
Jillian Ruvalcaba discovered her love of filmmaking as a child. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)
Freshman takes her love of moviemaking to another level
As a kid, she made a film with Barbie. Now Jillian Ruvalcaba is studying film and TV production and showing her Trojan pride
Jillian Ruvalcaba made her first film at the age of 10.
She and her friend filmed the stop-motion movie in her house using a Canon Powershot she got for Christmas. The films star was Barbie, her favorite character at the time.
It was then Ruvalcaba, now a freshman studying film and television production at USC, knew the magic of moviemaking.
I was like, You know, this is something I want to do for the rest of my life, she said.
In high school, she kept at it, saving up for a more sophisticated camera and making commercials for her school. She also got involved in theater. But most of her study of film happened at home, waiting patiently for Netflix DVDs to arrive in the mail for family movie nights.
When it came time to apply to schools, she was nervous about applying to the USC School of Cinematic Arts.
My parents were like, Just give it a try. All they can do is say no, said Ruvalcaba, 18.
Not only did she get in, but she ended up receiving a Stamps Scholarship covering her tuition and other expenses.
Its unbelievable, she said. I still cant believe it.
Following in dads footsteps
Ruvalcaba thinks of her dad when she talks about getting into USC. Her father Jaime, a first-generation high school and college student and Trojan, was born to a family of 11 in Mexico and raised in Californias Central Valley. His youth was spent harvesting fruit in the fields.
When she was a kid, her father joked he would one day take her and show her the life he had.
Turns out, he wasnt joking. When she was 13, they packed up and spent a week on a farm, spending the night at her aunts home in Fresno.
We would prune peaches from 6 in the morning till noon, she said. I used to cry every morning because we had to wake up at 4. The heat was unbearable and youd be sore after just a few hours.
A scrawny teen, she struggled to keep up with the workers, who ran laps around her.
That changed me so much, she said. Theres so much to be grateful for.
Trojan pride
Unlike many others, Jaime Ruvalcaba didnt drop out of high school, instead graduating and enlisting in the military, going on to be a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Marine Corps. He was active duty until 2012. He has a bachelors degree in political science from Tufts University and masters degrees from USC and Harvard University.
Hes who I look up to most, she said.
Growing up, he taught her Trojan pride.
Every time they scored a touchdown or the marching band came on, he would put me on his shoulders and we would do the fight on sign, she said.
Ruvalcaba has enjoyed her first couple weeks at USC and shes already diving into the world of cinema, watching Singin in the Rain for the first time and shooting a short documentary for a class.
Sometimes when shes watching a TV show or movie, shell pause and pay attention to the music or how they transitioned a scene which may offer a hint about her future career.
I love editing films, she said. A lot of people want to be directors and producers, and thats fine, but for me editing is when the magic happens.