FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Loretta
Ramos
212/621-6785
lramos@mtr.org
Festival to Include:
·
Seven
premiere screenings of current television documentaries,
followed by Q&As with
filmmakers and special guests
·
A
Conversation with Taylor Hackford
·
Opening
seminar, “The Passion of the Partisan:
What Is the Future of the Political Documentary?”
·
Hands-on
pitch workshop for aspiring documentarians with a
$5000 prize
·
Docu-Jam:
A Youth Documentary Showcase
Building
on the success of last year’s sold-out Festival, which premiered such
documentaries as Zana Briski
and Ross Kauffman’s Oscar-winning Born Into Brothels, Ivy Meeropol’s Heir to an Execution, David Grubin’s RFK, Morgan Neville’s Hank Williams:
Honky Tonk Blues, and Barak
Goodman’s The Fight, the Museum will again showcase a selection of the
season’s most noteworthy nonfiction films. As always, each screening will be
introduced by the filmmaker(s) and followed by a Q&A session, a hallmark of
the Festival.
In
addition to the slate of premiere screenings, the 2005 Festival will feature a
variety of panels and events exploring issues crucial to the craft and content
of the documentary form—including our popular pitch workshop (now with a $5,000
prize) and our ongoing youth documentary showcase, Docu-Jam.
The Festival will officially open with “The Passion of the Partisan,” an
all-star roundtable on the future of the political documentary, and will also
feature a conversation with Oscar-nominated director Taylor Hackford,
as well as a new signature event, the Documentary Dialogue, which will unite an
emerging filmmaker with an established master of the genre for a discussion on
the tradition of documentary storytelling.
This
year’s all-premiere lineup includes Street Fight, a riveting account of the 2002 Newark mayoral race; The Last Mogul, a look at the life and career
of MCA head Lew Wasserman; FDR: A Presidency Revealed, offering fresh insights into the man
and his groundbreaking decisions; Ring of
Fire: The Emile Griffith Story, a haunting tale of violence, sexuality, and
redemption in the 1960s New York City boxing world; Red Hook Justice, an exploration of a bold new approach to judicial
reform in Brooklyn; Pucker Up,
documenting the battle for top prize at the International Whistling
Competition; I’m Still Here,
revealing diaries of young people during the Holocaust; and Plagues & Pleasures on the Salton Sea, an irreverent look at the economic,
political, and environmental issues affecting this California landmark.
The
Television Documentary Festival was inaugurated in 2000 with the mission of
highlighting the role that television plays in bringing exemplary works of
nonfiction to the public. Over the past
five years, the Festival has explored the art, craft, and history of the
documentary through screenings and dialogues that have included such
participants as Jon Alpert, Peter Arnett, Ken Burns, Ric
Burns, Glenn Close, Robert Drew, Eve Ensler, Liz Garbus, Sebastian Junger, Susan
Lacy, Rory Kennedy, Al Maysles, Michael Moore, Gordon
Parks, Alexandra Pelosi, D A Pennebaker, Alvin Perlmutter, Sam Phillips, Alan and Susan Raymond, Gore
Vidal, Kurt Vonnegut, Robert Weide, and Gideon Yago. The Festival
is the centerpiece of the Museum’s ongoing commitment to the documentary form,
with public premieres of such films as Control
Room and My Architect: A Son’s Journey in the past year.
A
complete Festival schedule and ticketing information follows.
Funding for this Festival has been generously provided
by The Hearst Corporation, A&E, HBO/Cinemax
Documentary Films, and The History Channel.
The Festival’s Media Sponsors include The New York Sun, The Village
Voice, and IDA. Additional support
has been provided by Court TV; Success Express, Inc.; and Thirteen/WNET.
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Members-Only Screening
Street Fight
Street Fight is a riveting account of the most brutal
of contact sports: politics. It is
In Person: Marshall Curry
(Filmmaker)
Museum Members
should call (212) 621-6780 or e-mail membership@mtr.org to make reservations.
Tuesday, April 12 at
OPENING SATELLITE SEMINAR
The Passion
of the Partisan: What Is the Future of the Political Documentary?
This year
Michael Moore and the Swift Boat Veterans proved that there was a passionate
audience for partisan documentaries. This Museum seminar will address whether
the politically charged films that made headlines in 2004 have transformed the
craft and mission of the documentary. Panelists will consider if filmmakers are
now expected to bring a strong political viewpoint to a project before filming
starts and to appeal to a specific audience. The long-term implications of the
partisan documentary will also be examined, with executives and distributors
discussing upcoming projects.
This seminar is
presented as part of the Museum’s University Satellite Seminar Series.
Sent via
satellite to universities and colleges across the country, this seminar
includes a live question-and-answer session between panelists and the off-site
audience.
