Muckleshoot — Tobi Iverson Halliday, a Tsimshian and Turtle Mountain Chippewa writer based in the Pacific Northwest, is gaining national and international recognition for her debut feature screenplay, Wild Woman of the Woods — a mythic Indigenous action-thriller set in the 1800s along the Northern Pacific Coast.
Married to Muckleshoot Tribal member John Halliday, Tobi has long dreamed of bringing the rich cultures, stories, and landscapes of Northwest Tribal nations to the big screen.
“I want the world to fall into our world — to experience our myths, our legends, our canoes, totems, and button blankets. Hollywood has never shown the full beauty of our world. I want our ancestors to be seen with awe, dignity, and full humanity.”
— Tobi Iverson Halliday
Since May, Wild Woman of the Woods has built serious momentum on the international film festival circuit. The script was recently named a semi-finalist at the Oscar-qualifying Rhode Island International Film Festival, a winner of the Best Diverse Writer Award at the Santa Barbara International Screenplay Awards, and a finalist at both the Cambridge Script Festival in England and the Toronto International Women Film Festival.
Tobi also earned a coveted spot as a “Second Rounder” (quarter-finalist) at the prestigious Austin Film Festival, widely regarded as the most competitive screenwriting contest in the world. She will attend the festival and participate in its pitch sessions this October.
In addition, Tobi was recently selected as one of just 40 filmmakers invited to the Bend Film Festival’s Basecamp Retreat, where she will work closely with respected Hollywood professionals to further develop her script for production.
Industry veteran Wally Lane, former chair of the Northwest Screenwriters Guild, has mentored Tobi throughout this journey, calling Wild Woman of the Woods “one of the best historical dramas I’ve ever read.”
What began as a personal passion is quickly turning into a promising career. A graduate of the University of Washington in Native American Studies and Anthropology, Tobi is committed to creating authentic roles for Indigenous actors and filmmakers — and to showcasing the matriarchal cultures, shamanic traditions, and warrior histories of the Pacific Northwest on a global stage.
Her story is just beginning.
In June, Muckleshoot witnessed the graduation of 42 Muckleshoot Tribal Members with college degrees and 134 Muckleshoot Tribal Members who earned their technical education and vocational certificates.
Muckleshoot celebrated its Warrior traditions and veterans service with Tribes from around the region at the 2025 Veterans Powwow last month. Photos courtesy of Danielle Wilcox.
Councilwoman Cross joined retired Seattle University professor Fr. Pat Twohy, S.J., to celebrate his 86th birthday and the recent publication of his latest book, syəyaʔaʔ: Coast Salish Sacred Lifeways and the Sacred Lifeways of Jesus.
The Muckleshoot Tribal Council, Muckleshoot Intergovernmental Affairs, and our D.C. team were actively engaged since the BBB’s inception in January to ensure that the Tribe’s sovereignty and treaty rights were protected in this process.
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