of the Loyola Marymount University School of Film and Television in Los Angeles, California from 2018 to 2021.
In November 2022 she became Interim CEO of The Trevor Project.
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Early life and education
Rajski was born and raised in Stevens Point, Wisconsin where she was one of ten siblings. Her father, Pat A. Rajski, was a U.S. Navy veteran who participated in Admiral Byrd's Antarctic Expedition and Operation Highjump. Following his discharge from the Navy, Pat Rajski joined Consolidated Papers Wisconsin River Division. Her mother, Patricia A. (Simon) Rajski, was a homemaker.
As a youngster, she was a member of the local Girl Scouts Troop and was a recipient of the Marian Award in 1966.
Rajski attended Maria High School, a local all-girls Catholic school which merged with Pacelli High School when she was a junior. In high school, she was a varsity cheerleader, color guard Sergeant and active on the student council. She was a photographer for, and later editor of, the school yearbook. She graduated in 1971.
Rajski received a bachelor's degree in 1975 from the University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point, and a master of fine arts degree from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1977.
Filmmaking career
Following college, Rajski moved to New York to pursue a career in the film industry She initially work as a receptionist at a firm that produced corporate and moved into the role of producer/director within one year.
She began interfacing with people making low budget indie films and met writer/director John Sayles and producer Maggie Renzi at a friend's party in 1983. The couple were looking for a production manager for Sayles film next film project, Lianna and Rajski was offered the job.
She went on to produce a number of Sayles's early films, including The Brother from Another Planet (1984), Matewan (1987), and Eight Men Out (1988), also working with other filmmakers to produce Little Man Tate (1991; directed by and starring Jodie Foster), The Grifters (1990; directed by Stephen Frears and co-produced with Martin Scorsese), and Home for the Holidays (1995; also in collaboration with Jodie Foster).
In 1984, Rajski served as the producer for Bruce Springsteen's video for Born in the USA, which was directed by Sayles. She went on to produce the music videos for Springsteen's I'm on Fire and Glory Days with Maggie Renzi.
In 1994, Rajski directed the American short film Trevor and co-produced it with Randy Stone. Written by Celeste Lecesne and set in 1981, the film follows a 13-year-old boy named Trevor, a Diana Ross fan, when his crush on a schoolmate named Pinky Faraday is discovered. In 1995, Trevor tied for an Oscar for Best Short Subject with Franz Kafka's It's a Wonderful Life at the 67th Academy Awards. It also won the Teddy Award for Best Short at the Berlin International Film Festival in 1995. In 2017, the Writers Theatre in Chicago premiered "Trevor the Musical", adapted from Trevor. As of 2019[update], it was being adapted as a Broadway musical.
In 2003, Rajski directed episodes of the TV series, ER; she was the only new director introduced in the show's ninth season. In 2003, Rajski directed an episodes of the TV series, ER featuring Aaron Paul in a key supporting role.
In 2018, Rajski was selected as a mentor for Film Independent’s Global Media Makers program, an initiative in partnership with the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. The program serves to create relationships between filmmakers and industry professionals in the U.S. and abroad.
Rajski is a member of the Director’s Guild of American (DGA), Film Independent, and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences (AMPAS).
The Trevor Project
In 1998, Rajski founded The Trevor Project to create a 24/7 crisis intervention and suicide prevention organization for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning youth[i] with Randy Stone and Celeste Lecesne.
When HBO confirmed they would be airing the film that year with Ellen DeGeneres hosting, Rajski searched for a service that provided round-the-clock support for queer and questioning young people so that young viewers who identified with the central character’s experience would have a place to turn for help. Discovering that no such resource existed, Rajski moved to establish a nationwide 24-hour crisis line for LGBTQ+ youth which became The Trevor Project. When the film premiered on HBO in August 1998, The Trevor Project’s crisis line phone number was posted on screen as the film’s end credits rolled, and counselors received more than 1500 calls that first night.
..... The episode resulted in a record number of calls to the non-profit’s hotline, and record traffic to its website. Rajski stated that because the show "worked in conjunction" with The Trevor Project, the organization was prepared in advance to handle the increase in hotline traffic, which was "triple the [usual] number of calls." They also saw a nearly sevenfold increase to 10,000 website visitors on the evening the program aired.
Rajski has been an outspoken advocate and frequent speaker in support of crisis intervention and suicide prevention for LGBTQ+ youth. In 2022, she was the keynote speaker at student fundraiser held at the University of Missouri Kansas City Pride Breakfast. She has remained an active member of The Trevor Project’s Board of Directors since its founding in 1998 and was named interim CEO in 2022.
In 2024, the organization received outreach to its crisis services (phone, text and chat) from over 500,000+ contacts.
Academic career
In 2010, Rajski was appointed associate professor at New York University Tisch School of the Arts Graduate Film Program and promoted to head of studies for the producing track in 2011. She also served as a member of the faculty committee for the NYU Cinema Research Institute. During this time, the University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point named Rajski a College of Fine Arts and Communication Distinguished Alumnus.
Rajski was named Dean of the Loyola Marymount University School of Film & Television in 2018. In April 2019, she was a speaker and panel moderator at Film Independent's 14th annual Film Independent Forum, and is a frequent guest lecturer and panelist at industry events in Los Angeles and elsewhere. She left Loyola Marymount University in 2021.
Personal life
Rajski married actor Josh Mostel in 1983. The couple divorced in 1995. Rajski has been married to Paul Colin since 2012.
In 2024, Rajski joined NFL player Carl Nassib to announce the Cleveland Browns' second round draft pick during the annual nationally televised NFL event.
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Awards and honors
- Muse Award, New York Women in Film & Television, 1991
- Academy Award, Best Live Action Short Film, 1995
- Distinguished Alumnus, University of Wisconsin Stevens Point College of Fine Arts and Communications, 2014
- Pioneers of Queer Cinema, UCLA Film Archive, 2022 (the only non-LGBTQ-identified filmmaker to be honored)
- LGBTQ Power Players, Politics NY, 2023
Filmography
Year | Title | Position |
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2015 | Sweetheart Deal (documentary) | Executive producer; post-production |
2013 | Quad | Executive producer |
2012 | Grassroots | Producer |
2009 | Crossing Midnight (documentary short) | Producer |
2008 | One Bridge to the Next (documentary short) | Producer |
2007 | Towelhead | Executive producer |
2005 | Bee Season | Executive producer |
2002 | The Scoundrel's Wife | Producer |
1997 | Boys Life 2 | Producer—segment "Trevor" |
1995 | Home for the Holidays | Producer |
1994 | Trevor (short) | Director, Producer |
1992 | Used People | Producer |
1991 | Little Man Tate | Producer |
1990 | The Grifters | Co-producer |
1988 | Eight Men Out | Co-producer |
1987 | Matewan | Producer |
1984 | The Brother from Another Planet | Producer |
1983 | Lianna | Production manager |
See also
- List of female film and television directors
- List of LGBT-related films directed by women