Reality star is cut out of billionaire husband's will
Hollywood's Latest Financier: the Lottery
Jackpot winner antes up $30M for film production.
EXCLUSIVE
While Hollywood goes chasing to Abu Dhabi and Mumbai for ever-scarcer funds to finance its movies, the industry might do better just heading to 7-Eleven.
The latest film fund, $30 million to make romantic comedies, thrillers and faith-based dramas, comes from the lottery winnings of Cynthia Stafford, a single Hawthorne homemaker who shared a $67 million jackpot with her father and brother in 2007.
Now she wants to make movies.
"What I like about movies is it's something ongoing," Stafford said. "Movies from the '20s, '30s, '40s -- I still see them today and think, 'Wow, this is something that can go on forever."
The film fund, which follows the creation of her production company Queen Nefertari Productions, will be repped by the Gersh Agency. The banner already has four projects lined up.
Stafford is CEO and executive producer of Queen Nefertari; Jeff Kalligheri and Lanre Idewu are producers.

The production funding, which comes from private investments from Stafford and Kalligheri, will be used to finance or co-finance commercial feature films. They aim to expand the fund over the next 18 months by recruiting other investors or forming partnerships.
Given the difficult financing climate in Hollywood of late, with even big names such as Imagine Entertainment, George Clooney and Brett Ratner turning to outside sources like India's Reliance Big Pictures, Stafford definitely has a leg up with her lottery winnings.
With the assistance of the Gersh Agency, specifically Jay Cohen, the Queen Nefertari partners have been setting up meetings and putting together projects. Gersh's film financing and packaging division represents the banner.
“We all want to do movies that are meaningful to us,” Kalligheri said. “We're not just looking to make movies that make money – we want to make movies we would be proud to bring our families to. But we also want to make movies that are commercial, that make business sense.”
Stafford was quietly raising her late brother's five children in Hawthorne, California, when she and her father and another brother bought a $2 Mega Millions lottery ticket. They won $112 million, but took a lump-sum payment of $67 million.
Since that life-changing event, Stafford has become a philanthropist, donating $1 million to the Geffen Theater and becoming part of its outreach efforts. She's also involved with the National Resources Defense Council and other nonprofit organizations.
Stafford said she named her company after the Egyptian queen Nefertari because she was a patron of the arts, and “a queen for peace. She had tremendous power, a great love of herself and her family – that's who I am.”
Stafford recently produced a pair of independent movies, multicultural coming-of-age tale “Polish Bar” and supernatural thriller “The Gathering.”
Kalligheri attested to Stafford's love of moviemaking, saying, “She'd probably be collecting money door to door [if she had to] to make movies.”
Queen Nefertari expects to have its first film in production by the end of this month or, at the latest, the first of the year.
“We may even have three going at the same time in the spring,” Kalligheri said.
The company is looking primarily at commercial projects in four broad genres: comedy, romantic comedy, thriller/horror and faith-based.



Comments
Tony Says
From a professional point of view, Ms. Stafford may want to read "Inside The Huddle - Don't Plan Your Future Without It" before investing one more dime on any other project. If her financial advisers/planners signed off on her spending 44.77% of her lottery winnings on a movie project, they should be fired. I would rather Ms. Stafford take a fraction of that money and use it to teach people how to become financially independent. This could be her legacy, and one that would be on going long after she the good Lord calls her home.