Flannery is the lyrical, intimate exploration of the life and work of author Flannery O’Connor, whose distinctive Southern Gothic style influenced a generation of artists and activists. With her family home at Andalusia (the Georgia farm where she grew up and later wrote her best known work) as a backdrop, a picture of the woman behind her sharply aware, starkly redemptive style comes into focus. Including conversations with those who knew her and those inspired by her (Mary Karr, Tommy Lee Jones, Hilton Als and more), Flannery employs never-before-seen archival footage, newly discovered personal letters and her own published words (read by Mary Steenburgen) alongside original animations and music to examine the life and legacy of an American literary icon.
Elizabeth Coffman is a documentary filmmaker and writer. She has written, directed and produced an NEH-supported documentary, "Flannery” with co-director/writer Mark Bosco, about acclaimed Georgia writer, Flannery O'Connor. In 2019 “Flannery” won the first Library of Congress/Lavine/Ken Burns prize for historical documentary, was opening night film for the Hot Springs Documentary Festival and awarded best documentary at the Austin Film Festival. Elizabeth has co-produced/directed film and installation projects with Ted Hardin and their company Long Distance Productions--"Veins in the Gulf" (2011), streaming on Tubi.TV and "One More Mile: A Dialogue on Nation-Building" (2002), broadcast in Eastern Europe and festivals around the world.