NEW YORK FILM ACADEMY STUDENTS ARE NOW ELIGIBLE FOR FINANCIAL AID

The New York Film Academy is delighted to announce that students enrolling in its Bachelor’s of Fine Arts Degrees (BFA) are now entitled to financial aid under the Free Application for Federal Student Aid’s (FAFSA). Currently, NYFA offers a BFA in FilmmakingActing for FilmScreenwritingProducingAnimationPhotography, and Game Design at its Los Angeles campus, which shoots on the Universal Studios backlot.

Qualified BFA students have the option of completing course work at the New York City locations in a one-year, non-degree program and request that their course work be accepted for advanced standing in the degree program at the Los Angeles campus. If students are interested in this route, they must apply and be accepted to the degree program in Los Angeles. These students will take a modified course of study that will deliver the liberal arts courses in year two and three exclusively. The progression of the fine arts film classes will be slightly adjusted to accommodate this modified course of study.

Beginning January 1st of each year, The U.S. Department of Education will accept a FAFSA, and students are encouraged to submit applications as early as possible in order to be considered for maximum financial assistance.

Students are also advised by The Department of Education to utilize the IRS Data Retrieval Tool (DRT), which is made available on the FAFSA. This tool retrieves student tax information, not including wages, directly from the IRS and automatically inputs the information on his or her application. In addition to students, parents may also access and use the DRT.

If an applicant completed a FAFSA in previous years, he or she may submit a renewal FAFSA the next year. Changes in information must be updated annually. The FAFSA consists of many questions regarding a student’s (and his or her family’s) assets, income, and dependency. The numbers are entered into a formula that determines the Expected Family Contribution (EFC). A number of factors are used in determining the EFC including the household size, income, number of students from household in college and assets (not including retirement and 401(k) funds). This information is required due to the expectation of the parents’ contributions to their child’s education. There are no questions regarding race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, disability, or religion.

A Student Aid Report (SAR), which is a summary of the FAFSA responses, is forwarded to the student. The student should review the SAR carefully for errors and make any corrections. An electronic version of the SAR (called an ISIR) is made available to the colleges/universities the student selects on the FAFSA. The ISIR is also sent to state agencies that award need-based aid.

While almost every student is eligible for some form of financial aid, not all are awarded these benefits. Those who are not granted need-based aid may still be eligible for an unsubsidized Stafford Loan, regardless of status or income.

The New York Film Academy hopes this recent approval will provide more interested applicants the opportunity to explore our hands-on, intensive BFA degrees in the arts.

Team NYFA Walking in LA

Drew Carey
Drew Carey at AIDS WALK in LA

On Sunday, October 13, dozens of staff, faculty and students from New York Film Academy joined a crowd of 25,000 for the 10K LA AIDS Walk. Since its inception in 1985, AIDS Walk Los Angeles has benefited AIDS Project Los Angeles (APLA), a service organization dedicated to improving the lives of people affected by HIV disease, reducing the incidence of HIV infection and advocating for fair and effective HIV–related public policy.

This year, Drew Carey and the always-resplendent Richard Simmons helped rally the troops as thousands took to the streets and proved that people really do walk in LA. (And, in the process, raised more than $2 Million for APLA!)

Braving early morning shuttles, road closures and the overwhelming desire to sleep in, Team NYFA made its presence known at AIDS Walk. Team co-captain Sara Blindauer led the charge while two-year-old Judah Conner pushed co-captain Eric Conner to reach the finish line. Thankfully, AIDS Walk’s volunteers enabled the team to go strong via water, snack bars, popsicles and Cheetos!

With the help of star fundraising students like Amanda Vanucchi & Arndt Werling and the generosity of the school’s faculty & staff, New York Film Academy is one of the AIDS Walk’s top five fundraising Universities… and rising.

To donate to our team (till Nov 8) or learn more about AIDS Walk, visit: http://awla2013.kintera.org/nyfa.

ready to rock

richard simmons

New York Film Academy Continues to be Top Military Friendly School

NYFA Save A Suit

Recently, the New York Film Academy volunteered to produce a video for the “Save A Suit Foundation” at the Met’s Citi Field. The nonprofit organization provides military veterans with professional business attire and the confidence needed to succeed in the work force. Several NYFA alumni were also invited to the event, as the New York Film Academy is the school of choice for many veterans. “This is such a wonderful job networking event for the men and women who deserve it most,” said Evan Leone, NYFA Director of Veterans Admissions in NY. “I didn’t hesitate in inviting several of my Veteran students.”

NYFA has also developed a partnership with The Soldiers Project, a nonprofit that provides free, confidential counseling to military service members and veterans. A clinician from the Soldiers Project visits the LA based campus every Wednesday and Thursday to provide counseling support. The organization has also provided training for faculty and staff on the common readjustment issues many veterans face as they return home. The film they shot here is intended to help Colleges to develop support programs for veterans, and how to best help them.

