"Why didn't I know about this?" wonders U.S. soccer legend and two-time Women's World Cup Winner Brandi Chastain early on in Copa 71. She is watching footage of the 1971 Women's World Cup, held in ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. COPA 71 shows what happened at the unofficial Women's football World Cup in Mexico in 1971. The 2024 Women’s World Cup in ...
The year was 1971. The venue: Azteca Stadium in Mexico City. The event: the (unofficial) Women’s World Cup soccer tournament, attracting a massive crowd of more than 110,000 madly-cheering fans – to ...
In 1971, tens of thousands of fans filled Estadio Azteca in Mexico City to watch soccer. It was two decades before the U.S. women took home the inaugural FIFA Women’s World Cup championship title ...
"It was important for women to see that this was possible." Greenwich Entertainment has debuted a trailer for a sports history documentary film titled Copa 71, arriving to watch in June. It first ...
In 2024, women’s football is one of the world’s fastest growing sports. However, this hasn't always been the case as, after World War II, women were banned or marginalised for playing the beautiful ...
Credits: Directed by James Erskine and Rachel Ramsay, featuring Brandi Chastain, Carol Wilson, Elena Schiavo, Sylvia Zaragoza. Rating/Runtime: Rated R, 91 minutes. Screening at the Magic Lantern ...
EXCLUSIVE: Greenwich Entertainment has acquired U.S. rights to Copa 71, a documentary about the pioneering “Unofficial Women’s World Cup” that created a sensation in 1971 but has since been virtually ...
Take a look at this new trailer and artwork for the upcoming COPA 71, a new documentary about the 1971 Women’s World Cup and England’s lost Lionesses. The film from Rachel Ramsay and James Erskine (Le ...
“Copa 71,” the Serena Williams-produced documentary that aims to shed light on the 1971 controversially unsanctioned Women’s World Cup, will have its New York premiere at the 14th annual Athena Film ...
Read up on the latest Copa 71 News, Reviews and Features from the team at Collider. Despite breaking records, the history of the 1971 women’s World Cup in Mexico City has been hidden away. This ...