Renee Tajima-Peña


Renee Tajima-Peña is an American filmmaker whose work focuses on immigrant communities, race, gender and social justice. Her directing and producing credits include the documentaries Who Killed Vincent Chin?, No Más Bebés, My America...or Honk if You Love Buddha, Calavera Highway, Skate Manzanar, and Labor Women.

Biography

Tajima-Peña attended John Muir High School in Pasadena, California, and later received her bachelor's degree cum laude from Harvard University's Radcliffe College, where she majored in East Asian Studies and sociology. While at Harvard, she was chairperson of the United Front Against Apartheid.
Tajima-Peña has been deeply involved in the Asian American independent film community as an activist, writer, and filmmaker. She was the first paid director at Asian Cine-Vision in New York and a founding member of the Center for Asian American Media. She also founded the Asian American International Video Festival. Additionally, she was a film critic for The Village Voice, a cultural commentator for National Public Radio, and the editor of Bridge: Asian American Perspectives.

Activism

Tajima-Peña began filmmaking out of a desire for activism and political expression. Growing up in the 1970s, she was heavily influenced by the Asian American movement, the Civil Rights Movement, and others. Tajima-Peña later turned her interest toward filming activism among young Asian American laborers. This turned into the project Labor Women.

Teaching career

In 2013, Tajima-Peña was appointed Professor of Asian American Studies and the Alumni and Friends of Japanese American Ancestry Endowed Chair at UCLA. She also directs the , housed in the Asian American Studies Center with a teaching component in the Asian American Studies Department.
Tajima-Peña previously served as the Graduate Director of the Masters Program in Social Documentation as Professor of Film and Digital Media, at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Awards

Tajima-Peña’s film "Who Killed Vincent Chin", was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary. Her other honors include a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Peabody Award, an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award, the Alpert Award for Film/Video, the James Wong Howe “Jimmie” Award, the Justice in Action Award, and two International Documentary Association Achievement Awards, the Media Achievement Award from MANAA, the Steve Tatsukawa Memorial Award and the APEX Excellence in the Arts Award. She has twice earned Fellowships in Documentary Film from both the Rockefeller Foundation and the New York Foundation on the Arts.
Her films have screened at the Cannes Film Festival, London Film Festival, Museum of Modern Art, New Directors/New Films Festival, Redcat, San Francisco International Film Festival, Sundance Film Festival, SXSW, Toronto International Film Festival, and the Whitney Museum of American Art Biennial.
Her documentaries have been broadcast around the world, including BBC, CBC Canada, SBS Australia, Tokyo Broadcasting System, VPRO Netherlands, ZDF Germany, ABC, Home Box Office, Oxygen, Lifetime Television, the Sundance Channel, and PBS. In 2009 she won a Fellow Award from United States Artists.

Selected filmography

Her recent works include a documentary and a transmedia project. is a documentary about the sterilization of Mexican-origin women at Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center during the 1960s and 70s. It premiered at the 2015 Los Angeles Film Festival and was broadcast on the PBS documentary series Independent Lens. Tajima-Peña's transmedia project is an interactive history documentary, Heart Mountain 3.0, which uses the Minecraft video game.