<b>Winner of the Theatre Library Association¿s Richard Wall Memorial Award Special Jury Prize for an exemplary work in the field of recorded performance</b><br/>After the advent of sound, women in the British film industry formed an essential corps of below-the-line workers, laboring in positions from animation artist to negative cutter to costume designer. Melanie Bell maps the work of these women decade-by-decade, examining their far-ranging economic and creative contributions against the backdrop of the discrimination that constrained their careers. Her use of oral histories and trade union records presents a vivid counter-narrative to film history, one that focuses not only on women in a male-dominated business, but on the innumerable types of physical and emotional labor required to make a motion picture. Bell''s feminist analysis looks at women''s jobs in film at important historical junctures while situating the work in the context of changing expectations around women and gend