Wood began working with ceramics in 1933 when she took a class at Hollywood High School in California. She was an outspoken and determined young woman who became known as the “ mama of dada” because of her involvement with the Dada artists and Marcel Duchamp. When James Cameron was looking for a feisty old woman as a model for the 100 year-old Titanic survivor in his film, he came across Beatrice Wood. Her work had been included in exhibitions at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and she was receiving orders from major department stores including Neiman Marcus, Gumps and Marshall Fields. Beatrice Wood Center for the Arts / Titanic / Facebook. In 1993, she was the subject of a documentary, Beatrice Wood, the Mama of Dada, directed by Diandra Douglas. Beatrice Wood fled her affluent home and proper upbringing to become an actress, artist, and writer. Beatrice Wood: Mama of Dada: This documentary, by film maker Tom Neff, was released as a 16 mm film in Los Angeles, California on March 3, 1993, to coincide with Wood's 100th birthday. In observation of her 105th birthday a few days ago, Wood presented “Titanic” director James Cameron with the annual Beatrice Wood Film Award at a party in her studio. Moody on April 29, 2018: Jack Koeff was the real name of Jack Dawson. 25/08/2020 14:21 Actualizado a 25/08/2020 15:22. The time is summer 1917, the place, Coney Island. Beatrice Wood is seated on a fake ox while behind her, in an oxcart, against a painted backdrop, sit Marcel Duchamp and Francis Picabia. Beatrice Wood: The real Rose of the Titanic.On the 3rd of March 1893, the American artist and studio potter, Beatrice Wood, was born in San Francisco, California.Her eventful and 105-years-long life would later serve as an inspiration for the character of 'Rose' in James Cameron's 1997 film, Titanic. La historia de Beatrice Wood, la verdadera Rose de “Titanic” James Cameron quedó tan impresionado con la vida de la mujer que creó a la protagonista del clásico film basándose en su vida. An excerpt from the film "Beatrice Wood at 97" by Carole Ewing McCartney. The American ceramicist, though she liked to call herself a potter, was already over a hundred but she was still throwing pots in … In 1947, Beatrice Wood felt that her career was established enough that she might build a home in Ojai. Wood partially inspired the 101-year-old character of "Rose" in James Cameron 's epic 1997 film, Titanic . So beatrice wood was the real rose on the Titanic?But she wasn't on the ship when it sank?So everything that happened on the ship b4 it sank didn't really happen??? Redacción.