Lydia Dean Pilcher will discuss “Radium Girls” and “A Call to Spy” at the next Girls Club event. The conversation will take place Wednesday, October 21, at 3 p.m. EST and is open to the public. Be sure to register in advance.
Founded by Women and Hollywood publisher and founder Melissa Silverstein, the Girls Club is a community for women creatives, culture-changers, and storytellers to connect, create, network, advocate, support, and redefine entertainment. The Girls Club is offering a one-month membership free of charge when you sign up. If you identify as a woman and would like an invitation to this community, please email girlsclubnetwork@gmail.com and let us know a bit about who you are and what you do.
Find Girls Club event details, including official synopses and trailers for the films, and Pilcher’s bio below.
Synopsis for “Radium Girls”: Based on true events set in 1928, in New Jersey, teenage sisters, Bessie and Jo, dream of faraway places as the paint glow-in-the-dark watch dials at the American Radium Factory. When Jo loses a tooth, Bessie’s world turns upside down as the mystery of Jo’s disease slowly unravels. Bessie befriends two young activists and in a radical coming of age, she exposes a corporate scandal. Bessie and the “Radium Girls” file a lawsuit against American Radium. This notorious case ultimately led to a lasting impact in the area of workplace health and safety as well as the study of radioactivity.
Synopsis for “A Call to Spy”: At the dawn of World War II, a desperate Winston Churchill orders his new spy agency to train women for covert operations. Together, these female agents help undermine the Nazi regime in France, leaving an unmistakable legacy in their wake.
Bio: Lydia Dean Pilcher’s directorial debuts, “Radium Girls,” which she produced and co-directed,” and “A Call to Spy,” are both opening this month. Pilcher is also the longtime producer of Mira Nair’s films, including the new series, “A Suitable Boy,” that just premiered at TIFF. She is also an advocate for inclusion having launched the PGA Women’s Impact Network and created a class on inclusion at NYU. She also created PGA Green and created Greenproductionguide.com.