Amalie R. Rothschild is an award-winning filmmaker and photographer noted for her documentaries about social issues as revealed through the lives of people in the arts, and for her music photographs from the Fillmore East, Woodstock, and other seminal rock events from 1968 to 1974. She is a co-founder of New Day Films, the successful distribution cooperative founded in 1971, author of Live at the Fillmore East: A Photographic Memoir, and co-editor of Amalie Rothschild, published in 2012, a monograph and “portable museum” of the art and legacy of her mother and namesake, and subject of her film Nana, Mom and Me (1974). Other films include the groundbreaking It Happens to Us, made in 1971 with an all-woman crew and the first American film to argue that women should have the right to control their own bodies and end a pregnancy, Woo Who? May Wilson (1969), Conversations with Willard Van Dyke (1981), and Painting the Town: The Illusionistic Murals of Richard Haas (1990). Her fine art limited edition prints are represented by the Morrison Hotel Gallery in LA and NYC, Goya in Baltimore, Heart of Gold in Charleston, SC, Monroe in Santa Fe, and Snap in the UK, and are shown often in exhibitions nationally and internationally. While based professionally in New York City, since 1983 she lives about 7 months of the year in Italy.