Brenda Whitehall is an award-winning, independent filmmaker based in Vancouver, Canada. Her production company Whitehall Entertainment Incorporated has spearheaded several projects including short films, animations, music videos and documentaries.
Whitehall also created and co-produced a popular all-women mainstage play at the 2015 Vancouver Fringe Festival called Saturn Returns, receiving public and critical acclaim.
In 2017, Whitehall co-wrote and executive produced the short drama The Curtain, which screened in several countries, in four languages, and won more than a dozen international film festival awards. The film was directed by popular Hallmark actress Yan-Kay Crystal Lowe from the Signed, Sealed, Delivered franchise.
The following year, she wrote, directed and executive produced the award-winning short drama Little Oliver, which screened at the Mediterranean Film Festival in Cannes, France. Lead actor Angela Galanopoulos also received a prestigious Leo Award nomination in 2019 for her performance.
In 2019, Whitehall wrote and executive produced a groundbreaking short drama And Now This? about Canada's medical assistance in dying program. The film is streaming on YouTube.
She also wrote, produced and directed a music video, Meant for Something More, to raise awareness of trans teen suicide, airing on OutTV and available on YouTube.
Whitehall was undergoing cancer treatments in 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, and helped lead her producing team to finish the 2SLGBTQ+ short drama Falling In - virtually. It has gone on to screen and win several awards at international film festivals.
In 2021, Whitehall co-directed and co-produced The Stepmom, a short drama based on an award-winning play by Keara Barnes. She collaborated with the same production team in 2022 for a multi award-winning, dance-themed short film called Harbour, which she also co-directed. It began streaming on CBC Gem in February 2025.
With the support of Canada Council for the Arts, Whitehall completed a feature film documentary on Canadian women winter athletes as told by a women-identifying and non-binary filmmaking team. Released in 2024, the award-winning film, Beyond The Podium: Celebrating Canadian Women Champions, is available free on YouTube.
Whitehall has several projects in development.