Brenda Feigen was born on 1944 and is an American feminist activist, film producer, and attorney.
22 Facts About Brenda Feigen
Brenda Sue Feigen was born in 1944 in Chicago, Illinois, to Arthur Paul Feigen, a lawyer, and Shirley Kadison, a housewife.
At Harvard, Brenda Feigen was one of only 32 women in her law school class of 565 students.
In 1968, Brenda Feigen married Marc Fasteau, a Harvard Law classmate, in the Harvard Club of New York.
Brenda Feigen took the name Brenda Feigen Fasteau, and Marc later changed his to Marc Feigen Fasteau.
Just before walking down the aisle, Brenda Feigen spotted a "NO LADIES ALLOWED" sign on the Harvard Club of New York library wall.
In 1970, Brenda Feigen was elected National Legislative Vice President for the National Organization for Women.
Brenda Feigen coordinated the testimony of fellow NOW leaders and fellow activist Gloria Steinem, and testified herself on May 5,1970.
Brenda Feigen continued to serve as the national spokesperson for NOW, regularly appearing on Good Morning America.
In 1972, Brenda Feigen left private practice, and she, Steinem, and Catherine Samuels founded The Women's Action Alliance.
However, Brenda Feigen focused on the nonprofit, while Steinem took over the outreach through Ms.
Magazine co-founder Gloria Steinem, Brenda Feigen assumed her position at the ACLU.
In 1974, Brenda Feigen left the ACLU to take part in a law partnership with her husband, Marc Brenda Feigen Fasteau.
The Partnership was a law firm called Fasteau and Brenda Feigen, located on Madison Avenue in New York City.
In 1978, Brenda Feigen ran for the Democratic nomination in the 26th District of the New York State Senate.
Brenda Feigen ran against former superintendent of banks William Woodward III.
In 1982, Brenda Feigen began working as a business affairs attorney at the William Morris Agency in New York.
Brenda Feigen eventually became a motion picture agent, a position which initiated her further involvement with the film industry.
Brenda Feigen produced the TV show Comedy Lab in 1998 and the film The State of Eugenics in 2016.
Brenda Feigen gives frequent lectures on various motion picture and entertainment law topics.
Brenda Feigen represents companies that need her services concerning mergers and acquisitions with and of other entertainment companies.
Brenda Feigen is on the Executive Committee of the Beverly Hills Bar Association's Business Law Section.