Leona’s Sister Gerri (1995) 57m
Produced and Directed by Jane Gillooly
Editor, C.L. Monrose
Associate Producers, Joan Kaufman, C.L. Monrose
Assistant Producer / Editor, Carolyn Kaylor
Assistant PrEditor & Archivist Carolyn Kaylor
Camera, Andrew Neumann
Studio Camera, Charles Jevremovic
Additional Camera Jane Gillooly, Martha Swetzoff, James Walker
Original Music, Caleb Sampson
Additional Original Music and Sound Design, John Kusiak
This historic film reveals the story behind Gerri Santoro’s death from an illegal abortion. Her image galvanized America’s abortion movement.
For Geraldine Santoro and so many women like her, the barriers to obtaining a safe, legal abortion were insurmountable and in 1964 the legal and the social system did not protect her. The film LEONA’S SISTER GERRI tells the story of Gerri Santoro, a working-class mother of two and the “real person” in the now famous police photograph of an anonymous woman on a motel floor. She is face down on the floor next to an unmade bed. She had died from an illegal abortion. Reprinted thousands of times on placards and in the media, this tragic photo became a pro-choice icon. Should the media have used this image? What circumstances led to Gerri’s avoidable death? Since the film’s debut in 1995, Leona’s Sister Gerri has been taught as women’s rights canon. The film addresses reproductive justice, domestic violence, and media ethics by tracing the use of an iconic image and how this photograph of Gerri Santoro’s death galvanized the abortion movement.