NYFA, a school synonymous with its hands-on intensive approach to learning, is honored to work with the Department of Veterans Affairs and participate in the post – 9/11 GI Bill and Yellow Ribbon tuition assistance programs at both New York City and Los Angeles campuses. Recently, MilitaryFriendlySchools.com listed NYFA as a Top Military Friendly School.

“If I can succeed at serving my country during a time of war, I can succeed at following my dreams at attending film school,” says NAVY Veteran and NYFA graduate, Paquita Hughes. If you served time in the military, you too can follow your dreams by pursuing an education in the arts at the New York Film Academy.

If you have any questions about financial aid and military benefits at New York Film Academy, please contact the Office of Veterans Services at [email protected] or call (818) 733-2600.

 

 

New York Film Academy Hosts Screening of Veteran Documentary

Screen Shot 2013-10-15 at 11.33.56 AM

This past Thursday, the New York Film Academy, in collaboration with the Soldiers Project, a non-profit which provides confidential readjustment counseling to veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, held a screening of Where Soldiers Come From. The screening was immediately followed by a Q&A with currently enrolled veteran students at NYFA.

nyfa veteransThe film is based on a four year journey of childhood friends whose lives are forever changed by war. Where Soldiers Come From, provides a glimpse beyond the guns, glamour, and politics of war, and highlights family, friendship, community and the impact of war on our returning service members and veterans.

The Q&A allowed currently enrolled civilian students, faculty, and staff to ask the panel of veteran students about their experiences, while in the military, after the military, and now as a college students. The panel consisted of a former special operations service member (BFA Screenwriter), a Marine who deployed to Afghanistan (BFA Filmmaking), and two Army veterans (BFA Acting/MFA Acting), including a woman veteran who served as an MP (Military Police).

“The event brought together not only our veteran student population, but our entire campus community as a whole to learn about the experiences of our veterans,” says John Powers, Director Office of Veterans Services at NYFA. “With more than 200 veterans on campus, we are focused on providing services to ensure that NYFA veterans are meeting their educational and artistic goals while bridging the civilian, military gap.”

How David Marshall Grant’s Persistence Led to His Success

This Monday, the New York Film Academy hosted a screening of ABC’s Brothers and Sisters with executive producer/show-runner David Marshall Grant. The event was moderated by Producer, Tova Laiter.

In addition to Grant’s success in television as Executive Producer/show-runner of NBC’s Smash and ABC’s Brothers & Sisters, he is an accomplished actor and playwright. His first play, Snakebit, was nominated for both a Drama Desk Award and Outer Critics Circle Award. His second play, Current Events, was produced by the Manhattan Theatre Club in 2000. His most recent play, Pen, opened in 2006 at Playwrights Horizons. As an actor, Grant is best known for playing opposite Richard Gere in Broadway’s Bent and for his Tony-nominated performance in Angels in America. His acting credits include film and television work in such projects as The Devil Wears Prada, The Stepford Wives, The Rock, Air America, And the Band Played On, Citizen Cohn, thirtysomething, Eli Stone, and Party Down.

david grantAfter attending the Yale School of Drama, David went to the Eugene O’Neill Playwrights Conference in Connecticut where he did a workshop of Bent. He was very lucky to experience immediate success right out of school when the production, which was bound for Broadway, asked him to star opposite Richard Gere. “So much of life is what fate brings you, and so much of life is what you bring when fate shows up,” said Grant.

It was during his time at the playwright’s conference that David became fascinated with story and by the idea that the way an actor’s mind thought could actually help you as a writer. This kept gnawing at him until one summer he began to write a play. He wrote 23 pages the first day, assuming he could have the production up and running in no time. However, he ended up working on the play for five years and it was never produced despite his efforts.

When his acting career stalled after Bent, David started taking writing more seriously. His second play was entitled, Snakebit. It was twelve years before this film was produced on a very small scale at Grove Street Theater in New York. There was an audience of 53 people. One of these people was Peter Marks of The New York Times. Marks wrote a great review of the play, and the next day everyone was calling David. It seemed there was a renewed interest in him.

At the time, David was auditioning for episodic television and not getting the parts, so he decided to “open the door that wasn’t locked” and become a writer. Although, even that became an immense struggle for David. Five or six years later, John Robin Bates called David and asked him if he wanted to be a story editor on Brothers and Sisters, and he hasn’t stopped working since then.

David always tries to impress on his students that, “Failure is the norm,” and this industry is a long game. “You’ve got to keep your eye on the prize, and if it doesn’t happen today, it might not happen for the next five years. But that doesn’t mean you give up.”

David was also one of the first brave actors to play gay characters, like he did in Bent, when other actors (straight or gay) wouldn’t. This was also at a point when David hadn’t been out with the public. In thirtysomething, David took the opportunity to play a gay character, even though he was convinced it would ruin his career. He brought up the point that there hasn’t been a major movie actor that has come out yet. You can’t be Brad Pitt or Tom Cruise and be known as gay.

