
From No Home to a Perch in Hollywood, a Filmmaker Finally Breaks Through
Mahoney and her pal, the documentary filmmaker Kirsten Johnson, stood in that room and waited to be approached. Crickets. Finally, an agent came over and asked about their involvement in the labs. They responded effusively. But instead of inquiring about their work, he asked if they could introduce him to one of their male colleagues. That agent signed that colleague in the room. Mahoney? Nothing. Not on the mountain. Not after the festival ended.
It would take Mahoney 11 years to land an agent and 20 more to make her first studio film. That movie, 'The Old Guard 2,' debuted this week on Netflix.
'We all believe the fables of what happens when you're at Sundance and you've come through the labs; we've seen it,' Mahoney said in a recent interview. 'We weren't viable. We weren't anything. It's indicative of a thousand things.'
Mahoney's story is not unfamiliar. So many toil in the film industry and are not rewarded with sustainable careers even when they receive accolades early on. What makes Victoria Mahoney distinct is that there never was a Plan B. She lived without a safety net for a decade, couch surfing at friends' homes, even experiencing true moments of homelessness — nights when she didn't know where she would be resting her head. But her belief in herself that she was destined to be a filmmaker? That never ebbed, regardless of her setbacks.
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