Student Stories: Rachel Bass

Rachel Bass


Major: Motion Picture/TV Program

Rachel Bass graduated from Amherst College in 2013 with a bachelor’s degree in Black Studies.

She then applied to graduate film school but was turned down. Moving back home to Chicago, she had every intention of reapplying to graduate school but decided to register for film classes at College of DuPage.

“The only expectation that I had was to learn as much as I could about film and gain experience during my year of preparation to apply to graduate school again,” she said. “My intention was to make myself more competitive the second time around.

“My time at COD did much more than that, especially the classes I took with Heather Currie and John Rangel. Their classes artistically and academically challenged me more as a storyteller and filmmaker than any other class in my history as a student.”

If you come to COD with a purpose, the resources can take you wherever you want to go.

Rachel Bass

Because of her work at COD, Bass was accepted to graduate school and completed her Film Production MFA at Chapman University in Orange County, Calif., with an emphasis on directing. She directed “Thicker than Water,” her graduate thesis that was nominated for a Princess Grace Award, from a script she co-wrote with her siblings in a writers’ group they established years ago.

“In our script called ‘The Old Coat Society,’ the setting is 1877 Illinois and the story is about a lonely white boy with polio who develops a friendship with an adventurous white-looking town newcomer, and his racist worldview is threatened when he discovers that the boy is really black,” she said. “ ‘Thicker than Water’ was my most challenging undertaking as a storyteller, but it pushed me to grow in ways I did not foresee. My team and I are proud of the outcome, and the story unfolded magically.”

Bass’ film “Black Magic,” an autobiographical comedy, won the 2016 Director’s Guild of America Jury Prize. She won a second Director’s Guild of America award in 2018—Best African-American Film in the West Region—for “Thicker than Water.”

A feature script, “No Stars by Night,” was written by Bass and The Old Coat Society, which consists of three of her siblings who worked with her on “Thicker than Water.”

“ ‘No Stars by Night’ is a film adaptation from one of Mark Twain’s short novels that explores the concepts of white identity and fantasy, similar themes explored in ‘Thicker than Water,’” she said.

Adult Student Admissions at COD

After working as an adjunct lecturer at Chapman University, where she taught visual storytelling, and as a part-time personal assistant to a TV director, Bass is now a tenure-track assistant professor at DePaul University’s School of Cinematic Arts. She also was selected as a Public Voices fellow with the OpEd Project.

“I was selected as one of 20 faculty representing the seven DePaul schools in the prestigious national initiative, which was piloted at Yale, Stanford and Princeton, that now partners with top institutions and foundations across the U.S.,” she said. “Fellows are trained as thought leaders in their fields of study, prepared to be key contributors to the important public conversations of our age, and developed as public intellectuals by establishing relationships with the likes of TED, NYT, CNN and the Ford Foundation, to name a few.”

She also continues working on her filmmaking career and is in pre-production for her first film, “Snow Angels,” which is a Christmas road trip about a group of friends who take a holiday adventure to spend with their best friend awaiting a kidney transplant. It is scheduled to shoot in early 2025.

Bass reads as much myth and history as possible because she plans to incorporate myth more fundamentally into her work. Her long-term goal is to professionally direct historical fantasy and drama films.

While Bass is excited about her future, she is equally pleased about her decision to take film classes at COD.

“My experience at College of DuPage provided the foundation that is enabling me to pursue film to greater heights,” she said. “The faculty is the bomb. If you come to COD with a purpose, the resources can take you wherever you want to go. My one year at COD was the most important year in shaping my identity as a storyteller and always will be.

Learn more about the Motion Picture/TV program at College of DuPage