Support WOFFF

WOFFF needs your help

We need your help if WOFFF is to continue to grow and thrive. 

WOFFF is a community made up of volunteers, filmmakers, audiences, guest speakers, workshop facilitators, judges, supporters and sponsors. Your sponsorship can make a huge practical difference – from hosting a workshop, to offering affordable ticket prices or offering filmmaker prizes.

How you can help

Sponsorship

You can get involved in the vibrant and life-affirming work that Women Over 50 Film Festival does through sponsorship. Get in touch with us to request more information.

Volunteers

We’d love you to help us as we strive to make this year’s WOFFF the best one yet.  Click here to drop us a line if you’d like to get involved with WOFFF.

Make a donation

You can make a contribution to Women Over 50 Film Festival and help WOFFF flourish as we work towards a filmmaking world where women over 50 thrive.

Thank you to our sponsors

We’d like to say a huge thanks to all the fine folks whose generosity makes it possible to bring you Women Over 50 Film Festival year after year.

Our matron Greta Scacchi has been a long-time supporter of WOFFF particularly because it is tackling the discrimination older women face in the media.

She says, “I am delighted that Women Over 50 Film Festival is here to upset the Hollywood apple cart that accepts actresses playing ten years older while actors can play ten years younger. This festival is unique in celebrating rather than hiding or ignoring older women in film. WOFFF rejoices in our older stories, older faces and older hearts and it is my pleasure to be associated with the Festival.”

Greta is an Emmy award-winning actor. Born in Milan, Italy, she spent her childhood in England and two years of her teens in Australia, where she began working in theatre. 

Her films include White Mischief, The Player and Emma, and she can currently be seen in the TV series Bodies and recent film Run Rabbit Run (with Succession’s Sarah Snook), both on Netflix. 

She is about to play Mrs Hardcastle in a 1930s-style update of Goldsmith’s She Stoops to Conquer at the Orange Tree theatre, Richmond.

Miriam Margolyes, Janey Godley, Denise Welch, Deborah Findlay, Joely Richardson and Amanda Donohoe have also voiced their support for WOFFF.