Wednesday, April 01, 2009

The 6th Annual Langston Hughes

African American Film Festival April 18-26, 2009

True Life Tales of Inspirational Independent Women Bookend the Festival

Opening Night American Violet: Reception Follows (4/18; 7:00; $15)

Closing Night Celia The Queen: With Director Joe Cardona (4/26; 4:00; $15)

SEATTLE March 31, 2009 –Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center (LHPAC) will host its Sixth Annual African American Film Festival, featuring a powerful lineup of documentaries, narratives, workshops, film shorts and animation. The festival is thrilled to announce that American Violet , a true story about race, poverty and the criminal justice system starring Nicole Beharie and Alfre Woodard will open the festival on April 18th. On April 26th the festival will wrap with the special partnership with the Seattle Latino International Film Festival and the West Coast Premiere of Celia The Queen, a documentary about the legendary Afro Cuban diva queen of salsa, Celia Cruz. The film’s director, Joe Cardona will be on hand to discuss his work.

The African American Film Festival runs nine consecutive nights from April 18th – 26th and all screenings will take place at the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center. The festival includes a number of thoughtful, inspiring and irreverent entries from emerging and established filmmakers from across the U.S. and around the globe. The selection of powerful, diverse, intelligent and evocative films include a Hip-Hop Film Mini-Fest, a GLBT Film Mini-Fest that specifically addresses lesbian and transgender issues, and a Katrina Film Series that spotlights the disaster from three unique perspectives. A wide array of talkbacks, panels and workshops are peppered throughout the festival and provide a much needed bridge for artists and community patrons to engage in meaningful dialogue.

This annual event is expected to draw over 1,000 people who are passionate about creating and appreciating films by and about Black people in the world. The Festival spotlights over 40 feature-length and short films by independent filmmakers, and includes panel discussions, workshops special screenings for senior & youth and the rare opportunity to chat face-to-face with prominent filmmakers, industry professionals and community leaders.

FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS: SEATTLE PREMIERES

· American Violet – (4/18 7pm) Based on the astonishing true story of Regina Kelly, a waitress wrongly arrested during a disastrous drug sweep in Hearne, TX. Her refusal to accept a plea bargain eventually helped expose the DA’s case a sham, based almost entirely on the word of a pathological informant. Starring Nicole Beharie and Alfre Woodard. www.americanviolet.com

· Celia the Queen- (4/26 4pm)The story of legendary Afro Cuban diva Celia Cruz, a woman whose voice symbolized the soul of a nation. Her reign as the queen of salsa, surrounded her with some of the most important 1970s-era figures of the genre. Features interviews with Quincy Jones and Wyclef Jean. Filmmaker Joe Cardona in attendance. www.celiathequeen.com

· Prince of Broadway- (4/25 9pm) Sean Baker’s award winning film showcases the underbelly of the wholesale fashion district through the eyes of Lucky and Levon; two immigrant men struggling to confront what’s real and what’s fake. www.princeofbroadway.com

· Us: A Love Story- (4/25 7pm) A beautiful and haunting allegory exploring the relationships between Blacks and Whites. Filmmaker Alrick Brown in attendance. www.usalovestory.com

· Medicine for Melancholy- (4/24 7pm) A love story of bikes and one-night stands told through two African-American twenty-somethings dealing with issues of class, identity, and the evolving conundrum of being a minority in rapidly gentrifying San Francisco; the city with the smallest proportional black population of any other American city. www.strikeanywherefilms.com

· Carmen and Geoffrey- (Seattle Premiere; 4/23 7pm) An intertwined video history that explores the devoted relationship of dancers Geoffrey Holder and Carmen De Lavallade.

· 13th Amendment- (4/19 1pm) This documentary short follows a 90-year-old great-great-grandmother on her trek to vote for Barack Obama in the 2008 Pennsylvania primary. Having voted all her life, this is her first opportunity to vote for a black man for President.

HURRICANE Katrina Series

· Trouble the Water (4/22 7pm) 2009 Academy Award nominee/Best Documentary. A redemptive tale of two self-described street hustlers who become heroes. They survive the storm and seize a chance for a new beginning; Not As Seen on TV (4/22 4pm) youth documentary by four teens; Renaissance Village (4/19 1pm) A gritty look at the delicate relationship between gov’t and citizen post disaster. Follows the personal struggles of five characters who live in a FEMA trailer park where allegations of formaldehyde poisoning force the park to close. Filmmaker Lou Karsen in attendance.

