From a tweet to TIFF: Dal Health researcher's collaboration with filmmaker Ellen Page ready for its big premiere

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From a tweet to TIFF: Dal Health researcher's collaboration with filmmaker Ellen Page ready for its big premiere

Posted by Terry Murray-Arnold on September 3, 2019
Dr. Ingrid Waldron, pictured outside Seaview United Baptist Church on the site of Africville in Halifax, Nova Scotia. (Nick Pearce photo)
Dr. Ingrid Waldron, pictured outside Seaview United Baptist Church on the site of Africville in Halifax, Nova Scotia. (Nick Pearce photo)

Last fall, Ingrid Waldron noticed something surprising on Twitter.
 
A post using the hashtag for her book, There’s Something in the Water, had received thousands of likes and shares, almost overnight. Dr. Waldron, an associate professor in Dal Health’s School of Nursing with a cross appointment to the Department of Psychiatry, tracked the attention back to a social media post from Oscar- and Emmy-award-nominated actor-director Ellen Page, who enthusiastically endorsed the book.

Page had read The Mill: Fifty Years of Pulp and Protest by Joan Baxter, about environmental issues in Pictou Landing First Nation, and when she went looking for more information about environmental racism, she found Dr. Waldron’s book.

About 10 months later, that tweet has turned into a powerful documentary based on Dr. Waldron’s book of the same name.

There’s Something in the Water, co-produced by Dr. Waldron, Ellen Page, Ian Daniel, and Julia Sanderson will premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sunday, September 8, and at the Atlantic International Film Festival in Halifax on Saturday, September 14.


A scene from There's Something in the Water.

Dr. Waldron, also a senior research scholar & team lead for the Health of People of African Descent Research Cluster, Healthy Populations Institute, says Ellen Page was perfect to collaborate with on this project.

“She is humble and an excellent listener. She made it clear from the start that this project was not about her. It was about the communities living with the effects of environmental racism and the women who were advocating for them.”  

“We are thrilled and grateful that TIFF has accepted our documentary, There’s Something in the Water,” said co-producers Ellen Page and Ian Daniel. “Thank you to everyone who was interviewed and opened their communities to us. We are excited to say that this is just the beginning, and hopeful that the large platform TIFF provides will help spark the change that is needed.”

Star power


After she saw the tweet last year, Dr. Waldron reached out to Page on social media and the two connected. Determined to learn more about environmental racism in her home province, Page suggested setting up a conference call between herself, Dr. Waldron and some of the women whose stories were featured in the book.

“Ellen had an upcoming break in production and wanted to travel to Nova Scotia with her co-producer on the show Gaycation, Ian Daniel, and some film gear,” recalls Dr. Waldron. “They wanted to interview the women on the front lines who were struggling to have their voices heard.”

This spring, Page and Daniel traveled across the province to speak with the women in Dr. Waldron’s book. Originally the plan was to share the interviews as stories on social media. Once the trip was complete and Page and Dr. Waldron reviewed the footage, they had a deep realization.

“When we looked at the video, we were moved by the power and gravity in the women’s stories and it occurred to us that we had to do something bigger with the footage. We had to put it together in a feature length film,” said Dr. Waldron.

She had used diverse knowledge mobilization approaches in the past to share her research findings. But she says partnering with a celebrity of Page’s fame, and having their collaboration premiere at one of the biggest cinematic events in the world is definitely a first.  

“My hope for the film is to amplify the voices and stories of Indigenous and Black communities on the front lines of environmental justice organizing and activism in Nova Scotia and Canada,” said Dr. Waldron. “I want it to engage and touch the hearts and humanity of viewers, including politicians, in ways that incite them to act on environmental injustices and other social injustices happening across this country and the world.”