Wildflowers: A Bad Ass Mountain Woman Ahead Of Her Time

Premiering at the Banff Centre Mountain Film and Book Festival, Wildflowers connects two women explorers separated by a century but united by a passion for the mountains
Wildflowers Film movie poster
Natalie Gillis

A film about the life of a pioneering female explorer will make its big screen debut at the 2024 Banff Centre Mountain Film and Book Festival.

Wildflowers explores Mary Schäffer Warren’s legacy as a group of women led by outdoor writer Meghan J. Ward retraces Schäffer’s legendary 1908 expedition to Maligne Lake in Jasper National Park.

Co-produced by Ward, based in Banff, and Trixie Pacis, a filmmaker from Kimberley, BC, the film is based on the shared passions for mountain exploration and history held by two mountain women, Mary Schäffer Warren (1861-1939) and RCGS Fellow Meghan J. Ward separated by a century.

‘We feel incredibly honoured that our film will be one of only 90 selected for this year’s festival. Having our World Premiere at the BCMFF was our big goal from the beginning, not only because it is a prestigious festival but because it is one with deep connections to the film,” Pacis, the film’s director, said in an interview with The Rockies Life.

Trixie Pacis (left) and Meghan Ward (right) | wildflowersfilm.ca
Trixie Pacis (left) and Meghan Ward (right) | wildflowersfilm.ca

Bucking Conventions

The adventurous Mary Schäffer Warren | Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies
The adventurous Mary Schäffer Warren | Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies

Schäffer Warren was a pioneer in more ways than one. Born in Pennsylvania, she was destined to buck the conventions of polite early 20th-century Victorian society, where a woman’s place was to be dressed up nicely for tea time in the parlour. 

She studied art at a young age and married Dr. Charles Schäffer, a doctor and amateur botanist.

Together, they made many train trips to Banff, and she fell in love with the Canadian Rockies

Mt Schaffer near Lake O’Hara is named after the couple.

When her husband died, she was widowed at age 43. 

That’s when her life took a big turn. Schäffer Warren ‘’reinvented herself as a mountain explorer, writer and photographer,’’ as described on the Wildflowers’ website.

She was the first non-Indigenous woman to visit Maligne Lake and many parts of Jasper and Banff national parks. She also wrote two books, including the classic Old Indian Trails of the Canadian Rockies.

Jane Marshall (left), Natalie Gills (centre) and Meghan Ward (right) at the beginning of their six-day trip following the footsteps of Mary Schäffer Warren | wildflowersfilm.ca
Jane Marshall (left), Natalie Gills (centre) and Meghan Ward (right) at the beginning of their six-day trip following the footsteps of Mary Schäffer Warren | wildflowersfilm.ca

Retracing Footsteps

The seeds for Wildflowers were planted in 2020 when Pacis started working with Ward at Paul Ziska Photography in Banff. They became friends and soon learned they shared a fascination with mountain history, particularly Mary Schäffer Warren. 

More than a century after the original journey, Ward, photographer/RCGS Fellow Natalie Gillis, and travel writer Jane Marshall decided to follow Schäffer Warren’s inspiring footsteps to Maligne Lake.

Pacis, a Banff Centre Adventure Filmmakers Workshop graduate, saw it as a perfect pitch for a documentary film.

“Like Mary, Meghan moved west to the Rockies and reinvented herself as a mountain writer. Meghan once described her curiosity about Mary as “an itch that can’t be scratched,” Pacis said.

Schäffer Warren remains an inspiring figure for women in many ways. In the early 1900s, when females were not allowed to join official survey parties, a man employed by the Geological Survey of Canada had the guts to ask Schäffer Warren to survey Maligne Lake. 

It says a lot about the respect she had as an explorer and woman who was smart and could handle herself as well as any man could in the mountains.

At the same time Pacis noted that Schäffer Warren’s life overlapped with “a significant time of colonial impact in the Canadian Rockies.”

“Reflecting on Mary’s legacy invites us to ask questions, rethink history, and consider what we can do now to blaze a better trail forward,” Pacis said.

Schäffer Warren built a house in Banff and eventually remarried one of her longtime guides, Billy Warren.

She died in 1939 of pneumonia but left behind a considerable legacy of trailblazing – in the mountains and in a society that tried to put restrictive limits on what a woman could choose to do.   

‘’Wildflowers demonstrates that sometimes we must look back to blaze a better trail forward,’’ says the Banff Centre Mountain Film and Book Festival about the documentary. The producers describe the film as “the more we delved into Mary’s story, the more the focus of the film turned to how she inspires us to rethink history, deepen our relationship with nature, and pursue our passion and creativity with zeal.”

Natalie Gillis, the documentary team’s photographer, died tragically last June in a plane crash.

“Banff was also special to our friend and expedition photographer,” said Pacis. ”We have dedicated this film in loving memory of Nat and know that sharing this film in Banff, surrounded by her family and our friends, will be a special way to honour her memory.”

The film’s debut screening will take place at 10 AM on November 2 (tickets here) in the Max Bell Auditorium in Banff, Alberta.

Congratulations to the woman-powered team that created the film, and we look forward to the debut!  

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