Sue Marx, Oscar-winning filmmaker from Michigan, dies at 92
She was not on the list.
Sue Marx found a calling as a filmmaker and professional photographer.
She turned her skill into an award-winning run that had her
touting Michigan's name on a national stage.
“She had this curiosity about people and the world, and expressed it artistically through the lens,” said her daughter, Terry Marx.
Mrs. Marx died Monday, July 17, 2023, at her home. She was
92.
The longtime Birmingham resident produced more than 200 films, relatives said.
She perhaps is best known for “Young at Heart,” a 29-minute
1987 documentary film that chronicled the relationship between her father,
Louis Gothelf, and his second wife, Reva Shwayder, who were both artists and
had lost a spouse.
It won the Oscar for Best Documentary Short in 1988.
"From Hollywood, hooray for Michigan,” Mrs. Marx said
to end her acceptance speech.
While the piece earned much praise for its depiction of the couple and was considered a crowning accomplishment, Mrs. Marx had merely hoped to highlight an inspiring relationship, her daughter said.
“It wasn’t just a movie. It was a movie about her father, which made it particularly special. She followed it more than just an interested filmmaker. It was her father’s life, and the storyline was meaningful to her.”
Also significant were the many subjects behind the pieces the filmmaker helmed over the years through her company, Sue Marx Films, which launched in 1980.
It specialized in documentary films while also producing
marketing, political, educational and fundraising videos, according to the
website.
Productions included “AIDS 101: Tammy Boccomino Talks With Teenagers,” a one-hour TV special on a Warren woman who tested HIV-positive after contracting the illness from her first husband; “Encore on Woodward,” a documentary on the restoration of the Fox Theatre; 10 films centered on the Detroit Zoo; and “Detroit Remember When: The Jewish Community.”
Her client list featured big names such as General Motors,
Cranbrook Educational Community and former Detroit Mayor Coleman A. Young.
Mrs. Marx’s success owed to her constant collaborations and friendly nature, relatives said.
“She was a people person,” Terry Marx said. “The films that
were about people, and where she could learn their story and tell their story
were important.”
The road to stardom was an unconventional one.
Born Nov. 17, 1930, to immigrants in Yonkers, New York,
Suzanne Elaine Gothelf was raised in Wisconsin and Indiana.
After graduating from Indiana University in 1952, she relocated to Detroit to live with relatives and taught in Oak Park.
She soon met Stanley “Hank” Marx, who owned a lead smelting
company. They wed on Dec. 19, 1953.
While raising their three daughters, Mrs. Marx earned a master’s degree in social psychology at Wayne State University and started working as a model, according to her obituary.
She then pursued photojournalism. As she recounted to The
Detroit News in 2020, a friend, Hubert G. Locke, who wrote books including
"Detroit 1967,” had been launching a neighborhood newspaper during the
1964 city newspaper strike.
"Hubert said, 'Just go shoot stuff in Detroit,' and a lot of the pictures in the show are those free-to-do, just-get-neighborhood stuff," she said.
Sue Marx was asked to shoot Detroit neighborhoods for a local newspaper launched during the 1964 Detroit newspaper strike.
It specialized in documentary films while also producing marketing, political, educational and fundraising videos, according to the website.
Productions included “AIDS 101: Tammy Boccomino Talks With
Teenagers,” a one-hour TV special on a Warren woman who tested HIV-positive
after contracting the illness from her first husband; “Encore on Woodward,” a
documentary on the restoration of the Fox Theatre; 10 films centered on the
Detroit Zoo; and “Detroit Remember When: The Jewish Community.”
Her client list featured big names such as General Motors, Cranbrook Educational Community and former Detroit Mayor Coleman A. Young.
Mrs. Marx’s success owed to her constant collaborations and
friendly nature, relatives said.
“She was a people person,” Terry Marx said. “The films that were about people, and where she could learn their story and tell their story were important.”
The road to stardom was an unconventional one.
Born Nov. 17, 1930, to immigrants in Yonkers, New York, Suzanne Elaine Gothelf was raised in Wisconsin and Indiana.
After graduating from Indiana University in 1952, she
relocated to Detroit to live with relatives and taught in Oak Park.
She soon met Stanley “Hank” Marx, who owned a lead smelting company. They wed on Dec. 19, 1953.
While raising their three daughters, Mrs. Marx earned a
master’s degree in social psychology at Wayne State University and started
working as a model, according to her obituary.
She then pursued photojournalism. As she recounted to The Detroit News in 2020, a friend, Hubert G. Locke, who wrote books including "Detroit 1967,” had been launching a neighborhood newspaper during the 1964 city newspaper strike.
"Hubert said, 'Just go shoot stuff in Detroit,' and a lot of the pictures in the show are those free-to-do, just-get-neighborhood stuff," she said.
Sue Marx was asked to shoot Detroit neighborhoods for a local newspaper launched during the 1964 Detroit newspaper strike.
She also photographed the Kennedys and a young Bob Seger,
her family said.
Mrs. Marx went on produce "Profiles in Black” in the 1970s for what is now WDIV-TV (Channel 4). The program sought to illustrate the lives of Metro Detroit Black residents.
After founding her company, she went on win more than 20
Emmys, 11 CINE Golden Eagles, honors from many film festivals as well as an
Award of Excellence from what is now the Alliance for Women in Media, relatives
said.
She has been named a Detroit News Michiganian of the Year, and some of her films on art and artists are in a collection at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
Mrs. Marx was a lifelong voting member with the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.She also served on the Michigan Film Office
Advisory Council, joined the Friends of the Detroit Film Theatre advisory
committee and judged for the Kresge Foundation’s Artist Fellows program.
“She was very accomplished,” Terry Marx said.
Besides her daughter, other survivors include two children,
Jane Marx and Liz Marx; and three grandchildren. Her husband died in 2007.
A funeral service is scheduled for 1 p.m. Wednesday at Ira Kaufman Chapel, 18325 W. Nine Mile, Southfield. It also will be live-streamed.
Interment is at Clover Hill Park Cemetery.
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