

Ronald Chase
Director · Actor · WriterRonald Chase (born December 29, 1934) is an American artist, photographer, educator, independent film maker and opera designer. In 1963, Chase began making short experimental films with Fragments, written by Mary Lee Settle and filmed in the Hudson Valley. In 1964, he began experimenting with using film projections in theatre and dance performances. These experiments produced the films The Covenant, Chameleon and Clown, as well as Parade, a short documentary of the first Gay & Lesbian Pride Parade in San Francisco. Chase produced and directed two features in the 1970s. Bruges-La-Morte premiered at the 1978 Rotterdam Film Festival and was awarded the Critics Prize at the International Film Festival Ghent in 1980. LULU, adapted from the play by Frank Wedekind, screened at a number of festivals and was chosen as one of the three best films of 1978 by Pariscope, but could not be released because of a copyright conflict with the estate of Alban Berg. In 1993, Chase created the San Francisco Art & Film Program for Teenagers, a non-profit devoted to making the arts accessible to young people. SF Art & Film has been cited as one of the most comprehensive art education programs in the United States.
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KNOWN FOR
FILMOGRAPHY
DIRECTOR17

Gay USA: Snapshots of 1970s LGBT Resistance
2024
Director

Jezebel
2006
Director

Beatrice Cenci (On a Painting by Carravaggio)
2003
Director

Fantasia on the Childhood of Busoni
1981
Director

Lulu
1978
Director

Bruges-La-Morte
1978
Director

Parade
1972
Director

Beatrice Cenci
1972
Director

San Francisco Christmas Breakfast
1972
Director

Sally Simpson
1971
Director

A Village Romeo
1971
Director

Cathedral
1971
Director

Scene One: Take One
1971
Director

Chameleon
1969
Director

Clown
1969
Director

The Covenant
1965
Director

Fragments
1964
Director