In Person: Robert Drew (Primary), Eugene
Jarecki (Why We Fight), Alexandra
Pelosi (Journeys with George), Thom Powers (Guns and
Mothers), Ted Steinberg (Celsius 41.11: The Temperature at Which the
Brain Begins to Die), Paul Stekler (Last
Man Standing)
Moderator: Steve Rosenbaum (Managing
Partner, Magnify Media; Trustee, IDA)
Wednesday, April 13 at
The Last
Mogul: The Life and Times of Lew Wasserman
“If
As the uncannily
shrewd head of the Music Corporation of America (MCA) for more than half a
century, Lew Wasserman transformed the way
In Person: Barry Avrich (Writer/Director). Additional
panelists to be announced.
Thursday, April 14 at
PREMIERE
FDR: A
Presidency Revealed
As Geoffrey C.
Ward noted in the Smithsonian, the presidency of Franklin Delano
Roosevelt “would profoundly alter both the relationship between Americans and
their government and the relationship between the
A
screening in conjunction with The History Channel’s 10th Anniversary.
In Person: Susan Werbe
(Executive Producer, The History Channel), Matilda Bode (Senior
Associate Producer), Thomas Fleming (Historian/Author, The New Dealers’ War: FDR and the War Within World
War II), Jon Meacham
(Managing Editor, Newsweek).
Additional panelists to be announced.
Friday, April 15 at
Ring of Fire:
The Emile Griffith Story
Chosen by Newsweek’s
David Ansen as “the most moving film” he saw at this
year’s Sundance Festival, Ring of Fire is a haunting tale of violence,
sexuality, and redemption in the
In Person: Dan Klores (Filmmaker; Chairman/CEO, Dan Klores Communications), Bert Sugar (Boxing Hall of
Fame Historian). Additional panelists to be announced.
Moderator: Richard Sandomir
(Television, Sports, and Business Columnist, The
New York Times)
Saturday, April 16 at
WORKSHOP
The Art of the Documentary Pitch: How to
Turn an Idea into a Reality
Cosponsored by the International
Documentary Association
All
documentaries begin with an idea that is eventually pitched to a producer or
network. In this workshop/competition, a panel of respected producers will
discuss the process of developing a documentary and will hear pitches from
novice filmmakers trying to sell a nonfiction concept. Five emerging documentarians (two directing credits or less) will be preselected to make public pitches to the panelists, who
will critique both their pitches and their concepts. After all the pitches have
been heard, the panel will choose a winner—based on persuasiveness,
originality, and viability—who will receive a $5,000 grant to be used toward
the completion of the film. The prize is sponsored by American Documentary
Inc., the producers of the award-winning P.O.V. series for PBS.
Panelists will also take questions from the audience about how a documentary
idea grows from seed to fruition.
In Person: Chana Gazit (Producer/Director/Writer, Steward/Gazit Productions), Diana
Holtzberg (Acquisitions, Project Development
Director, Sales Director,
Saturday, April 16 at
FESTIVAL CENTERPIECE
An Evening
with Taylor Hackford and a Screening of Bukowski
“When I went
into features I tried to capture that level of reality I had in documentaries.”
—Taylor Hackford
Given the
realistic detailing and emotional veracity he brought to the screen with such
acclaimed films as Ray and An Officer and a Gentleman, it should
come as no surprise that director/producer Taylor Hackford
began his career in the realm of nonfiction. His “film school” was a stint with
KCET, the
In Person: Taylor
Hackford
Moderator:
Monday, April 18 at
Red Hook
Justice
Documentarian Meema Spadola explores the bold new approach to judicial reform
that is taking place in an experimental criminal court in a
In Person: Meema
Spadola (Producer/Director),
Gerianne Abriano
(Bureau Chief, Red Hook, Kings County District Attorney’s Office), Judge
Alex Calabrese (Presiding Judge, Red Hook Community Justice Center), Leroy
Davis (Court Officer, Red Hook Community Justice Center), Brett Taylor
(Defense Attorney, Legal Aid Society, Red Hook Community Justice Center)
Wednesday, April
20 at
DOCU-JAM: A YOUTH DOCUMENTARY SHOWCASE
In Association with
Across the
country young people are documenting their lives and interests with video
cameras. This year’s Festival spotlights seven documentary shorts that explore
identity, stereotypes, addiction, sex, cultural heritage, activism, and family.
After the screenings, the youth producers will discuss the impact that making documentaries
has had on their lives and future plans.
Films to be
screened include:
·’Auhia Kae Kisu Atu
Pe (A Journey against the Tides) (10 minutes;
Spy Hop Productions)
·ASCODIMAYA (11 minutes;
·Green Thumb (6 minutes;
Raw Art Works)
·Happy Ending (11 minutes;
HBO Young Filmmakers Lab)
·The Cries of a Teenage Soul (11 minutes;
Downtown Community Television/DCTV)
·No Cinderella Story (7 minutes;
HBO Young Filmmakers Lab)
·Beyond the Streets (11 minutes;
Video Machete)
Tickets: This event is
free to students with valid ID. Seats available on a
first-come, first-served basis. For group reservations, please call
(212) 621-6663.
Wednesday, April
20 at
Pucker Up: The Fine Art of Whistling
Stephen
Sondheim suggested that “anyone can whistle,” but this engaging documentary
demonstrates that whistling is an age-old art form of surprising musical depth.
