Joyce Skinner
Family name: Skinner
Work area/Craft/Role: Amateur filmmaker
Industry: Film
Websites: The Mace Archive, The Free Library, Women's Film and Television History
Joyce Skinner was born in 1920. Ebin.pub
She originally trained to be a secondary school teacher, though that was interrupted by wartime events. Ebin.pub
Her specialisms in her teaching career included art and physical education. Ebin.pub
Film-Making & Amateur Cinema Work
Despite being a teacher, film was her passion. She borrowed a camera early on and began making films in her spare time. Ebin.pub
She co-founded the South Birmingham Cine Society in the early 1950s. Ebin.pub
In that club:
• She and other women made films together, sometimes working separately from the male members in sub-groups. Ebin.pub
• Joyce Skinner became chair of the club. Ebin.pub
• She donated a trophy which she won repeatedly in competitions. Ebin.pub
Career Outside Film
As a single person during her teaching career, she had flexibility to take opportunities outside school, which occasionally involved film commissions. Ebin.pub
She attained the rank of Deputy-Head in her school career. Ebin.pub
Filmworks & Themes
Her films often focused on educational, community, local life and travel themes. Subjects included:
• School life, including inventive teaching setups (e.g. an improvised ski slope inside a school hall) Ebin.pub
• Educational cruises, visits abroad, tours, and travelogue content. Ebin.pub
• Commissioned work: films on electricity, safety / accident prevention, elderly care, disability, youth and career options. Ebin.pub
• Wildlife & local nature – she recorded flora/fauna, for instance bird-box activity using small or closed circuit cameras. Ebin.pub
• Documentaries of local & regional life: village anniversaries, floods. She also filmed from aerial viewpoints later in her life. Ebin.pub
Later Life & Technological Evolution
After retiring from teaching, she continued making films for another 26 years, adapting to changing formats & technology (from film to Super-VHS, later digital). Ebin.pub
Her interest in invention and nature persisted into later work. Ebin.pub
Recognition, Style & Impact
Skinner’s work won respect within amateur film circles. Her competition successes (through the cine society and amateur cine competitions) earned her recognition from male and female peers alike. Ebin.pub
Some commissioned films meant she was paid modestly, but that had implications, for example, making some works ineligible for certain competitions like those run by Amateur Cine World. Ebin.pub
Her quote: “If I had known how things were going to progress and there had been the openings, I think I would have enjoyed a job as a filmmaker,” reflects how she saw amateur filmmaking almost as a parallel career. Ebin.pub
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