We are very excited to introduce our Board of Directors! We couldn’t do this without them–our personal superheroes!
2014 Festival Recap: Short Film Program
The short film program was a huge hit at the 2014 Mixed Remixed Festival. We screened films by emerging filmmakers who are extremely talented. The program was followed by a Q&A with the filmmakers and actors (Max Faugno, Jeffrey Moline, Aaron Samuels) involved and was led by the ever-awesome Festival Producer and Planner, Jennifer Frappier. The complete film line-up included:
The United Colors of Amani, dir. Amani Starnes (Running time 15 minutes)
Ozzy & Harry dir. Jeffrey Moline (Running time 6:25 minutes)
Tender Love dir. Joseph Hernandez-Kolski (Running time 5:17 minutes)
Covered in Grass dir. Celso White & Matt Malis (Running time 4:45 minutes)
The United Colors of Amani
In the tradition of Robert Townsend’s Hollywood Shuffle, the web series “The United Colors of Amani,” explores Amani’s uncomfortable racial adventures in Hollywood. Amani, an ethnically ambiguous performer, has dealt with the “What are you question” her whole life. But what does it mean to be black, white, and everything in between as she navigates the entertainment industry and life in LA? “The United Colors of Amani,” a with sociological undertones, sheds light on the uncomfortable, awkward, and outrageous constructions of race permeating showbiz. It will evoke laughter, discomfort, and outrage. Despite the specific circumstances of the protagonist’s journey through the big bad world of Hollywood, viewers will be surprised to find that they, too, can relate on some level to the identity politics and interpersonal catastrophes highlighted in “The United Colors of Amani.”
Amani Starnes is a multiracial actress, writer, producer, and singer. She graduated from Yale, where she studied Theater and African American Studies. Amani is the face of several national television commercials and a member of Tim Robbins’ Actors’ Gang. She also sings, choreographs, and stars in independent films, plays, concerts, music videos, and rock operas.
Ozzy & Harry
A biting satire on Conservative American Family Values “Ozzy and Harry” (a play on “Ozzy and Harriet”). Features Ozzy, a closeted, conservative Mixed race business executive and Harry his Nordic spouse and homemaker are trying to raise Pumpkin, their Latino son in a world that only existed on their television sets. Pumpkin tries to pull the wool from over his parents eyes by confronting the family dynamic of two fathers. Shot in 2003 in glorious black and white “Ozzy and Harry” reflects rotten core at buying into the American Dream, through apathy, consumerism and simply the need to be right. It illustrates how we lose our uniqueness in chasing it.
JGM is a singer/songwriter, musician and filmmaker. He uses his art and life to promote a solidarity of enlightened common people. JGM was farm raised in MN and lives in West Hollywood. JGM hopes you enjoy his film Ozzy and Harry.
Tender Love
As a writer who comes from a mixed background, I think my perspective is slightly different. I think my comedy tends to reflect that. This comedy short is a commentary on technology and relationships, not specifically about the mixed experience, but I think it’s a universal topic. My goal is to continue to speak about our experience in ways that demonstrate a positive direction in which I think we need to move as a society, where we are not on the outskirts of the mainstream. We need to redefine what that mainstream looks like.
Joe Hernandez-Kolski is a spoken word poet and comedian. His first short film, “Afterschool’d” was an NBC Comedy Short Cuts finalist. He has written several hip-theater shows, both in the solo format and with his partner Joshua Silverstein under the comedy moniker “So Fresh & So Clean.” His first solo show, “You Wanna Piece of Me?” was recently published by the University of Michigan press as part of an anthology entitled, “Say Word: Voices of Hip-Hop Theater.”
Covered in Grass
The film is a video adaptation of a poem that examines a shared history of oppression between the narrator’s Black heritage and Jewish heritage.
Aaron Samuels, raised in Providence, Rhode Island by a Jewish mother and a Black father, is a Cave Canem Fellow and a nationally acclaimed performer. His work has been nominated for a Pushcart, featured on TV One’s Verses & Flow, and has appeared in many journals including Tidal Basin Review and Muzzle Magazine.
2014 Festival Re-cap: Closure, feature film
Closure dir. Bryan Tucker
The Mixed Remixed Festival was thrilled to screen the feature film, Closure directed by Bryan Tucker. The documentary follows Angela, an African-American woman who was raised by a Caucasian couple in a large, multiracial family in Washington State. She was adopted at the age of one from foster care in the state of Tennessee, under the terms of a closed adoption. As Angela grew older, it became apparent that the unanswered questions about her birth story would continue to haunt her if she did not attempt to find some answers. Filmed and edited by her husband, Bryan, the documentary follows Angela for two years during the search for her birth family. Several twists and surprising revelations ultimately lead Angela and her family across the country to her place of birth. It is there where Angela comes face to face with her birth mother for the first time, and meets family members who had never known she was even born – including her birth father.
Bryan and Angela attended the Festival to do a Q&A led by Festival Advisor John Meeks. The audience was incredibly moved by the film and there were lots of tears and stories shared during the audience interaction after the screening. We can’t wait to see else this duo does to advance the conversation around these issues!
Meet some of the 2015 Team
The Mixed Remixed Festival is organized by an all-volunteer team. And it’s an incredible bunch. Check out some of the team here!-Heidi Durrow
Happy Halloween from the Mixed Remixed Festival!
Happy Halloween everybody! Have a great day! Be safe! And maybe consider this important question from Matthew Salesses: Is Halloween a holiday just for white people?—Heidi Durrow
We’re on YouTube with lots of Festival Footage to Come!
We’re on YouTube! We’ll be posting more Mixed Remixed Festival footage in the next few weeks so make sure you subscribe to our YouTube Channel! Right now you can catch the wonderful Key & Peele heartfelt speech from the Stortyeller’s Prize now.–Heidi Durrow
[youtube]http://youtu.be/D7VRVQgbDvE[/youtube]
See You on Saturday 10/25 for 1st Mixed Remixed Write-In!
We’re excited to have our very first write-in this Saturday Oct. 25 11am-1pm. Now you can meet-up in Los Angeles and the Seattle Area. Bring your neglected work-in-progress and laptop or paper and pen and get energized by your fellow Mixed Remixed writers. And please let us know that you’re coming so we can save some tables together! RSVP here.
Los Angeles: Coffee Connection, 3838 S. Centinela Avenue, LA, CA.
Seattle: Third Place Books (The Commons), Lake Forest Place, 17171 NE Bothell Way, Lake Forest Park, WA 98155
See you on 10/18 for Mixed Remixed Movie Meet-up: Dear White People
What’s your favorite curly hair product?
Join the Mixed Remixed Festival Planning Team
We need YOU! The Mixed Remixed Festival is an all-volunteer team and we can use your help! We’re seeking folks of all stripes and polka dots to help plan the 2015 festival but we are in particular need of graphic designers, web designers, and grant writers, and pr and social media folks! Are you interested? Email questions to Mathis info(at)mixedremixed.org. Or sign up here.
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