With the quirky spirit of Spellbound and Best in Show, Pucker
Up follows a crew of enthusiastic practitioners—including a turkey hauler,
an investment banker, and a Dutch social worker—as they vie for the top prize
at the International Whistling Competition in Louisburg, North Carolina.
Filmmakers Kate Davis and David Heilbroner delve into
the intriguing history and physics of whistling as they offer evocative clips
of such celebrities as Harpo Marx, Elvis Presley, and
Monty Python all puckering up. (2005; 79 minutes. A film by Kate Davis and David Heilbroner.
A Q-Ball Production.)
In Person: Kate Davis (Director), David Heilbroner (Director), Geert
Chatrou (Whistling Competitor), Steve Herbst (Whistling Competitor), Fred Newman
(Mouth Sounds Expert)
Thursday, April
21 at
PREMIERE
I’m Still Here: Real Diaries of Young
People Who Lived During the Holocaust
While Anne
Frank has come to symbolize the voice of innocence during the Holocaust, many
other firsthand witnesses wrote about the horrors. Director Lauren Lazin, whose documentary Tupac:
Resurrection was recently nominated for an Academy Award, brings to life
the words of young writers who “refused to quietly disappear.” An emotional
montage of archival footage and personal photos with a hypnotic score by Moby
animates the diaries, which are read by some of today’s most talented young
actors, including Elijah Wood, Kate Hudson, and Joaquin Phoenix. Lazin worked closely with Alexandra Zapruder,
whose award-winning book Salvaged Pages: Young Writers’ Diaries of the
Holocaust first collected these diaries, and the documentary is part of
MTV’s Fight for Your Rights antidiscrimination campaign. (2005;
45 minutes. Produced and directed by Lauren Lazin.
Produced by Allison Leikind.)
In Person: Lauren Lazin (Director/Producer),
Katy Garfield (Coproducer), Alexandra Zapruder (Producer; Author, Salvaged Pages: Young
Writers’ Diaries of the Holocaust).
With special guests.
Friday, April 22
at
DOCUMENTARY DIALOGUE 2005
The 2005
Festival inaugurates an annual seminar that will bring together a master of the
documentary genre with the next generation of filmmakers. The evening will
begin with a screening of the emerging filmmaker’s documentary, followed by a
discussion of the tradition of documentary storytelling and how the form and
technology continue to evolve.
Plagues & Pleasures on the
In a harsh
desert valley in a forgotten corner of
In Person: Chris Metzler (Director/Producer) and Jeff
Springer (Director/Editor)
In dialogue
with Jon Alpert (Video Documentary Pioneer)
·Tickets for Festival events, unless otherwise noted, are $15
each ($12 for Museum Members) and $5 for students with valid ID. The series price for any three events is $40
($30 for Museum Members) and $12 for students.
·Admission to Docu-Jam is
free to students with valid ID.
·Tickets may be purchased in advance by calling the Museum at
(212) 621-6600 Mondays to Fridays from
·Members of the
American Women in Radio and Television, Association of Independent Video and
Filmmakers, DocuClub, the International Documentary
Association, and New York Women in Film & Television may purchase tickets
at the Museum Members price.
Programs
and participants are subject to change.
Doors open thirty minutes before scheduled start time, and all seating
is general admission. No refunds or
exchanges. Go to www.mtr.org for up-to-the-minute Festival information, or
e-mail tvdocfest@mtr.org for
additional information.
The Museum’s Television
Documentary Advisory Committee members are Jon Alpert, Downtown Community
Television Center; Nancy Dubuc, A&E; David
Fanning, Frontline; Paola Freccero; Liz Garbus, Moxie Firecracker Films; Chana
Gazit, Steward/Gazit
Productions; Rena Golden, CNN International; David Grubin,
David Grubin Productions; Diana Holtzberg,
Films Transit International; Marjorie Kaplan, Discovery Kids/Discovery
Communications, Inc.; Lynne Kirby, Court
TV; Barbara Kopple, Cabin Creek Films; Susan Lacy, American
Masters; Lauren Lazin, MTV News and
Documentaries; Ruby Lerner, Creative Capital; Beni Matias, Association of Independent Video and Filmmakers; Al
Maysles, Maysles Films,
Inc.; Cara Mertes, P.O.V.; Stanley Moger, SFM Entertainment, LLC; Nina Henderson Moore, BET;
Sheila Nevins, HBO; Elizabeth Peters, Association of
Independent Video and Filmmakers; Steve Rosenbaum, Broadcast News Networks Inc.
and Camera Planet; Vivian Schiller, Discovery Times Channel; Prof. George Stoney, Tisch School of the Arts,
New York
University; Rosalind P. Walter, The Rosalind P. Walter Foundation; Susan Werbe, The History Channel; Christopher Wilcha,
Filmmaker; and Kristal Brent Zook,
The Graduate School of Journalism and the Institute for Research in African
American Studies, Columbia University.
The Museum of Television & Radio, with
locations in
###
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& Radio in New York, located at 25 West 52 Street in Manhattan, is open
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