D’Arc Productions                                                                

Phone: (631) 793-8881

Fax: (360) 285-6334

 

Who We Are

Who We AreWho_We_Are.html
ProductionsProductions.html
NewsNews.html
BlogsBlog/Blog.html
HomeHome_2.html
Contact usContact_Us.html
PurchasesPurchases.html
Campbell Dalglish - Founding director of D’Arc Productions, an award winning playwright, screenwriter and director. 


Campbell Dalglish is currently a tenured professor in the film program at City College of New York where he teaches screenwriting and directing.  He is also a Film Commissioner for Suffolk County on Long Island.


As a television producer he created segments for The New Morning Show (Faith and Value Media/Hallmark Channel) focusing on three reservations – the Havasupai, the White Mountain Apache, and the Navajo.  Together with his partner Catherine Oberg, he co-produced with Invisible Dog Inc., an environmental issues pilot Eco Action, and for PBS/WLIW the short film Ahalani: Living In Harmony With The Sun, featuring an alternative energy lifestyle in their solar home.


His short narrative film Dance of the Quantum Cats, about racial and religious tensions in the inner city, won over a dozen international awards and was selected by CINE to represent USA at the 12th International Film Festival of Peace, Hiroshima, JAPAN.  It was broadcast on PBS/CPTV as part of a series on emerging directors.


Over the years Dalglish has developed a technique of making films from the perspectives of people living in marginal communities by visiting, interviewing and conducting interactive improvisations with his subjects.  The results have been A Hard Way Out (1996 Hartford gangs), The Community Room (1992 Jericho Homeless Shelter), and The Shooting Gallery (1988 Bridgeport Prison).


Campbell is currently in development on an original screenplay Taxti Wau, Deer Woman, a supernatural thriller to be directed by Chris Eyre.


Dalglish has also been a script consultant for The Shooting Gallery and the Independent Film Project (IFP) as well as a frequent panelist on screenwriting for the Institute of International Film Financing. Recently he moderated a panel at the Native American Finance Conference in Las Vegas titled “Hollywood: American Indian Film.”


Today he is partnering with Ron Pate of Aeon Artists on a new production company owned by American Indians called Red Warrior Films.


Dalglish is a graduate of the Yale School of Drama, and is one of the co-founders of The Plaza Media Arts Center in Patchogue, Long Island, where he lives.