Bus Stop Films is getting ready to shoot its first feature, 'Baby Cat', and is conducting a nationwide casting call for an actress to play the lead, Sonja, a young woman living with trisomy 21 (Down syndrome).
Bus Stop Films has partnered with Griffith Film School to deliver its Accessible Film Studies program for people living with disability in Brisbane.
Australia is the only OECD nation not to provide audio description on television.
Katrina Barber and Julianne Ryan. (Photo: City of Mandurah). Screenwest and Carers WA have awarded Perth-based production studio Rhythm Content...
The South Australian Film Corporation (SAFC) has launched its inaugural Disability Equality Plan, outlining the agency’s actions to support, encourage and develop...
Sarah Barton has tried to champion film and television that advances the rights of people with disabilities since the beginning of her career.
People with disability working in the screen industry routinely experience prejudice, are lower paid, offered more precarious work and are in less powerful positions than their non-disabled counterparts.
It is time to consider the mainstream benefits of audio description for film and television, Katie Ellis writes.