QUESTION: Can you give advice to actors who want to transition into producing?

DAVID: An actor’s job should always be to figure out how he or she can support the STORY—understand what your place in the story is. You are a part of the larger thing—and that thing is everything—STORY.

QUESTION: What are some of the roles of a show-runner?

DAVID: Your first job is to come up with a story every week. You follow the story. Also, it’s about navigating personalities—the demands of the studio and the actors on the script. That’s what the show-runner does. In the process of pushing that story up the hill, he deals with every human being that touches that story.

David’s story was inspirational in regards to the success one can achieve in this industry through endurance and never giving up. He made the point to say that you must consciously inspire yourself. “It really works by failing every single day, until the world sees,” he concluded.

New York Film Academy Photography Students Shoot German Currents: 7th Annual Film Festival of German FIlm

NYFA Photography
photo by Andrew Linga

Photography students from the Los Angeles campus were on hand as the exclusive event photographers for the Goethe-Institut Los Angeles German Currents 7th Annual Film Festival, held last weekend at the Egyptian Theatre in the heart of Hollywood. Students shot the opening night event, workshops and screenings over the weekend. A sample of their images are below or checkout the link here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/goethe-institut_los_angeles/

Thanks to July 2013 1YR students: Andrew Linga, Aric Coppola and Jimmy Rhodes; January 2013 MFA students: Nicole Campbell and Joseph Bornilla; January 2013 2YR student: Liam Hayes; and January 2013 One Year graduate Luc-Richard Elie. Great job everyone!

joseph bornilla
photo by Joseph Bornilla

Andrew Linga
photo by Andrew Linga

 

New York Film Academy Photography Students Meet Historical Processes Through Hands-on Field Trips

Students enrolled in New York Film Academy photography courses at the Los Angeles campus attended two exciting events last week. Renowned photographer, Abelardo Morell’s retrospective exhibition, The Universe Next Door, opened at the Getty Museum and students were treated to a talk by the artist last Thursday night.
NYFA Photography
It’s a small photography world –  one of our regular guest instructors, Luther Gerlach, built a special camera obscura for the Getty exhibition and NYFA photo students attended a wet-plate workshop with him on Friday.

Luther Gerlach has been making images using historical processes for over thirty years, and he makes them big! With these processes, big means big negatives – not made from the computer using transparency paper. He uses large format cameras (8×10 inch through 30×40 inch) and lenses dating from 1850 to 1940, which he has been collecting and restoring for many years.

The wet-plate photographic process dates from 1851. For tintypes, he uses black sheet metal bought from a trophy manufacturer (it’s clean and painted black – which is necessary for the negative image to show up).

One of Luther’s terrific qualities is how open he is. He opens his home for students, shares his historical collection of daguerreotypes and wet plate images, and makes a 12″x20″ tintype group photo (see below) using his mobile dark room – a truck. He’s generous with explaining the process and it’s clear he is one of the most knowledgeable people on this format. We like Luther.

NYFA Plate

Interested in our photography courses? Find out how!

 

NYFA Filmmaking Instructor Directs Interactive Murder Mystery Series

untitled murder project

Starting tomorrow, Untitled Murder Project 2.0, from Unlinear.tv, will be available online. The 49-episode interactive murder mystery comes from director and New York Film Academy Instructor, Alonso Mayo. Untitled Murder Project 2.0 is the follow-up to 2011’s Untitled Fiction Project, an hour-long experiment in unscripted fiction filmmaking about the aftermath of an affair. Like its predecessor, Untitled Murder Project 2.0 was shot using structured improvisation, with dialogue developed by the actors and the director on the day of the shoot based solely on an outline. The 13 original episodes of Untitled Fiction Project comprise Chapter 1 of Untitled Murder Project 2.0.

Alonso Mayo, recently wrote and directed the feature film The Story of Luke, starring Lou Taylor Pucci, Seth Green, Cary Elwes and Kristin Bauer. The film won 20 festival top prizes including Best Film from the San Diego Film Festival, Irvine Film Festival, and San Luis Obispo Film Festival. Originally from Lima, Peru, Mayo won the Student Academy Award with his American Film Institute thesis film WednesdayAfternoon.

“I wanted to experiment with a new storytelling format,” said Mayo. “I love making feature films, but to a certain point the format is limiting – given the storytelling possibilities offered by the internet. It was a great challenge to develop a project that puts many of the decisions that you would ordinarily be in charge of as a filmmaker in the hands of the audience, and still retain enough control to guarantee a uniform and entertaining experience.”

Untitled Murder Project 2.0 Chapters 1 & 2 are available starting 10/10/2013 (22 total episodes) and the next 3 chapters (9 episodes each) will be released weekly through the end of October.