GLBT FILM Mini-Fest – Lesbian/Transgender Focus

· Dreams Deferred: The Sakia Gunn Film Project (4/19 4pm) 15-year old student fatally stabbed in a gay hate crime in NJ; Still Black: A Portrait of Black Transmen (4/19 4pm) explores the lives of 6 black transgender men living in the U.S.; black/womyn…conversations (4/19 7pm) lives and views of lesbians of African descent living in the U.S. Filmmaker Tiona M. in attendance.

Hip Hop Film Mini-fest

· Features B-Girl Be(4/23 4pm) recognizes and celebrates the role of women in Hip Hop; 206 Zulu (4/23 9pm) local filmmaker Georgio Brown in attendance; Masizake: Building Each Other (4/24 9pm) local filmmakers Scott and Angela Macklin in attendance. Sabar (4/25 4pm) An African American California born hip-hop girl resists the ancestral call of the Senegalese dance "Sabar." When she finally gives in, she discovers more than a dance -she finds herself. Filmmaker Chike C. Nwoffiah in attendance

AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY

· Transforming Tacoma: The Struggle for Civil Rights- (4/18 1pm) The History of Civil Rights in Tacoma. Local Filmmaker Sidney Lee in attendance.

· February One – (4/20 4pm) Based largely on first hand accounts and rare archival footage, the new documentary film February One documents one volatile winter in Greensboro that not only challenged public accommodation customs and laws in North Carolina, but served as a blueprint for the wave of non-violent civil rights protests that swept across the South and the nation throughout the 1960's.

· The Prophet of the Slaves- (4/26 1pm) Nat Turner believes that he is destine by god to deliver his race from bondage and leads the bloodiest slave revolt in U.S history. This is a powerful narrative short by director Michael Flees that illustrates the passion and determination of a people brought to a country as chattel. www.theprophetoftheslaves.com

· Sweet Old Song- (4/18 1pm) Howard "Louie Bluie" Armstrong: acclaimed musician, NEA “national treasure,” sly and charming personality. He is known for a lifetime of jazz, blues, folk and country music but when he met Barbara Ward, a sculptor 30 years his junior, a new chapter of his life/art unfolded. This is the story of their courtship and marriage drawing on nearly a century of African American experience, beginning with Armstrong's vivid stories/paintings of his childhood in segregated TN.

· No Short Climb: Race Workers and America's Defense Technology- (4/21 7pm) Presenting the contributions made by Black scientists and technicians recruited for military and civilian service jobs during WWII.

· Frederick Douglass and the White Negro- (4/26 1pm) Douglass escaped slavery and took refuge in Ireland during the peak of the Great Famine. This film examines the effect Ireland had on his activism, the role of the Irish in America after Douglass' return, and the turbulent relationship between African and Irish Americans as well as the race riot that rocked NYC during the Civil War.

All festival activities take place at the historic Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center on 17th & Yesler (104 17th Ave. S). Advance tickets available through Brown Paper Tickets www.brownpapertickets.com/producer/2303. Day of show tickets also available at the Langston Hughes Box office. Opening and Closing night film events begin at 7 pm, are $15, and include a reception. All other evening showtimes are 7:00 pm. Sat/Sun. matinees at 1:00pm & 4:00pm. Weekday matinees at 4:00pm. Late Shows at 9:00 pm Tues 4/21 -Sat. 4/25. Tickets are $ 7 for adults $5 for seniors and $2 for youth. An all-access “Langston Pass” is $75. Film details and ticketing information are available at www.langstonblackfilmfest.org or by calling 206-32....

The African American Film Festival is supported by The Lucky 7 Foundation, Seattle Parks and Recreation, 4 Culture, SafeCo Insurance, the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs, and a host of local businesses and organizations. The Langston Hughes African American Film Festival gives Northwest audiences a chance to view a diverse array of irreverent, poignant, provocative documentary films on topics such as youth, politics, history, social justice and relationships.

About the Langston Hughes African American Film Festival: The Langston Hughes African American Film Festival supports community building by providing opportunities for artists and audiences to connect using the medium of film as a catalyst for dialogue that leads to social change. The festival creates year round opportunities to enhance media literacy, self reflection, and community discussion. By creating the shared experience of films that are by and about Black people, the festival is a creative and collaborative opportunity to build cultural competency across the aisle and across neighborhoods in greater Seattle. www.langstonblackfilmfest.org

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