55 Steps

115min • PG-13

Showings

Lark Theater Fri, Nov 23, 2018 4:00 PM
Lark Theater Mon, Nov 26, 2018 6:00 PM
Lark Theater Thu, Nov 29, 2018 10:00 AM
Lark Theater Sun, Dec 2, 2018 5:55 PM
Lark Theater Mon, Dec 3, 2018 12:00 PM
Lark Theater Tue, Dec 4, 2018 9:00 PM
Film Info
Event Type:Movie
Release Year:2018
Rating:PG-13
Genre:Drama
Cast/Crew Info
Director:Bille August
Cast:Hillary Swank, Helena Bonham Carter, and Jeffery Tambor

Description

 

Colette Hughes

 

Join us this Sunday, Dec 2 at 5:55pm for a special screening and Q&A with Colette Hughes

 

Colette Hughes is a San Francisco-based patient's rights lawyer who represented Eleanor Riese in the groundbreaking RIESE VS. ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL trial, as portrayed by Hilary Swank in the movie 55 STEPS.

 


 

55 STEPS is based on the inspiring true story of the unlikely relationship between an outrageous and wickedly smart Eleanor Riese (Helena Bonham Carter), a patient in a psychiatric hospital where she’s been mistreated, and her attorney, a workaholic patients’ rights lawyer, Colette Hughes (Hilary Swank). In this heartfelt tale told with humor and emotion, Colette takes on the uphill battle of representing Eleanor against the psychiatric establishment while the spirited Eleanor makes it her mission to mentor Colette whether Colette likes it or not! The film features an award-winning cast including Helena Bonham Carter and Oscar-Winner Hilary Swank

 

"At its core this film transcends class as a remarkable bonding story."
- WBAI Radio

 


 

 

ABOUT COLETTE HUGHES

 

Colette Hughes began her human rights work in 1962 at age eight. Alongside her father, she went door to door for months, finally ending the opposition of enough neighbors so that the small residential care home in the neighborhood could open and the developmentally disabled residents could move in.

 

At age fifteen, with the help of the Detroit ACLU, Colette argued the civil rights case against the local school board on behalf of herself and other students, ending the longstanding unconstitutional practices of improper search and seizure of students’ lockers, censorship of the student newspaper to prevent articles opposing the war in Vietnam, and the removal of reading materials from the library, including writings of Thoreau and the play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf?

 

After becoming a nurse, Colette moved to San Francisco in the 70s, where she worked with the Gray Panthers, helping elders facing eviction and other abuses. As a result of her efforts in Bracco v. Lackner (challenging the precipitous, involuntary, life-threatening relocation of long-term nursing home residents), the U.S. House of Representatives convened an unprecedented nationally televised committee hearing at the Post Street Nursing Home in San Francisco, permitting the residents to be heard directly on their rights to remain near family and friends, and to be protected from “relocation shock.”

 

Colette then went to law school and opened a private practice in 1983, focusing on the rights of people with psychiatric labels. For the next 20 years she held positions of public trust. She was appointed to the California Senate Subcommittee Task Force on Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities, and Genetic Diseases. She also served as Administrator of the Patients’ Rights Advocacy Office for the County of San Mateo and as Supervising Attorney of the Investigations Unit for the California Protection and Advocacy System. Investigations led to the release of over 15 public reports, which were used to implement statewide reforms to prevent medication and physical restraint-related deaths and the unnecessary use of lethal force by police officers during the commitment process.

 

Colette was co-counsel in Riese v. St. Mary’s Hospital, which established for the first time the right of civil detainees on short-term psychiatric holds to give or withhold informed consent to psychotropic medications, absent a judicial determination of incompetence or a narrow emergency exception to prevent imminent physical harm. In 1989, she successfully challenged the imposition by local zoning officials of a special use permit that would have resulted in the imminent eviction of 11 Vietnam-era veterans from a residential facility in Berkeley. This was the first known antidiscrimination case brought on behalf of residents with psychiatric disabilities pursuant to the then-new Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988.

 

Colette’s lawyering in the Riese case is explored in the film 55 Steps. Directed by Bille August and written and co-produced by Mark Bruce Rosin, it stars Helena Bonham Carter as Eleanor Riese, Jeffrey Tambor as Professor Mort Cohen and Hilary Swank as Colette Hughes. More than 30 years later, Colette continues to field requests from individuals who want to avoid forcible medication and other intrusive psychiatric interventions.