
International award for Dales filmmaker Juliet Klottrup
She told the BBC: "Being recognised by Sony and sharing these stories on an international stage is incredibly meaningful."This work feels both personal and local to me, capturing stories of identity and belonging against the backdrop of the region's landscapes."She said she was honoured to have an audience in Los Angeles watch her work which was "very different to when I premiered the film to Joe in a very small pub in North Yorkshire on a laptop".
The filmmaker and photographer, who heralds from a rural community in the Dales near the Cumbrian border, graduated from the University of Brighton in 2016.Klottrup began photographing the Gypsy and Traveller community in 2019 and said she felt it was "really important to preserve and record a heritage that really matters and is so unique".She said: "Where I live the road connects North Yorkshire to Cumbria, and past my window Travellers make their way to Appleby Horse Fair."She explained that she met Joe out on the moors with his horses and wagon and they "just got chatting, sharing life stories" and he agreed to having his portrait taken, which led to the film.Travelling Home evolved from portraits and 8mm vignettes of Joe's daily life.Klottrup said: "He so beautifully articulated what his heritage and identity meant."There were more than 11,750 entries for the Sony awards, set up to nurture and celebrate new filmmaking talent.Travelling Home has also been chosen to be shown at several Bafta-qualifying festivals, including the London Film Festival.
Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.
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BBC News
7 hours ago
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